These experiments compared potential-operated calcium channel function in smooth muscle from stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP) and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY). Carotid artery strips from adult male SHRSP and WKY rats were suspended in tissue baths for isometric force recording. Contractile force was expressed as percent of response to 100 mmol/l KCl. Vascular strips from SHRSP were more sensitive to KCl (ED50 = 25 mmol/l) compared to strips from WKY rats (ED50 = 37 mmol/l). The calcium channel agonist Bay K 8644 (2.8 × 10–10 to 2.8 × 10–7 mol/l) produced tonic contractions in carotid artery strips from SHRSP (34% of the contractile response to 100 mmol/l KCl) but not in those from WKY rats. Incubation of vascular strips in 1.8 or 6 × 10–10 mmol/l norepinephrine did not alter the maximal contractile response to Bay K 8644 in either strain of rats. In 12 mmol/l KCl, the maximal contractile response to Bay K 8644 was increased in both SHRSP (71%) and WKY rats (25%). In 18 mmol/l KCl, maximal contractile responses to Bay K 8644 in the two strains were similar (SHRSP = 73%, WKY = 76%). Removal of the endothelium did not significantly affect contractile responses to Bay K 8644 in either strain of rats. There were no differences in contractile responses to the calcium ionophore A23187 or in nifedipine-induced relaxation of potassium-activated vessels between carotid arteries from SHRSP and WKY rats. In summary, these results suggest that a difference in voltage-operated calcium channel function may underlie the increased sensitivity of SHRSP vascular smooth muscle to depolarizing stimuli.
Isolated tail arteries from stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP), but not normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats, exhibit oscillatory contractions in response to norepinephrine. To establish whether this vascular abnormality is secondary to elevated arterial pressure, SHRSP and WKY were treated with hydralazine and hydrochlorothiazide from weaning to 4 months of age. Hydralazine and hydrochlorothiazide treatment significantly attenuated hypertension development in SHRSP (systolic blood pressure: control SHRSP = 219 +/- 9 mmHg; treated SHRSP = 143 +/- 5 mmHg at 15 weeks of age). Helically-cut tail artery strips from all rats were mounted in tissue baths for isometric force recording and exposed to norepinephrine (6 x 10(-10)-6 x 10(-6) M) for 20 min at each concentration. Oscillatory activity was defined as the sum of the magnitudes of all phasic contractions occurring during the final 10 min of NE incubation. There was no significant difference in the magnitude of oscillatory activity between hydralazine/hydrochlorothiazide-treated SHRSP and control SHRSP. From these results we conclude that norepinephrine-induced oscillatory activity in SHRSP is a primary vascular abnormality that is not secondary to high blood pressure.
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