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Department of Pediatrics, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242
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ABSTRACT |
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Anion currents contribute to
vascular smooth muscle (VSM) membrane potential. The substitution of
extracellular chloride (Cl) with iodide (I) or bromide (Br) initially
inhibited and then potentiated isometric contractile responses of rat
aortic rings to norepinephrine. Anion substitution alone produced a
small relaxation, which occurred despite a lack of active tone and
minimal subsequent contraction of endothelium-intact rings (4.2 ± 1.2% of the response to 90 mM KCl). Endothelium-denuded rings
underwent a similar initial relaxation but then contracted vigorously
(I > Br). Responses to 130 mM I (93.7 ± 1.9% of 90 mM KCl) were
inhibited by nifedipine (10
6 M),
niflumic acid (10
5 M), tamoxifen
(10
5 M), DIDS
(10
4 M), and
HCO
3-free buffer (HEPES 10 mM) but not
by bumetanide (10
5 M). Intact rings
treated with N
-nitro-L-arginine
(10
4 M) responded weakly to I (15.5 ± 2.1% of 90 mM KCl), whereas hemoglobin
(10
5 M), indomethacin
(10
6 M), 17-octadecynoic acid
(10
5 M), and
1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazole[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one
(10
6 M) all failed to augment the
response of intact rings to I. We hypothesize that VSM takes up I
primarily via an anion exchanger. Subsequent I efflux through anion
channels having a selectivity of I > Br > Cl produces
depolarization. In endothelium-denuded or agonist-stimulated vessels,
this current is sufficient to activate voltage-dependent calcium
channels and cause contraction. Neither nitric oxide nor prostaglandins
are the primary endothelial modulator of these anion channels. If they
are regulated by an endothelium-dependent hyperpolarizing factor it is
not a cytochrome P-450 metabolite.
nitric oxide; calcium channels; chloride channels; vascular smooth muscle; anion exchangers.
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INTRODUCTION |
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OPENING OF CHLORIDE (Cl) ion channels depolarizes
vascular smooth muscle (VSM). This is because Cl is transported into
VSM cells against its electrochemical gradient, resulting in an
intracellular Cl concentration that is much higher than that predicted
by passive distribution (8). Cl currents are activated by both
vasoconstrictors (3, 20, 38) and stretch (28). Agonist-induced Cl
current contributes functionally to the VSM response to catecholamines because when Cl channels are blocked or Cl transport is interrupted contraction is inhibited (7, 23). Endothelial disruption greatly
augments the Cl dependence of norepinephrine (NE)-induced contraction,
suggesting that the Cl current activated by
-adrenergic receptors is
regulated by an endothelial factor (24).
Two distinct Cl conductances have been identified in VSM. A calcium-activated Cl current (ICl,Ca) has been well characterized (26). This current is activated by both spontaneous (40) and agonist-induced (3, 31) release of intracellular calcium stores at calcium concentrations ranging from 180 to 600 nM (30). These channels have a very low conductance of 1-2 pS (19) and an anion selectivity of iodide (I) > Cl (40). ICl,Ca is inhibited by a number of pharmacological agents, including DIDS and niflumic acid (25). VSM cells also possess a typical "volume-activated" Cl current (ICl,vol) (29, 41). These channels are activated by hypotonic conditions associated with cell swelling. ICl,vol is outwardly rectifying, inactivates at positive potentials (more than approximately +60 mV) and, like ICl,Ca, has an ion selectivity of I > Cl. The channel is blocked by DIDS and by the antiestrogen agent tamoxifen. It has been proposed that ICl,vol is encoded by the ClC-3 gene (11), which is the most highly expressed member of the ClC gene family in VSM (22).
In previous experiments we used anion substitution as a tool to study the contribution of Cl currents to vasoconstrictor responses of the rat aorta (23). Replacement of Cl with methanesulfonate at the same time that NE was applied resulted in immediate potentiation of contractile responses. Substituting bromide (Br) or I for Cl initially depressed contractile responses of endothelium-intact rings to NE but subsequently potentiated them. In the current study, when anion substitution was performed without the concomitant addition of NE, a small, immediate relaxation to I or Br was the only response seen. However, when the same experiment was performed in endothelium-denuded rings, this initial relaxation was followed 10-15 min later by a very large contractile response. The current experiments were designed to investigate the mechanism underlying these responses to anion substitution.
