1. Vanilloid type 1 receptor and the acid-sensing ion channel mediate acid phosphate activation of muscle afferent nerves in rats.
- Author
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Zhaohui Gao, Henig, Oze, Kehoe, Valerie, Sinoway, Lawrence I., and Jianhua Li
- Subjects
MUSCLES ,ION channels ,SUPERPHOSPHATES ,MUSCLE contraction ,PHYSIOLOGY ,RATS - Abstract
Reflex cardiovascular responses to contracting skeletal muscle are mediated by mechanical and metabolic stimulation of thin-fiber muscle afferents. Diprotonated phosphate (H
2 PO4 - ) excites those thin-fiber nerves and evokes the muscle pressor reflex. The receptors mediating this response are unknown. Thus we examined the role played by purinergic receptors, vanilloid type 1 receptors (VR1), and acid-sensing ion channels (ASIC) in mediating H2 PO4 - -evoked pressor responses. Phosphate and blocking agents were injected into the arterial blood supply of the hindlimb muscles of 53 decerebrated rats. H2 PO4 - (86 mM, pH 6.0) increased mean arterial pressure by 25 ± 2 mmHg, whereas monoprotonated phosphate (HPO4 2- , pH 7.5) had no effect. Pyridoxalphosphate-6-azophenyl-2′,4′-disulfonic acid (a purinergic receptor antagonist, 2 mM) did not block the response. However, capsazepine (a VR1 antagonist, 1 mg/kg) attenuated the reflex by 60% and amiloride (an ASIC blocker, 6 μg/kg) by 52%. Of note, the H2 PO4 - -induced pressor response was attenuated by 87% when both capsazepine and amiloride were injected before the H2 PO4 - . In conclusion, VR1 and ASIC mediate the pressor response due to H2 PO4 - . The H2 PO4 - -evoked response was greater when VR1 and ASIC blockers were given simultaneously than when the respective blockers were given separately. Our laboratory's previous study has shown that H+ stimulates ASIC (but not VR1) on thin-fiber afferent nerves in evoking the reflex response. Thus VR1 and ASIC are likely to play a coordinated and interactive role in processing the muscle afferent response to H2 PO4 - . Furthermore, the physiological mechanisms mediating the response to H+ and H2 PO4 - are likely to be different. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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