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Abstract
We studied the effect of acute hypoxia on the cytosolic calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) of fetal vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC) from late gestation fetal lambs. We tested the following hypotheses: 1) fetal pulmonary artery (PA) SMC sense hypoxia; 2) hypoxia stimulates transmembrane Ca2+ influx causing increased basal [Ca2+]i and Ca2+ responses to pharmacological vasoconstrictors; and 3) the response is unique to SMC from small (near resistance) PA. Fetal SMC were isolated from the proximal and distal pulmonary (DPA) and carotid arteries of late-gestation ovine fetuses, maintained in culture for 5-14 days prior to study, and studied with dual-excitation microfluorimetry using fura 2. Acute hypoxia caused a 233% increase in [Ca2+]i in distal PA SMC (P < 0.01), which was absent in low extracellular calcium bath. [Ca2+]i increased transiently in normoxic DPA SMC treated with angiotensin II, and oscillations in [Ca2+]i occurred (amplitude > or = 30 nM). In hypoxic DPA SMC the increase in [Ca2+]i was sustained and oscillations were attenuated or absent. [Ca2+]i in proximal PA SMC did not change with exposure to acute hypoxia and carotid artery SMC [Ca2+]i decreased by 13% (P < 0.05). We conclude that fetal SMC isolated from the DPA of late-gestation ovine fetuses directly sense decreased oxygen tension with an increase in [Ca2+]i that is dependent on the entry of extracellular Ca2+.
View details for Web of Science ID A1993LP43100098
View details for PubMedID 8338182