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METHODS |
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Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-300 g) were obtained from Harlan Sprague Dawley. The animals were killed by exposure to 100% CO2 for 5 min followed by cervical dislocation. Thoracic aortas were removed, cleaned of adherent connective tissue, and cut into 4- to 5-mm rings. The rings were prepared for recording isometric force as previously described (23). In some preparations the endothelium was removed by gentle rubbing with the edge of a fine, serrated forceps. Passive stretch was set at 2.5 g, and the rings were allowed to equilibrate in physiological salt solution (PSS) at 37°C for 120 min before the start of experimentation. Normal PSS contained (in mM) 130 NaCl, 4.7 KCl, 1.18 KH2PO4, 1.17 MgSO4 · 7H2O, 14.9 NaHCO3, 1.6 CaCl2 · H2O, 5.5 dextrose, and 0.03 CaNa2-EDTA (pH 7.30). NaI and NaBr PSS were prepared by equimolar substitution of these salts for NaCl. The total concentration of Cl from sources other than NaCl was 7.9 mM. HEPES-buffered PSS was prepared by substituting NaHCO3 with 10 mM HEPES and titrating the pH to 7.3.
For the concentration-response curve to I (see Fig. 4), mixtures of 130 mM NaCl, 130 mM NaI, and 130 mM Na-methanesulfonate PSS were used. The 130 mM Na-methanesulfonate buffer was prepared by substituting NaCl with 130 mM NaOH and titrating the pH of the buffer to 7.30 with methanesulfonic acid while the solution was being aerated with 95% O2-5% CO2. The measured osmolality of this buffer was 292 compared with 293 mosmol/kgH2O for normal PSS (5500 vapor pressure osmometer). The various I concentrations were achieved by mixing either normal 130 mM NaCl PSS or 130 mM Na-methanesulfonate buffer with 130 mM NaI buffer in fixed ratios. In one set of experiments, Cl was simply replaced with I and NaCl plus NaI to equal 130 mM. In a second set of studies, Cl was present only at the constant 7.9 mM (4.7 mM KCl + 1.6 mM CaCl2) as in all experiments involving I or Br replacement. In these experiments NaI plus Na-methanesulfonate equals 130 mM.
Prazosin, yohimbine, and
[NOC-18,DETA/NO,(Z)-1-[2- (2-aminoethyl)-N-(2-ammonioethyl)amino]diazen-1-ium-1,2- diolate]
(detaNONOate) stock solutions were prepared in water. NE
stock was prepared in water containing 10 mM ascorbic acid as a
preservative. DIDS and hemoglobin (rat) were dissolved directly into
PSS at the desired concentration.
N
-nitro-L-arginine
(L-NNA) was dissolved in 1 N HCl. Bumetanide and nifedipine
were dissolved in ethanol, whereas tamoxifen, niflumic acid,
indomethacin, 17-octadecynoic acid (ODYA), and
1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazole[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) were dissolved in DMSO. Solvents were added to the buffer at no
greater than a 1,000:1 dilution yielding a final solvent concentration
of
0.1%. Indomethacin treatment consisted of a 1-h exposure at
10
6 M during the 2-h equilibration
period, which preceded all experiments. Nitric oxide synthesis was
inhibited by incubation in L-NNA
(10
4 M) for 20 min before eliciting a
response. No individual ring was used for more than a single
pharmacological intervention (drug or combination of drugs) to avoid
potential effects of incomplete washout. All drugs and all salts for
the preparation of PSS were obtained from Sigma Chemical with the
exception of ODQ and detaNONOate, which were obtained from Alexis
Pharmaceuticals, and ODYA, which was obtained from Biomol.
