Pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein mediates coronary microvascular control during autoregulation and ischemia in canine heart

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Abstract

GTP-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) regulate various biological functions, but their participation in controlling coronary microvascular tone has not been established yet. The goal of the present study was to elucidate the role of pertussis toxin (PTX)-sensitive G protein in regulating coronary microvascular tone during autoregulation and ischemia. In 42 open-chest dogs, coronary arterial microvessels on the surface of the left ventricle were directly observed by epi-illuminated fluorescence microangiography using a floating objective system. PTX (300 ng/mL) was superfused onto the surface of the left ventricle for 2 hours to block G(i) and G(o) protein in epimyocardial coronary microvessels in vivo. PTX superfusion caused no change in the resting diameters of microvessels and significantly blocked the vasoconstriction induced by BHT 920 (a selective α2-agonist). After pretreatment with PTX or its vehicle, the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) was occluded by a hydraulic occluder to reduce coronary perfusion pressure (CPP) in a stepwise fashion. A mild stenosis (CPP, 60 mm Hg), a severe stenosis (CPP, .40 mm Hg), and complete occlusion were sequentially produced. Coronary flow velocity in the LAD distal to the stenotic site was continuously monitored. In both PTX and vehicle groups, flow velocity did not significantly decrease during mild stenosis, proving that transmural coronary autoregulatory function was well preserved in the preparation. During severe stenosis and complete occlusion, the coronary flow velocity significantly decreased. In the vehicle group microvessels <100 μm in inner diameter significantly dilated in response to the reduction in perfusion pressure (mild stenosis, 6.2±1.9%; severe stenosis, 21.1±4.4%; and complete occlusion, 16.8±5.9%; P

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Komaru, T., Wang, Y., Akai, K., Sato, K., Sekiguchi, N., Sugimura, A., … Shirato, K. (1994). Pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein mediates coronary microvascular control during autoregulation and ischemia in canine heart. Circulation Research, 75(3), 556–566. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.75.3.556

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