Abstract
The contribution of the alpha-1B adrenergic receptor (AR) to vascular smooth muscle contraction has been assessed using a combination of immunological, molecular biological and pharmacological approaches. A subtype-selective antibody detectedalpha-1B immunoreactivity in the medial layer of the aorta, caudal, femoral, iliac, mesenteric resistance, renal and superior mesenteric arteries. Receptor protection assays and antisense oligonucleotides were used to assess the contribution of thealpha-1B AR to contraction. Thealpha-1B AR was implicated in mediating the phenylephrine-induced contraction of the mesenteric resistance artery. The alpha-1D AR was implicated in mediating the contraction of the aorta, femoral, iliac and superior mesenteric arteries. Similarly, the alpha-1A AR was implicated in mediating contraction of the caudal and renal arteries. In vivo application of antisense oligonucleotides targeted to the translational start site of the alpha-1B AR had no effect on the phenylephrine-induced contraction of the femoral or renal arteries. In contrast, antisense oligonucleotides directed against the alpha-1D AR significantly inhibited the phenylephrine response in the femoral artery but had no effect on the renal artery. Application of alpha-1A AR antisense oligonucleotides inhibited the contraction of the renal artery without effect on the femoral artery. These data show that (1)alpha-1B AR immunoreactivity is widely distributed in the same peripheral arteries in which previous studies detected its mRNA, and (2) despite this distribution, receptor protection and antisense oligonucleotide studies indicate that thealpha-1B AR mediates the contraction of only the mesenteric resistance artery.
Thealpha-1 AR family is a member of the G protein-coupled superfamily of receptors. In analogy to bacteriorhodopsin, these receptors have the now very familiar proposed structure of seven transmembrane spanning domains connected by hydrophilic loops alternately exposed to the extracellular and intracellular environment. The structure of G protein-coupled receptors in general and alpha-1 ARs specifically have been the subject of several reviews (Bylund et al., 1995; Grahamet al., 1996; Guarino et al., 1996; Minneman and Esbenshade, 1994; Strader et al., 1994). Three genes encoding unique alpha-1 AR subtypes (Cotecchia et al., 1988; Lomasney et al., 1991; Perez et al., 1991; Schwinn et al., 1990) have been discovered. Despite early controversy and confusion, a nomenclature consisting of the alpha-1A (formerly referred to as thealpha-1c), the alpha-1B and alpha-1D (formerly the alpha-1a or alpha-1a/d) AR subtypes has been proposed and gained acceptance in the field (Hieble et al., 1995).
There is longstanding evidence that multiple alpha-1 AR subtypes participate in the regulation of peripheral vascular function (Bylund et al., 1995; McGrath, 1982; Minneman, 1988). However, the individual contribution of each of the alpha-1D AR subtypes has not been established. mRNA for the alpha-1A AR is expressed at very high levels in peripheral arteries, ∼90% of the total alpha-1 AR message pool (Guarino et al., 1996). High-affinity antagonists have been used to implicate the alpha-1A AR in the regulation of the caudal and renal arteries (Han et al., 1990; Elhawary et al., 1992; Piascik et al., 1995). Although expressed at low levels compared with the other receptor subtypes, alpha-1D AR mRNA can also be detected throughout the peripheral vasculature (Guarino et al., 1996; Piascik et al., 1995). Studies with the high-affinity alpha-1D AR antagonist BMY 7378 have shown that the alpha-1D AR mediates the contraction of the aorta, iliac artery and skeletal muscle arterioles (Kenny et al., 1995; Leech and Faber, 1996;Piascik et al., 1995; Testa et al., 1995) and is involved in the regulation of systemic arterial blood pressure (Zhou and Varga, 1996).