At the beginning of each experiment a contractile response to 90 mM KCl was recorded. KCl was added directly to the buffer from a 1 M stock without adjusting for changes in tonicity. Many of the data are reported as a percentage of the response of each individual ring to this initial, maximal response to KCl. Traces of typical responses are drawn accompanied by a solid, vertical bar representing the magnitude of this response. The figures show mean responses ± SE, and the n values represent the number of tissues from different rats that underwent a given intervention. Differences between groups were assessed using Student's t-tests. Linear regression was performed using Microsoft Excel software and significance assessed using ANOVA. P < 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
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RESULTS |
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Anion substitution has complex effects on NE-induced contractile
responses of intact rings of rat aorta (Fig.
1). The concentration of NE was titrated
for each ring to achieve an approximately ED25 response in
normal PSS (n = 10). The average concentration of NE was 1.0 ± 0.23 × 10
7 M. The replacement
of NaCl with either NaBr or NaI at the same instant that NE is added
(no time for transport of the alternative anion before agonist binding)
produced a diminution of initial tension development compared with
control responses obtained in normal PSS. Br causes less suppression of
the initial response (Br: control 26.0 ± 2.3% of the response to 90 mM KCl, treated 14.3 ± 4.6% vs. I: control 31.2 ± 3.8%, treated
6.7 ± 4.3%, P < 0.05 for percentage suppression) and an
earlier onset of potentiation than does I. We have previously reported
the early inhibitory effects of anion substitution (23) and speculated
that this effect was related to inward movement of the substituted
anion down its instantaneously infinite concentration gradient,
resulting in membrane hyperpolarization. As time passes the initial
suppressive effect of anion substitution changes to a large
augmentation of the contractile response. NE-induced contractions in
the presence of NaBr or NaI were significantly larger at both the 10- and 20-min time points, but there was no statistically significant
difference between the magnitude of the potentiating effects of I and
Br.
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To define the direct effects of alternative anions in the absence of
agonist stimulation, we exposed both endothelium-intact and -denuded
(rubbed) rings to 130 mM I alone (Fig. 2).
Both intact and rubbed rings underwent an immediate relaxation from
basal tension. This relaxation occurred despite the absence of
identifiable active contractile tone. This relaxation was not
significantly different between intact (215 ± 9 mg, n = 27 rings from 9 rats) and rubbed (234 ± 6 mg, n = 67 rings from
18 rats) rings. Over a 40-min period intact rings slowly recovered from
this relaxation and some developed small contractile responses. At 40 min average tension was 4.2 ± 1.2% of the response to 90 mM KCl.
Tensions below baseline at 40 min (7 of 27) were also calculated as a
percentage of the response to 90 mM KCl and averaged in as negative
values. Rubbed rings contracted vigorously to I and average tension at 40 min was 93.7 ± 1.9% (n = 67 rings from 18 rats).
I-induced contraction was not inhibited by
-adrenergic receptor
blockade with prazosin (10
6 M) plus
yohimbine (10
6 M; control 92.7 ± 11.2%, treated 91.1 ± 6.2%, n = 3). This
combination completely blocked contractions of comparable size induced
by NE (2 × 10
8 M; control 93.7 ± 9.3%, treated 0%, n = 3). These data demonstrate that
I-induced contraction is inhibited by an intact endothelial layer and
is not caused by release of endogenous catecholamines from adrenergic
nerve endings within the vascular wall.
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Figure 2 includes a scatterplot of the standardized force-generating capacity of each ring (response to 90 mM KCl) plotted against the response of each ring to I. There is a significant difference in the maximal force-generating capacity between intact (3.69 ± 0.13 g) and rubbed (2.65 ± 0.06 g) rings. However, there is significant overlap between the two groups with regard to the magnitude of the KCl response but no overlap with respect to the magnitude of the I response. Within groups there is no significant correlation between the size of the KCl response and the size of the response to I [intact, r2 = 0.023, not significant (ns); rubbed, r2 = 0.034, ns]. These results suggest that the response to I is all or none and is related to the removal of some endothelial influence rather than to varying degrees of VSM cell damage caused during the rubbing process.
