Mechanosensitive cation channels such as Piezo1 and Piezo2 are activated by mechanical force like a starched wall of the aorta while blood pressure (BP) rising, which helps to elucidate the underlying mechanism of mechanotransduction of baroreceptor endings. In this study we investigated how Piezo1 channel activation-mediated gender- and afferent-specific BP regulation in rats. We established high-fat diet and fructose drink-induced hypertension model rats (HFD-HTN) and deoxycorticosterone (DOCA)-sensitive hypertension model rats. We showed that the expression levels of Piezo1 and Piezo2 were significantly up-regulated in left ventricle of HFD and DOCA hypertensive rats, whereas the down-regulation of Piezo1 was likely to be compensated by Piezo2 up-regulation in the aorta. Likewise, down-regulated Piezo1 was observed in the nodose ganglion (NG), while up-regulated Piezo2 was found in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), which might synergistically reduce the excitatory neurotransmitter release from the presynaptic membrane. Notably, microinjection of Yoda1 (0.025-2.5 mg/ml) into the NG concentration-dependently reduced BP in both hypertensive rat models as well as in control rats with similar EC; the effect of Yoda1 was abolished by microinjection of a Piezo1 antagonist GsMTx4 (1.0 μM). Functional analysis in an in vitro aortic arch preparation showed that instantaneous firing frequency of single Ah-fiber of aortic depressor nerve was dramatically increased by Yoda1 (0.03-1.0 μM) and blocked by GsMTx4 (1.0 μM). Moreover, spontaneous synaptic currents recorded from identified 2nd-order Ah-type baroreceptive neurons in the NTS was also facilitated over 100% by Yoda1 (1.0 μM) and completely blocked by GsMTx4 (3.0 μM). These results demonstrate that Piezo1 expressed on Ah-type baroreceptor and baroreceptive neurons in the NG and NTS plays a key role in a sexual-dimorphic BP regulation under physiological and hypertensive condition through facilitation of baroreflex afferent neurotransmission, which is presumably collaborated by Piezo2 expression at different level of baroreflex afferent pathway via compensatory and synergistic mechanisms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41401-023-01154-y | DOI Listing |
J Physiol
December 2024
Daniel Baugh Institute for Functional Genomics and Computational Biology, Department of Pathology and Genomic Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Loss of cardiac physiological function following myocardial infarction (MI) is accompanied by neural adaptations in the baroreflex that are compensatory in the short term, but then become associated with long-term disease progression. One marker of these adaptations is decreased baroreflex sensitivity, a strong predictor of post-MI mortality. The relative contributions of cardiac remodelling and neural adaptation in the sensory, central brainstem and peripheral ganglionic loci to baroreflex sensitivity changes remain underexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Electrocardiol
January 2025
Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, IA, United States of America.
Neurocardiology is a broad interdisciplinary specialty investigating how the cardiovascular and nervous systems interact. In this brief introductory review, we describe several key aspects of this interaction with specific attention to cardiovascular effects. The review introduces basic anatomy and discusses physiological mechanisms and effects that play crucial roles in the interaction of the cardiovascular and nervous systems, namely: the cardiac neuraxis, the taxonomy of the nervous system, integration of sensory input in the brainstem, influences of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) on heart and vasculature, the neural pathways and functioning of the arterial baroreflex, receptors and ANS effects in the walls of blood vessels, receptors and ANS effects in excitable cells in the heart, ANS effects on heart rate and sympathovagal balance, endo-epicardial inhomogeneity, ANS effects with a balanced vagal and sympathetic stimulation, sympathovagal interaction, arterial baroreflex, baroreflex sensitivity and heart rate variability, arrhythmias and the arterial baroreflex, the cardiopulmonary baroreflex, the exercise pressor reflex, exercise-recovery hysteresis, mental stress, cardiac-cardiac reflexes, the cardiac sympathetic afferent reflex (CSAR), and neuromodulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
October 2024
State Key Laboratory of Frigid Zone Cardiovascular Diseases (SKLFZCD), Department of Pharmacology (State Key Laboratory-Province Key Laboratories of Biomedicine-Pharmaceutics of China, Key Laboratory of Cardiovascular Research, Ministry of Education), College of Pharmacy, Harbin Medical University, Harbin 150081, China.
Multi-drug therapies are common in cardiovascular disease intervention; however, io channel/pump coordination has not been tested electrophysiologically. Apparently, inward currents were not elicited by Yoda1/10 nM or Dobutamine/100 nM alone in Ah-type baroreceptor neurons, but were by their combination. To verify this, electroneurography and the whole-cell patch-clamp technique were performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Physiol
January 2025
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, Manaaki Manawa - The Centre for Heart Research, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
The autonomic regulation of the pulmonary vasculature has been under-appreciated despite the presence of sympathetic and parasympathetic neural innervation and adrenergic and cholinergic receptors on pulmonary vessels. Recent clinical trials targeting this innervation have demonstrated promising effects in pulmonary hypertension, and in this context of reignited interest, we review autonomic pulmonary vascular regulation, its integration with other pulmonary vascular regulatory mechanisms, systemic homeostatic reflexes and their clinical relevance in pulmonary hypertension. The sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems can affect pulmonary vascular tone and pulmonary vascular stiffness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropeptides
December 2024
General Department, Wuxi Central Rehabilitation Hospital, The Affiliated Mental Health Center of Jiangnan University, Wuxi, 214151, China. Electronic address:
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