The dynamic activity of afferent arteriolar diameter (AAD) and blood flow (AABF) responses to a rapid step increase in renal arterial pressure (100-148 mmHg) was examined in the kidneys of normal Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 11) before [tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF)-intact] and after interruption of distal tubular flow (TGF-independent). Utilizing the in vitro blood-perfused juxtamedullary nephron preparation, fluctuations in AAD and erythrocyte velocity were sampled by using analog-to-digital computerized conversion, video microscopy, image shearing, and fast-frame, slow-frame techniques. These assessments enabled dynamic characterization of the autonomous actions and collective interactions between the myogenic and TGF mechanisms at the level of the afferent arteriole. The TGF-intact and TGF-independent systems exhibited common initial (0-24 vs. 0-13 s, respectively) response slope kinetics (-0.53 vs. -0.47% ΔAAD/s; respectively) yet different maximum vasoconstrictive magnitude (-11.28 ± 0.1 vs. -7.02 ± 0.9% ΔAAD; P < 0.05, respectively). The initial AABF responses similarly exhibited similar kinetics but differing magnitudes. In contrast, during the sustained pressure input (13-97 s), the maximum vasoconstrictor magnitude (-7.02 ± 0.9% ΔAAD) and kinetics (-0.01% ΔAAD/s) of the TGF-independent system were markedly blunted whereas the TGF-intact system exhibited continued vasoconstriction with slower kinetics (-0.20% ΔAAD/s) until a steady-state plateau was reached (-25.9 ± 0.4% ΔAAD). Thus the TGF mechanism plays a role in both direct mediation of vasoconstriction and in modulation of the myogenic response.
CITATION STYLE
Walker, M., Harrison-Bernard, L. M., Cook, A. K., & Navar, L. G. (2000). Dynamic interaction between myogenic and TGF mechanisms in afferent arteriolar blood flow autoregulation. American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology, 279(5 48-5). https://doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.2000.279.5.f858
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