I produced both larger initial relaxations (Br: 126 ± 18 mg, I: 308 ± 24 mg, n = 5) and larger contractions (Br: 45.7 ± 27.3%, I: 105 ± 3.3%) than Br (Fig. 3). The
average time to onset of contraction was not significantly different
but tended to be longer with I than with Br (Br 12 min 51 s ± 2 min 4 s, I 14 min 40 s ± 53 s). Br-induced contractions were highly
variable and frequently transient with large fluctuations in tone (see
typical responses, Fig. 3). Both the relaxation and the contraction
induced by I were concentration dependent (Fig.
4) and did not peak until the I
concentration reached 130 mM. This suggested that high intracellular I
concentrations were required for the response. To test this hypothesis
we repeated the dose response to I using Na-methanesulfonate as a
substitute for the NaCl component of the buffer. Methanesulfonate has
been employed frequently as an extracellular Cl substitute because it
permeates anion channels very poorly (33) and, unlike many other large
anions, has a negligible effect on the ionized calcium concentration of
physiological buffers (18). In addition, methanesulfonate is a poor
substrate for the Na-K-2Cl cotransporter (6). On the basis of the
selectivity of the Cl/HCO
3 exchanger
for Cl over other large anions (32), it is likely that inward
methanesulfonate transport by this mechanism is also minimal. We hypothesized that using methanesulfonate would
limit the extracellular anions available for transport and force I
loading of the VSM cells at lower extracellular concentrations of I. Under these conditions the concentration response relationship for I was shifted remarkably to the left. With simple I substitution for Cl,
98 mM I was required to produce a contractile response of 59 ± 5.4%
of the response to 90 mM KCl. In contrast, when Na-methanesulfonate is
substituted for the NaCl portion of the buffer, a response of similar
magnitude (56 ± 12.9%) is obtained in only 16 mM I. We have shown
previously that replacement of extracellular Cl with methanesulfonate
causes a small contraction of variable size (average ~20% of maximal
response to KCl) in rubbed rings (24). This finding is confirmed in
these experiments by the response seen in 0 mM I (130 mM
methanesulfonate, 18.7 ± 2.9%).
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Under normal conditions, contractile responses to NE in the
endothelium-intact rat aorta are about 75% dependent on calcium entry
through nifedipine-sensitive, voltage-dependent calcium channels (24).
To determine the source of calcium responsible for I-induced
contraction, rings were treated with nifedipine (10
6 M) either 10 min before changing to
NaI buffer or after the contraction to I reached a plateau at 40 min
(Fig. 5). Pretreatment with nifedipine had
no effect on the relaxation response to I but completely inhibited the
contraction (0%, n = 6). These data suggest that although the
contractile response is a completely voltage-dependent phenomenon, the
relaxation (and presumably the initial suppression of NE-induced contraction) is not mediated by hyperpolarization as previously suggested (23).
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The complete inhibition of I-induced contraction by nifedipine
suggested that the contractile response to I was due to either direct
activation of voltage-sensitive calcium channels or membrane depolarization. To discern between these two possibilities, inhibitors of Cl transport and Cl channel blockers were employed. Control contractile responses to 130 mM I were obtained in rubbed rings. The
tissues were then incubated for 20 min in one of the following: 1:1,000
dilutions of DMSO or ethanol, 10 mM HEPES buffer (0 HCO
3), 10
5 M bumetanide,
10
5 or
10
4 M niflumic acid,
10
4 M DIDS, or
10
5 M tamoxifen. The rings were then
reexposed to 130 mM NaI in the continued presence of the
pharmacological intervention. Figure 6
demonstrates that the contractile response to I could be repeated three
times without a significant change in the response. The contraction was
also not altered by the solvents used to dilute the drugs employed in
these experiments. Neither time nor solvents produced any change in the
initial relaxation response (data not shown). As shown in Fig.