The role of the alpha-1B AR in mediating vascular smooth muscle contraction is less certain. Recently,Leech and Faber (1996) showed that thealpha-1B AR mediates constriction of skeletal muscle venules. Early studies with CEC suggested this receptor was involved in the contraction of several blood vessels (Minneman, 1988). However, it is now known that the alpha-1A andalpha-1D ARs can also be inactivated by CEC to varying degrees (Lomasney et al., 1991; Perez et al., 1991; Schwinn et al., 1990). Therefore, this ligand cannot be considered a subtype-selective alkylating agent that can be used to define alpha-1B AR-mediated processes. Furthermore, the alpha-1B and alpha-1D ARs exhibit similar affinities for most ligands used for receptor characterization (Lomasney et al., 1991; Perez et al., 1991). We are not certain of the extent to which thealpha-1B AR mediates vascular smooth muscle contraction. For example, thealpha-1B AR was initially thought to regulate the contraction of the aorta (Han et al., 1990;Piascik et al., 1993). However, more recently, several groups of researchers have used BMY 7378 to demonstrate that aortic contraction is mediated by the alpha-1D AR (Kennyet al., 1995; Piascik et al., 1995; Testaet al., 1995). Recently, a selectivealpha-1B AR antagonist was synthesized (Giardina et al., 1996) and may prove useful in dissecting the role of this receptor in the regulation of smooth muscle function.
mRNA for the alpha-1B AR is widely distributed in peripheral arteries (Piascik et al., 1994;Guarino et al., 1996). We assessed the extent of protein expression of the alpha-1B AR with a subtype-selective antibody. We then used pharmacological methods and antisense oligonucleotides to characterize the extent to which thealpha-1B AR mediates smooth muscle contraction in the peripheral vasculature. A pluronic gel delivery system was used to apply the antisense oligonucleotides to arteriesin vivo, and the effect on contractility was assessed 24 hr later. Pluronic gels are liquid at 4°C and solidify at room temperature (Schmolka, 1972). The gels have been used as a system to deliver antisense oligonucleotides into vascular smooth muscle in vivo (Bennett et al., 1994; Simons et al., 1992; Villa et al., 1995). It has been shown that antisense c-myb oligonucleotides delivered with a pluronic gel inhibit smooth muscle cell growth after vascular injury (Simons et al., 1992; Villa et al., 1995). Our results indicate that the protein expression of an alpha-1D AR subtype on peripheral blood vessels cannot be taken as evidence that the receptor is involved in contractile regulation.
Methods
Animals.
Male Sprague-Dawley rats weighing between 250 and 350 g were used in all experiments. The aorta, caudal, femoral, iliac, mesenteric resistance, renal and superior mesenteric arteries were removed and processed according to the experimental protocols described below.
Immunocytochemistry.
After removal, the blood vessels were cleaned of extraneous tissue and cryoprotected by immersion in increasing amounts of sucrose in PBS (15% for 2 days, 30% for 2 days) at 4°C. The vessels were then placed in O.C.T. mounting media and quick-frozen (−50°C in isopentane cooled with dry ice); 13-μm sections were cut on a cryostat. Sections were placed on poly-l-lysine-coated, circularly etched slides and stored at −80°C until use. Sections were thawed, fixed in cold 4% paraformaldehyde for 10 min and then washed. These sections were incubated in blocking solution (PBS containing 10% normal goat serum, 1% bovine serum albumin and 0.1% Triton X-100) for 2 hr at room temperature and then incubated withalpha-1B AR antisera (1:100–150 dilution) for 24 hr at 4°C in the blocking solution without goat serum. Slides were then washed in PBS followed by application of an affinity-purified FITC-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:200 dilution; Jackson Immunologicals, West Grove, PA) secondary antibody. After 1 hr at room temperature, the secondary antibody was removed by washing with PBS, and the slides were coverslipped with Vectashield (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) mounting media and then examined by fluorescence microscopy. The anti-receptor IgG, originally described byFonseca et al. (1995), was affinity-purified against the immunizing peptide immobilized on a solid support matrix (Sulfolink; Pierce Chemicals, Rockford, IL). Preimmune IgG was prepared by fractionating rabbit serum over the same column.
