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The role of vascular gap junctions in the conduction of intercellular Ca2+ and vasoconstriction along small resistance arteries is not entirely understood. Some depolarizing agents trigger conducted vasoconstriction while others only evoke a local depolarization. Here we use a novel technique to investigate the temporal and spatial relationship between intercellular Ca2+ signals generated by smooth muscle action potentials (APs) and vasoconstriction in mesenteric resistance arteries (MA). Pulses of exogenous KCl to depolarize the downstream end (T1) of a 3 mm long artery increased intracellular Ca2+ associated with vasoconstriction. The spatial spread and amplitude of both depended on the duration of the pulse, with only a restricted non-conducting vasoconstriction to a 1 s pulse. While blocking smooth muscle cell (SMC) K+ channels with TEA and activating L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs) with BayK 8644 spread was dramatically facilitated, so the 1 s pulse evoked intercellular Ca2+ waves and vasoconstriction that spread along an entire artery segment 3000 μm long. Ca2+ waves spread as nifedipine-sensitive Ca2+ spikes due to SMC action potentials, and evoked vasoconstriction. Both intercellular Ca2+ and vasoconstriction spread at circa 3 mm s-1 and were independent of the endothelium. The spread but not the generation of Ca2+ spikes was reversibly blocked by the gap junction inhibitor 18β-GA. Thus, smooth muscle gap junctions enable depolarization to spread along resistance arteries, and once regenerative Ca2+-based APs occur, spread along the entire length of an artery followed by widespread vasoconstriction.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.ceca.2018.08.001

Type

Journal article

Journal

Cell Calcium

Publication Date

07/08/2018

Volume

75

Pages

21 - 29

Keywords

Gap junctions, Intercellular Ca(2+)waves, Mesenteric resistance artery, Spreading vasoconstriction