7, HEPES buffer, which inhibits
Cl/HCO
3 exchange by being
HCO
3 free, had no effect on the
relaxation response to I (control 245 ± 17 mg, treated 254 ± 32 mg)
but almost completely blocked the contractile response to I (control
101.4 ± 6.1%, treated 11.2 ± 7.8%). Bumetanide, which inhibits
Na-K-2Cl cotransport, did not significantly alter either the relaxation
(control 245 ± 34 mg, treated 250 ± 35 mg) or the contraction
(control 95.2 ± 4.8%, treated 80.5 ± 15.2%) to I. We have
previously demonstrated that HEPES buffer inhibits the contractile
response to NE but does not affect responses to KCl in any way. The
effect of HEPES buffer on responses to NE is absent when both HEPES and
HCO
3 are present, suggesting that the
effect is due to the absence of HCO
3 not the presence of HEPES (23). The results obtained with HEPES and
bumetanide suggest that I is taken up by VSM cells via anion exchange
and that the ability of I to cause contraction is dependent on I
getting into VSM cells.
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Three different Cl channel blockers significantly inhibited contractile
responses to 130 mM I but none of them inhibited the initial relaxation
(Fig. 7). Niflumic acid at 10
5 M
(control contraction 90.7 ± 9.7%, treated contraction 28.0 ± 20.8%, control relaxation 383 ± 31.8 mg, treated relaxation 367 ± 21.6 mg) and tamoxifen (control contraction 98.9 ± 8.7%, treated
contraction 47.4 ± 13.3%, control relaxation 238 ± 21 mg, treated
relaxation 220 ± 20 mg) partially inhibited contraction to I. Niflumic acid at 10
4 M (control
contraction 101.6 ± 17.0%, treated contraction
9.3 ± 1.4%, control relaxation 208 ± 33 mg, treated relaxation 287 ± 28 mg) and 10
4 M DIDS (control
contraction 98.1 ± 15.7%, treated contraction
12.9 ± 1.1%,
control relaxation 347 ± 45.5 mg, treated relaxation 417 ± 20.4 mg)
inhibited contraction completely. We have demonstrated previously that
10
3 M DIDS and
10
5 M tamoxifen do not alter KCl-induced
contraction of rat aortas (23), whereas
10
4 M niflumic acid inhibits the
response by ~50%. We therefore used niflumic acid at both
10
5 and
10
4 M. Niflumic acid does not inhibit
calcium current directly at 10
5 M (25).
These data suggest that the contractile effect of I is not likely to be
due to direct activation of calcium channels and must require
depolarization. This depolarization appears to be Cl-channel dependent.
The requirement for endothelium removal to induce contractile responses
to I suggested that the anion channels responsible for the depolarizing
response to I were under the regulatory control of the endothelium. We
used inhibitors of known pathways for the production of
endothelium-dependent vasodilators in an attempt to mimic the effect of
rubbing and to determine what endothelial factor is involved. Intact
rings were treated with indomethacin (10
6 M), an inhibitor of cyclooxygenase
and therefore prostacyclin production, ODYA
(10
5 M), an inhibitor of cytochrome
P-450 metabolism and putative inhibitor of endothelium-derived
hyperpolarizing factor production, or L-NNA
(10
4 M), an inhibitor of nitric oxide
synthase. These compounds were used both alone or in combination
(n = 3 for all groups). None of these interventions duplicated
the effect of rubbing on the contractile phase of the response to I
(Fig. 8). Contractions tended to be larger
whenever L-NNA was used, and when the L-NNA results were pooled from all combinations that included
L-NNA (n = 9 rings from 3 rats) a significant
effect can be demonstrated (control 7.0 ± 1.9%, L-NNA
treated 15.5 ± 2.1%, P < 0.05). Although this result
reaches statistical significance, the response to 130 mM I in the
presence of L-NNA is not nearly as large as that obtained
after rubbing.
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The small magnitude of the effect of L-NNA suggested that
rather than specifically regulating the ion channels responsible for
I-mediated depolarization, inhibition of resting nitric oxide production might be nonspecifically increasing vascular reactivity. This effect could be mediated by releasing a tonic inhibitory effect on
voltage-dependent calcium (34) or potassium (1) channels. To evaluate
the role of nitric oxide in another way, ODQ was used to inhibit
NO-mediated activation of soluble guanylate cyclase (Fig. 8).