Laser scanning confocal microscopic analysis of immunofluorescent images.
Microscopic sections were placed on the stage of an inverted microscope and imaged using a laser-scanning confocal microscope (RCM 8000; Nikon, Melville, NY). FITC fluorescence was excited using the 488-nm wavelength output of an argon laser. Emitted fluorescence was collected using a Nikon 40× water-immersion objective (N.A. 1.15). Image quality was enhanced by averaging 64 scans/image. Images were immediately stored on an optical disk recorder as eight-bit, 512 × 483 pixel TIFF files. The files were later transferred to an 80486 microcomputer for off-line analysis using the program Metamorph (Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA). Fluorescence measurements were confined to the vascular smooth muscle regions between the highly autofluorescent elastin bands. This was facilitated by setting the analysis program threshold settings to exclude the bright elastin autofluorescence. The mean fluorescence in these defined regions was calculated for both preimmune and postimmune arterial sections. Differences in these mean fluorescent values were determined by a t test for unpaired data.
In vitro assessment of contractile function.
Isolated blood vessel segments were prepared by techniques routinely used in our laboratory (Piascik et al., 1994, 1995). Arterial segments were removed and placed in a cold PSS of the following composition (in mM): NaCl, 130; KCl, 4.7; KH2PO4, 1.18; MgSO4·7H2O, 1.17; CaCl2·2H2O, 1.6; NaHCO3, 14. 9; dextrose, 5.5 and Na2 EDTA, 0.03. Three-millimeter ring segments of aorta, caudal artery, femoral artery, iliac artery, renal artery, superior mesenteric artery and mesenteric resistance vessel (these were cut to 2 mm; ∼150–200-μm I.D.) were cut and cleaned of surrounding fat and connective tissue. The mesenteric resistance artery was isolated in the following manner: After removal of the entire mesenteric bed from its primary branching point at the abdominal aorta to the terminal arteriolar/capillary connections at the intestinal wall, a second-generation branch was isolated, cut free and cleaned. Stainless steel or platinum wires of an appropriate diameter were threaded through the lumen of each vessel. One wire was connected to a fixed base and the other to a micrometer clamp to adjust passive force on the tissues. The tissues were mounted in water-jacketed muscle baths containing PSS maintained at 37°C under constant oxygenation (95% O2/5% CO2, pH 7.4). Passive forces of 2 × g (aorta), 0.25 ×g (mesenteric resistance artery) or 1 × g(all other arteries) were then placed on the vessels. Previous studies have shown that these values for passive force give optimal agonist responses. Changes in force generation were recorded using Grass FT.03 force transducers connected to a Grass model 7 polygraph.
Protection experiments.
Cumulative concentration-response curves to phenylephrine (1.0 nM to 100 μM) were generated in all vessels. The tissues were then washed repeatedly for a period of 1 hr to allow the vessels to restabilize at their resting levels of passive force. Pretreatment with protecting agents was carried out as follows: BMY 7378 (30 and 100 nM), A-61603 (100 nM) or vehicle was incubated with the blood vessel segments for 20 min. PBZ (10 nM) or CEC (10 μM) was then added and coincubated in the presence of protecting agent or vehicle for an additional period (10 min for PBZ, 30 min for CEC), after which both ligands were extensively washed from the arteries for 2 hr. Base-line tension was reestablished, and a second phenylephrine concentration-response curve was generated. To determine time-related changes in sensitivity, control rings were run that received only vehicle treatment followed by the washout period. ED50 values for the two phenylephrine curves generated in these control vessels were not significantly different. Concentration-response curves are expressed as a percentage of the maximal response obtained in the first phenylephrine concentration-response relationship. Protection from irreversible inactivation was defined as a statistically significant increase in the maximal response to phenylephrine obtained after treatment with a protecting agent compared with the maximal response obtained in the presence of PBZ or CEC alone. A-61603, the optically pure (R)-isomer, was a gift from Abbott Laboratories (Abbott Park, IL) and provided to us by Dr. Michael Meyer.
