Abstract

Electrical field stimulation (EFS) produced relaxation of contracted arteries in the presence of tetrodotoxin. In the present study the contributions of vascular smooth muscle repolarization and endothelial release of nitric oxide to the relaxation response were investigated using isolated rat tail arteries and bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC). Intact and endothelium-denuded rings or intact, pressurized artery segments were contracted with either phenylephrine or KCl prior to EFS. Electrical field stimulation induced a small relaxation in denuded, phenylephrine contracted rings that was inhibited by the K+ channel blockers glibenclamide and BaCl2. In intact, phenylephrine-contracted rings, EFS induced significantly larger relaxations that were inhibited by BaCl2 as well as by L-NAME, an inhibitor of nitric oxide (NO) synthase, and methylene blue. EFS-induced relaxations were completely inhibited when BaCl2 and L-NAME or methylene blue were combined. Exposure to Ca(2+)-free buffer or diltiazem also inhibited the relaxation while ascorbic acid had no effect. Effluent from electrically stimulated BAEC caused denuded, phenylephrine contracted rings to relax. The ability of the effluent to cause relaxation was almost completely blocked by exposure of the BAEC to L-NAME or exposure of the recipient vascular smooth muscle to methylene blue; glibenclamide caused partial blockade. Simultaneous measurements of membrane potential and intraluminal pressure showed that EFS-induced membrane repolarization preceded changes in steady-state pressure. It is concluded that (1) the smooth muscle cells possess an endothelium-independent repolarization mechanism, (2) EFS causes endothelial cells of intact arteries to release NO and possibly a hyperpolarizing factor, (3) EFS of BAEC causes release of NO, and (4) EFS-induced relaxation depends on vascular smooth muscle cell membrane repolarization and endothelial cell release of vasoactive substances.

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