Abstract
Histamine stimulation of swine carotid artery induces both contraction and actin polymerization. The importance of stimulus-induced actin polymerization is not known. Tyrosine phosphorylation of the scaffolding protein paxillin is thought to be an important regulator of actin polymerization. Noise temperature, hysteresivity, and phase angle are rheological measures of the fluidity of a tissue, i.e., whether the muscle is more a "Hookean solid" or a "Newtonian liquid." Y118 paxillin phosphorylation, crossbridge phosphorylation, actin polymerization, noise temperature, hysteresivity, phase angle, real stiffness, and stress were measured in intact swine carotid arteries that were depolarized with high K(+) or stimulated with histamine. The initial rapid force development phase of high-K(+) or histamine-induced contraction was associated with increased crossbridge phosphorylation but no significant change in Y118 paxillin phosphorylation, actin polymerization, noise temperature, hysteresivity, or phase angle. This suggests that the initial contraction was caused by the increase in crossbridge phosphorylation and did not alter the tissue's rheology. Only after full force development was there a significant increase in Y118 paxillin phosphorylation and actin polymerization associated with a significant decrease in noise temperature and hysteresivity. These data suggest that some part of the sustained contraction may depend on stimulated actin polymerization and/or a transition to a more "solid" rheology. Supporting this contention was the finding that an inhibitor of actin polymerization, latrunculin-A, reduced force while increasing noise temperature/hysteresivity. Further research is needed to determine whether Y118 paxillin phosphorylation, actin polymerization, and changes in rheology could have a role in arterial smooth muscle contraction.
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