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Non-additive interactions between mitochondrial complex IV blockers and hypoxia in rat carotid body responses. | LitMetric

Non-additive interactions between mitochondrial complex IV blockers and hypoxia in rat carotid body responses.

Respir Physiol Neurobiol

Department of Pediatrics, Division of Respiratory Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520, USA. Electronic address:

Published: January 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The metabolic hypothesis suggests that a decrease in ATP production triggers activation of carotid body chemoreceptors during hypoxia.
  • Pretreatment with low doses of sodium cyanide reduced the nerve response and catecholamine release during hypoxia, indicating that cyanide impairs the connection between calcium rise and neurotransmitter release.
  • A PKC blocker was able to reverse cyanide's inhibitory effects, highlighting a regulatory step that modulates chemoreceptor responsiveness beyond the calcium response in glomus cells.

Article Abstract

The metabolic hypothesis of carotid body chemoreceptor hypoxia transduction proposes an impairment of ATP production as the signal for activation. We hypothesized that mitochondrial complex IV blockers and hypoxia would act synergistically in exciting afferent nerve activity. Following a pre-treatment with low dosage sodium cyanide (10-20μM), the hypoxia-induced nerve response was significantly reduced along with hypoxia-induced catecholamine release. However, in isolated glomus cells, the intracellular calcium response was enhanced as initially predicted. This suggests a cyanide-mediated impairment in the step between the glomus cell intracellular calcium rise and neurotransmitter release from secretory vesicles. Administration of a PKC blocker largely reversed the inhibitory actions of cyanide on the neural response. We conclude that the expected synergism between cyanide and hypoxia occurs at the level of glomus cell intracellular calcium but not at downstream steps due to a PKC-dependent inhibition of secretion. This suggests that at least one regulatory step beyond the glomus cell calcium response may modulate the magnitude of chemoreceptor responsiveness.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3849127PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resp.2013.09.009DOI Listing

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