Application of oligonucleotides.
Sense and antisense phosphorothioate oligonucleotides were synthesized by Dr. Dianne Perez (Department of Molecular Cardiology, Research Foundation, The Cleveland Clinic). The phosphorothioate backbone makes these nucleotides resistant to breakdown by nucleases. Fluorescently labeled analogs of these oligonucleotides were also made. The sequences for these oligonucleotides are sense, ACCATGGTGCTTCTC AAAATGAATCCCGAT GAGATGACTTTCCGA, and antisense, AGAGAGAAGCACCAT CAGATCGGGATTCAT GTCTCGGAAAGTCAT. The oligonucleotides were received as a dried pellet, resuspended in sterile water, and the concentration was determined spectrophotometrically.
In vivo transfection.
A 40% w/v solution of pluronic F-127 gel (Sigma Chemical, St. Louis, MO) was prepared in water at 4°C by mixing on a platform shaker overnight in a cold room. F-127 pluronic gel solutions, which are liquid at 4°C, solidify at room temperature (Schmolka, 1972). Sufficient oligonucleotide was added to the cold gel solution to give the desired concentration (see below). The addition of oligonucleotide reduces the pluronic gel concentration to 30%. Care was taken to ensure that all pipette tips and storage tubes were kept at 4°C. Animals were anesthetized with a mixture of ketamine and acepromazine. After a surgical incision, the femoral or renal artery was located and gently cleaned of adhering tissue. Forty microliters of the pluronic gel/oligonucleotide solution were applied around the artery. After the gel solidified around the artery, it was gently placed back into its original position, and the wound was closed with surgical staples. The animal was then allowed to recover until use in experimentation. To assess the degree of uptake of the oligonucleotide by the smooth muscle, an FITC-labeled oligonucleotide was applied in the gel. The artery was removed 24 hr later and prepared for fluorescence microscopy.
Statistical analysis.
Concentration-response curves represent the mean value of a minimum of two experiments on individual blood vessel segments, of which each was from a different animal. Only two concentration-response curves were run on any segment. A two-way analysis of variance followed by Student-Newman-Kuels analysis was used to determine where statistically significant differences existed between the various treatment conditions. In all figures, data are given as mean ± S.E.M. Asterisks indicate statistically significant difference at the P < .05 level.
Results
mRNA for the alpha-1B AR is widely distributed in the peripheral vascular system (Guarino et al., 1996; Piascik et al., 1995). An anti-peptide antibody prepared against the alpha-1B AR (Fonseca et al., 1995) was used to determine the extent to which this mRNA is expressed as receptor protein in a series of peripheral blood vessels. Photomicrographs of the immunofluorescent staining in the aorta, caudal, femoral, iliac, mesenteric resistance, renal and superior mesenteric arteries are presented in figures 1 and2. An intense immunofluorescent staining was obtained in the medial layer of all blood vessels examined. The fluorescent signal obtained in the tissue exposed to secondary antibody alone was much less than that obtained in the presence of primary alpha-1B AR antibody (see figs. 1 and2). The immunofluorescence signal was quantified with laser scanning confocal microscopy; these data are summarized in table 1. In all cases, the mean fluorescence obtained in the presence of thealpha-1B AR antibody was statistically significantly greater than that seen with preimmune serum. Preincubation of the antibody with the immunizing peptide used to generate the antisera significantly reducedalpha-1B AR immunoreactivity (data not shown). In contrast, incubation of thealpha-1B AR antibody with an immunizing peptide used to generate an alpha-1D AR antiserum had no effect on alpha-1B AR immunoreactivity (data not shown).