Pretreatment with ODQ (10
6 M) did not
alter the contractile response of aortic rings to NaI (control 3.3 ± 3.4%, treated 2.7 ± 1.1%). This concentration of ODQ was very
effective at reversing the vasodilator effect of nitric oxide
(detaNONOate,
10
6-10
4
M). On the basis of these results the ability of nitric oxide synthase
inhibition to induce small contractile responses to I in intact rings
is not due to an ability to reduce cGMP levels. Finally, to eliminate
the possibility that a stored form of nitric oxide was involved in
endothelial suppression of responses to I,
10
5 M hemoglobin was used as an nitric
oxide scavenger. Three intact rings underwent a control exposure to I
followed by a 10-min incubation in hemoglobin. The rings were then
reexposed to I. No significant contractile response to I was seen in
the presence of hemoglobin (control
2.1 ± 1.2%, treated
4.2 ± 2.4%).
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DISCUSSION |
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The response of isolated blood vessels to anion substitution occurs in
two phases. An initial relaxation response is endothelium independent
and related to both the anion used [I > Br, not seen with
methanesulfonate (24)] and its concentration. This relaxation is
not voltage-sensitive calcium channel or Cl channel dependent as it was
not altered by nifedipine or by Cl channel blockers. The contractile
phase of the response to I is also concentration dependent and elicited
by I > Br. This contraction is not induced by an endothelial factor
and is in fact prevented by the presence of an intact endothelium.
I-induced contraction can be inhibited by calcium channel (nifedipine)
or Cl channel (niflumic acid, tamoxifen, DIDS) blockers and by
interruption of Cl/HCO
3 exchange. The
induction of a contractile response to I by mechanical endothelial
disruption cannot be mimicked by drugs that inhibit the production of
known endothelial vasodilators (NO, prostaglandins, P-450
metabolites). These results are best explained by the hypothesis that
VSM cells take up I via an anion exchanger and subsequent I efflux
through anion channels produces depolarization, which is sufficient to
activate voltage-sensitive calcium channels. It will be important to
directly measure the effect of I substitution on membrane potential in
future experiments.
Anion-induced relaxation occurs in rings having no evident myogenic or
vasoconstrictor-induced tone. This relaxation was not seen when Cl was
replaced with the impermeable anion methanesulfonate (23). A similar
response was observed when thiocyanate anions were used as a Cl
substitute by other investigators (42, 43). Neither calcium-free buffer
nor nifedipine duplicate this effect of anion substitution. These data
suggest that the ability of I or Br substitution to suppress the
initial contractile response to NE is not due to membrane
hyperpolarization as we previously hypothesized (23). I could either
inhibit active but calcium-independent tone (35) or somehow alter the
elastic properties of these isolated vessels. The immediate onset of
relaxation and lack of inhibition by anion uptake blockade
(HCO
3-free bumetanide) suggest that the initial site of action of the relaxant effect of I is extracellular.
The replacement of extracellular Cl with gluconate inhibits
Cl/HCO
3 exchange and produces VSM cell
alkalinization (4, 27). This effect is not seen in HEPES buffer and
requires 10-20 min to complete. This time course is consistent
with that of the onset of I-induced contraction; however, this pH
change was not associated with contraction of human subcutaneous small arteries (4). If a pH change is directly responsible for the contractile effects of anion substitution, then contraction should be
inversely proportional to the ability of the substitute anion to
replace Cl as a substrate for the anion exchanger. The Na-independent anion exchangers expressed in rat aortic VSM cells are AE2 and AE3 (2).
There are limited data regarding the anion selectivity of these
proteins; however, AE2 expressed in Xenopus oocytes has a
diminished ability to transport I compared with Cl (15). The same is
true of the erythrocyte band 3 protein (AE1), and I is a worse
substrate than Br (32). Although no data are available, one would
predict that methanesulfonate, like gluconate, would be an extremely
poor substrate for the anion exchanger, yet this anion causes only
small and inconsistent late contractions (Fig. 4 and Ref. 24). Although
a change in pH may occur with I substitution and may be important, it
seems unlikely that alkalosis is the primary mechanism of the
vasoconstrictor effect of I.
