P2 purinoceptor‐mediated control of rat cerebral (pial) microvasculature; contribution of P2X and P2Y receptors
- 1 September 2000
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 527 (2) , 315-324
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7793.2000.00315.x
Abstract
Purine and pyrimidine nucleotides evoke changes in the vascular tone of medium to large cerebral vessels through the activation of P2 purinoceptors. We have applied P2 receptor drugs to rat pial arterioles and measured changes in arteriole diameter (o.d. 40-84 micrometer at rest), and recorded currents from arteriolar smooth muscle cells using patch-clamp techniques. Transient vasoconstrictions and rapidly inactivating currents were evoked by alpha,beta-methylene ATP (0.1-30 micrometer) and were sensitive to the P2 receptor antagonists suramin and iso-PPADS. UTP and UDP (0.1-1000 micrometer) evoked sustained suramin-sensitive vasoconstrictions. ATP (0.1-1000 micrometer) and 2-methylthioATP (2MeSATP, 300 micrometer) evoked transient vasoconstrictions followed by sustained vasodilatations. ADP application resulted in only vasodilatation (EC50 approximately 4 micrometer). Vasodilator responses to ATP, 2MeSATP or ADP were unaffected by suramin (100 micrometer). RT-PCR analysis indicated that P2X1-7 and P2Y1,2,6 RNA can be amplified from the pial sheet. Our results provide direct evidence for the presence of functional P2X receptors with a phenotype resembling the P2X1 receptor subtype on cerebral resistance arterioles. The pharmacological properties of the pyrimidine-evoked responses suggest that a combination of P2Y2- and P2Y6-like receptors are responsible for the sustained vasoconstrictions. It is therefore likely that the nucleotides and their associated receptors are involved in a complicated regulatory system to control cerebral blood pressure.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- The P2Y1 receptor closes the N‐type Ca2+ channel in neurones, with both adenosine triphosphates and diphosphates as potent agonistsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 2000
- Evidence that rat hepatocytes co‐express functional P2Y1 and P2Y2 receptorsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 2000
- Dual coupling of heterologously-expressed rat P2Y6 nucleotide receptors to N-type Ca2+ and M-type K+ currents in rat sympathetic neuronesBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1999
- 2′,3′‐O‐(2,4,6‐ trinitrophenyl) adenosine 5′‐triphosphate (TNP‐ATP)–a nanomolar affinity antagonist at rat mesenteric artery P2X receptor ion channelsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1998
- Phenotype Changes of the Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Regulate P2 Receptor Expression as Measured by Quantitative RT-PCRBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1998
- Molecular cloning and characterization of rat P2Y4 nucleotide receptorBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1998
- UTP induces vascular responses in the isolated and perfused canine epicardial coronary artery via UTP-preferring P2Y receptorsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1997
- Diadenosine phosphates and the physiological control of blood pressureNature, 1994
- Subcellular Distribution Studies of Diadenosine Polyphosphates—Ap4A and Ap5A—in Bovine Adrenal Medulla: Presence in Chromaffin GranulesJournal of Neurochemistry, 1988
- Prolonged contraction of isolated human and canine cerebral arteries induced by uridine 5'-triphosphate.Stroke, 1978