We assessed the effect of PBZ or CEC on vascular smooth muscle contraction alone and after coincubation with either thealpha-1D AR-selective antagonist BMY 7378 or thealpha-1A AR-selective agonist A-61603 (Knepper et al., 1995). BMY 7378 and A-61603 at the appropriate concentrations would be expected to bind to and protect the alpha-1 AR at which they have the highest affinity, whereas the other subtypes would be inactivated by the alkylating agents. PBZ significantly inhibited the spasmogenic response to phenylephrine in all blood vessels examined (figs. 3 and4). The degree of inhibition differed, with the mesenteric resistance artery being the most sensitive and the caudal being the least sensitive. Incubation with 30 nM BMY 7378 alone resulted in only minimal inhibitory action remaining after the 2-hr washout period. When coincubated in the presence of 30 nM BMY 7378, the inhibitory actions of PBZ were significantly reduced in the aorta, femoral, iliac and superior mesenteric arteries (fig. 3). In contrast, BMY 7378 had no effect on the antagonist actions of PBZ in the caudal, mesenteric resistance or renal arteries (fig. 4). Incubation of 100 nM BMY 7378 produced a greater level of protection in the aorta, femoral, iliac and superior mesenteric arteries, whereas no protective action was noted at this higher dose in the caudal, mesenteric resistance or renal arteries. The maximal level of the contractile response (in grams) for phenylephrine in the various treatment conditions is presented in table 2. The selective protection exerted by BMY 7378 in the aorta, femoral, iliac and superior mesenteric arteries suggests that the phenylephrine response is due to activation of the alpha-1D AR.
If this suggestion is correct, then we would expect similar results with CEC. Previous work has shown that neither the caudal nor renal arteries are sensitive to CEC inactivation (Han et al., 1990; Piascik et al., 1995). Therefore, these arteries were not examined in this series of studies. CEC alone produced varying degrees of inhibition in the test arteries. BMY 7378 (30 nM) protected the aorta, femoral, iliac and superior mesenteric arteries from CEC inactivation (fig. 5). Increasing the BMY 7378 concentration to 100 nM produced a greater level of inhibition than that observed at 30 nM. In the presence of either 30 or 100 nM BMY 7378, no protection was noted in the mesenteric resistance artery. The maximal contractile response seen in the various CEC treatment conditions is presented in table 3.
A-61603 is an agonist that has been shown to exhibit a high degree of selectivity for the alpha-1A AR (Knepper et al., 1995). At 100 nM, A-61603 had no effect on the inhibitory actions of PBZ in the aorta, iliac or superior mesenteric artery (fig.6). In contrast, the ligand significantly protected the caudal and renal arteries from inactivation (fig.7). A modest degree of protection was also noted in the femoral artery (fig. 6). A-61603 had no effect on PBZ inhibition of the mesenteric resistance artery. The fact that thisalpha-1A AR-selective ligand protected the caudal and renal arteries is consistent with the idea that these arteries are regulated by the alpha-1A AR. The protective action in the femoral artery was surprising. The significance of this observation is dealt with in the Discussion.
In results similar to those obtained with PBZ, A-61603 had no effect on the inhibitory actions of CEC in the aorta, femoral, iliac, superior mesenteric and mesenteric resistance arteries (fig.8). A summary of the level of maximal response for all experiments with A-61603 is presented in tables4 and 5. A summary of all the protection data and our predictions regarding which receptor is involved in contractile regulation can be found in table6.