Contraction to I is likely to depend not only on the removal of
extracellular Cl but also intracellular accumulation of the substitute
anion. Nearly complete replacement of Cl (130 mM I, 7.9 mM Cl) is
required to elicit a full contractile response to I. This suggests that
a relatively high intracellular concentration of I is required to
induce the response. This conclusion is supported by the large leftward
shift in the concentration-response relationship that is observed when
methanesulfonate is used to limit alternative anions for uptake. The
ability of HEPES buffer to inhibit the contraction suggests that
HCO
3-dependent anion exchange is
important for I uptake. Decreased efficiency of anion exchange in the
presence of I may account for the significant time delay before the
onset of contraction as intracellular Cl is progressively replaced with
I. The time required for I to induce contraction of resting tissues is
much longer than the time required for I to potentiate NE-induced
contraction. This may be due to the ability of catecholamines to
accelerate inward anion transport (9). The lack of an effect of
bumetanide on I-induced contraction suggests that this transporter does
not play a major role in inward I transport in these tissues.
Once VSM cells are loaded with I or Br, efflux through anion channels will result in a depolarizing current. VSM has a significant resting Cl conductance, with estimates of relative permeability at rest for K and Cl (Cl/K) varying from 0.09 in the rat femoral artery (5) to 0.82 in rat portal vein (39). No data are available comparing anion permeability in endothelium-intact vs. denuded tissues. ICl,vol channels have a relative permeability for I compared with Cl (PI/PCl) of 1.5-2 (29, 36, 40), whereas for ICl,Ca the ratio is 3.5 (26). Therefore if the anion gradients are equal, the depolarizing current produced under resting conditions by I efflux will exceed that produced by Cl efflux through the same number of open channels. If the total anion conductance at any given time produces sufficient depolarization to reach threshold for activation of voltage-sensitive calcium channels, contraction will occur. Replacement of Cl with thiocyanate (highly permeant anion) in unstimulated cells produced a significant outward current in rabbit pulmonary artery cells (13) and caused contraction of rat aortic rings (42). In resting, endothelium-intact aortic rings, anion conductance is apparently not high enough to cause contraction after I loading. However, NE activates a Cl conductance that contributes to depolarization (3) and contraction (23). Replacing Cl with a more permeable anion appears to augment this response. It seems remarkable, however, that rubbed rings contract so vigorously to anion substitution alone. Endothelium disruption may uncover a previously inactive VSM anion conductance. This conclusion is supported by previous experiments demonstrating that only rubbed rings contract when the outward Cl gradient is suddenly augmented by Cl replacement with methanesulfonate (24).
The two anion conductances that are likely to account for resting Cl
permeability in VSM are ICl,vol and
ICl,Ca. The ability of tamoxifen to partially
inhibit I-induced contraction suggests that ICl,vol
contributes significantly to resting anion conductance. This conclusion
is supported by the ability of tamoxifen to decrease the holding
current of isolated rabbit portal vein VSM cells held at
50 mV
(12). It has been speculated that ICl,vol may be
activated by mechanical stretch, allowing the passive tension placed on the rings to provide basal activation of this current (12, 28, 41). An
ICl,vol has been recorded from VSM cells and may be encoded by the ClC-3 gene (11, 41). ClC-3 is the most highly expressed
member of the ClC chloride channel gene family in human aortic VSM
(22). The inability of tamoxifen to completely inhibit the response to
I suggests that other anion channels are involved. ICl,Ca is selectively inhibited by
10
5 M niflumic acid
[IC50 ~5 × 10
6
M (Ref. 14)]. At a higher niflumic acid concentration
(10
4 M), ICl,vol is
likely to also be partially inhibited [IC50 ~1 × 10
4 M (Ref. 12)]. The
ability of niflumic acid to partially inhibit I-induced contraction at
10
5 M and to completely block it at
10
4 M suggests that in rubbed rings,
both ICl,Ca and ICl,vol are active at rest. The activity of ICl,Ca may be
accounted for by periodic activation of spontaneous transient inward Cl
currents due to release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum
(40). There is evidence to suggest that these events occur not only in
isolated cells but also in whole tissue preparations (37). There is
evidence that anion channel activity is regulated by the intracellular
concentration of the permeant anion (10, 17), but there are no data
available regarding the relative ability of alternative anions to
induce these changes. In the current experiments the substitute anion
may not only permeate anion channels more readily but could also
contribute to an increase in anion conductance. Any pH change
associated with anion replacement could also alter the probability of
opening of VSM anion channels.
