AI Article Synopsis

  • Prostaglandin E (PGE) is thought to help regulate blood flow in the brain by dilating arterioles through EP4 receptors, but previous evidence suggests it may cause constriction via EP1 receptors instead.
  • Recent experiments demonstrated that applying PGE to capillaries leads to dilation of upstream arterioles, with a critical concentration required for this effect and partial inhibition by blocking certain ion channels.
  • A genetic mouse model with cerebral small vessel disease showed diminished responses to PGE stimulation, reinforcing the idea that capillaries play a central role in mediating blood flow responses in the brain.

Article Abstract

Prostaglandin E (PGE) has been widely proposed to mediate neurovascular coupling by dilating brain parenchymal arterioles through activation of prostanoid EP4 receptors. However, our previous report that direct application of PGE induces an EP1-mediated constriction strongly argues against its direct action on arterioles during neurovascular coupling, the mechanisms sustaining functional hyperemia. Recent advances have highlighted the role of capillaries in sensing neuronal activity and propagating vasodilatory signals to the upstream penetrating parenchymal arteriole. Here, we examined the effect of capillary stimulation with PGE on upstream arteriolar diameter using an capillary-parenchymal arteriole preparation and cerebral blood flow measurements with two-photon laser-scanning microscopy. We found that PGE caused upstream arteriolar dilation when applied onto capillaries with an EC of 70 nM. The response was inhibited by EP1 receptor antagonist and was greatly reduced, but not abolished, by blocking the strong inward-rectifier K channel. We further observed a blunted dilatory response to capillary stimulation with PGE in a genetic mouse model of cerebral small vessel disease with impaired functional hyperemia. This evidence casts previous findings in a different light, indicating that capillaries are the locus of PGE action to induce upstream arteriolar dilation in the control of brain blood flow, thereby providing a paradigm-shifting view that nonetheless remains coherent with the broad contours of a substantial body of existing literature.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8414797PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2021.695965DOI Listing

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