Hypoxia and N6,O2'-dibutyryladenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate, but not nerve growth factor, induce Na+ channels and hypertrophy in chromaffin-like arterial chemoreceptors.
- 15 October 1992
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 89 (20) , 9469-9473
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.89.20.9469
Abstract
Chronic hypoxia sensitizes the ventilatory reflex in mammals and causes enlargement of the carotid body, a peripheral arterial chemosensory organ. To investigate possible underlying mechanisms, in the absence of circulatory changes, we exposed cultures of dissociated rat carotid body containing the oxygen sensors (i.e., chromaffin-like glomus cells) to chronic hypoxia (6% O2) over a period of 2 weeks. After a delay of a few days, the Na+ current density in hypoxia-treated glomus cells increased significantly, reaching values up to 6 times that seen in normoxic (20% O2) controls. In addition the whole-cell capacitance, an indicator of cell size, was also significantly larger (3-4 times control) in glomus cells exposed to chronic hypoxia. Both effects were mimicked qualitatively by chronic treatment of normoxic cultures with N6,O2'-dibutyryladenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate, but not nerve growth factor, which is known to induce similar changes in the chromaffin cell line PC12. Thus, the physiological and morphological effects of chronic hypoxia on the carotid body in vivo may be due in part to a cAMP-mediated stimulation of Na+ channel expression and hypertrophy in the chemosensory glomus cells.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Whole-cell and perforated-patch recordings from O2-sensitive rat carotid body cells grown in short- and long-term culturePflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1991
- Carbonic anhydrase and neuronal enzymes in cultured glomus cells of the carotid body of the ratCell and tissue research, 1990
- Nerve growth factor acts through cAMP-dependent protein kinase to increase the number of sodium channels in PC12 cellsNeuron, 1990
- Evidence for a PO2‐sensitive K+ channel in the type‐I cell of the rabbit carotid bodyFEBS Letters, 1989
- Electrical activity, cAMP, and cytosolic calcium regulate mRNA encoding sodium channel α subunits in rat muscle cellsNeuron, 1989
- Chemotransduction in the Carotid Body: K + Current Modulated by P O 2 In Type I Chemoreceptor CellsScience, 1988
- Membrane potential of cultured carotid body glomus cells under normoxia and hypoxiaBrain Research, 1984
- Demonstration of the neural crest origin of type I (APUD) cells in the avian carotid body, using a cytochemical marker systemHistochemistry and Cell Biology, 1973
- The carotid body in animals at high altitudeThe Journal of Pathology, 1971
- The carotid body in emphysema and left ventricular hypertrophyThe Journal of Pathology, 1971