The ability of Cl channel blockers to inhibit the contractile response to I suggests that outward I movement (inward current) produces depolarization, activates voltage-dependent calcium channels, and induces contraction. Alternative explanations must be considered and include that these compounds 1) inhibit calcium channels directly, 2) interfere with some other mechanism of depolarization activated by I such as inhibition of potassium channels or activation of nonselective cation channels, or 3) inhibit anion exchange. DIDS and niflumic acid did not alter voltage-dependent calcium currents measured by patch-clamp recording from rabbit coronary artery myocytes (25). In addition, neither DIDS nor tamoxifen had any effect on contractile responses to submaximal (38 mM) potassium-induced depolarization of rat aortic rings (23). Niflumic acid also did not alter contractile responses of rat aortic rings to 25 mM KCl, which were completely relaxed by the potassium channel activator levcromakalim (7). These data suggest that these inhibitors do not alter VSM contraction by blocking calcium channels. Patch-clamp recording of rabbit portal vein myocytes demonstrated that niflumic acid did not alter either spontaneous calcium-activated potassium currents or catecholamine-induced nonselective cation currents (14). It is possible that the inhibitory effect of DIDS and niflumic acid on I-induced contraction are at least partially related to inhibition of anion exchange. Although DIDS has been demonstrated to inhibit anion exchange in VSM (8), the data for niflumic acid are more limited and are entirely based on interactions with AE1 (32). The relative ability of these agents to block Cl channels vs. inhibit anion exchange is difficult to quantify. Both actions may contribute to inhibition of I-induced contraction. We can find no evidence from the literature that tamoxifen inhibits anion exchange, but this possibility cannot be dismissed.
Endothelial disruption is required to induce a contractile response to I or Br. Rubbing may remove an endothelial factor that inhibits anion conductance. We have been unable to identify a critical factor by using inhibitors of endothelial vasodilator production (L-NNA, indomethacin, ODYA) on intact rings. Nitric oxide and prostaglandins do not appear to be involved. By definition such a factor would be an endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor in that it prevents I-induced depolarization; however, it does not appear to be a P-450 metabolite. It is possible that the response to I is induced by VSM damage related to the rubbing process. It is difficult to assess the significance of any injury to VSM cells induced by endothelial denuding. The mean maximal force-generating capacity of the denuded rings was slightly diminished, suggesting that some VSM damage occurred. However, there was no correlation between force-generating capacity (response to 90 mM KCl) and the size of the response to I either in the rubbed rings or in the intact rings, which are also at risk for partial endothelial and VSM injury during handling. The effect of rubbing could also be caused by loss of physical contact between the endothelium and the underlying VSM (16).
In summary, these data suggest that isolated rat aortic VSM has a significant resting anion current which is larger when the endothelium is absent. When the cells are loaded with I, this anion current can produce sufficient depolarization to result in a large contractile response. Both ICl,vol and ICl,Ca seem to contribute to this current. I-induced contractions may provide a useful bioassay for future study of the regulation of vascular anion channels. The mechanism by which endothelial cells control VSM anion current may be an important determinant of contractility. The withdrawal of this influence could play a critical role in the increase in vascular reactivity that accompanies endothelial damage.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This work was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grant HL-62483 and by a grant from the American Heart Association, Iowa Affiliate.
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FOOTNOTES |
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A preliminary account of this work was previously presented in abstract form (21).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: F. S. Lamb, Dept. of Pediatrics, 5040-B RCP Univ. of Iowa Hospitals, Iowa City, IA 52242 (E-mail: fred-lamb{at}uiowa.edu).
Received 12 August 1999; accepted in final form 4 November 1999.
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