These data indicate that there is limited involvement of thealpha-1B AR in regulating contraction of the blood vessels examined in this study. To further address this possibility, a novel approach with antisense oligonucleotides was used. We chose the femoral and renal arteries for these studies. The pluronic gel/antisense oligonucleotide mixture can be easily applied to these vessels. To demonstrate that this application technique does in fact deliver antisense oligonucleotides to smooth muscle cells, 150 μM of an FITC-labeled alpha-1D AR antisense oligonucleotide was applied to the femoral artery. Twenty-four hours later, an intense fluorescent signal was detected in the medial layer, indicating significant penetration of the oligonucleotide into the arterial smooth muscle (fig. 9). In a similar fashion, application of 250 μM FITC-labeled alpha-1A AR antisense oligonucleotide resulted in an intense fluorescence signal detected in the medial layer of the renal artery (data not shown). The application of a nonfluorescent phosphorothioate alpha-1D AR antisense oligonucleotide to the femoral artery also had no effect on the response of the artery to KCl or serotonin (fig.10). Furthermore, analpha-1D AR sense oligonucleotide had no effect on phenylephrine-induced contraction of the femoral artery (fig.11B). In contrast, an antisense oligonucleotide directed against the translational start site of thealpha-1D AR significantly inhibited the femoral artery response to phenylephrine (fig. 11A). The application of 150 μM of an antisense oligonucleotide directed against the translational start site of the alpha-1B AR had no effect on the phenylephrine response in the femoral artery (fig. 11D). A similar result was observed when alpha-1A AR antisense oligonucleotides were applied to the femoral artery (fig. 11C).
When antisense oligonucleotides directed against the translational start site for the alpha-1B AR were applied to the renal artery, no inhibition of the phenylephrine response was observed (fig. 12C). The application of an antisense oligonucleotide directed against thealpha-1D AR also had no effect (fig. 12D). Similarly, sense oligonucleotides against the alpha-1A AR had no effect on the contractile actions of phenylephrine (fig. 12B). However, treatment with an antisense oligonucleotide directed against the translational start site of the alpha-1A AR significantly inhibited the response to phenylephrine in the renal artery (fig. 12A).
The inhibition of contraction produced by either antisense oligonucleotide was concentration dependent, with higher concentrations producing a greater level of inhibition than that observed at lower concentrations (fig. 13).
Discussion
Despite many significant advances in the regulatory biology of thealpha-1D AR subtypes, we have at best an incomplete understanding of the role played by these receptors in modulating physiological processes such as vascular smooth muscle contraction. Of the known alpha-1 ARs, alpha-1A andalpha-1D have most often been implicated in playing a role in regulating vascular smooth muscle tone (Guarino et al., 1996). In this report, we analyzed the contribution of thealpha-1B AR to the contraction of a series of peripheral arteries. mRNA for this receptor is widely distributed in peripheral arteries (Guarino et al., 1996). In terms of the level of mRNA expression for the entirealpha-1 AR subtype pool, the alpha-1B AR is expressed at much lower levels than the alpha-1A AR but at higher levels than the alpha-1D AR (Guarino et al., 1996; Piascik et al., 1995).
Using an antipeptide antibody, we detected specificalpha-1B AR immunoreactivity in the medial layer of all blood vessels examined. This indicates that in all arteries in which we can detect its mRNA, thealpha-1B AR is also expressed as protein. It is not known whether the expression of this receptor on vascular smooth muscle cells a priori indicates that the subtype plays a role in contraction or whether thealpha-1B AR can be expressed on blood vessels and not subserve a contractile function.
Classic and contemporary pharmacological approaches were used to determine the contribution of thealpha-1B AR to the contraction of the blood vessels under study. In the first series of experiments, we assessed the ability of subtype-selective ligands (BMY 7378 and A-61603) to protect a specific alpha-1D AR from inactivation by PBZ and CEC. The dissociation constant of BMY 7378 estimated in binding studies with a recombinant form of the alpha-1D AR or in functional studies is 0.9 to 4 nM (Goetz et al., 1995;Piascik et al., 1995). The dissociation constant for either the alpha-1A or thealpha-1B AR is >500 nM (Goetzet al., 1995; Piascik et al., 1995). Therefore, at 30 nM, BMY 7378 would occupy >90% of the alpha-1D population while occupying <6% of either the alpha-1A oralpha-1B ARs. BMY 7378 protected the aorta, femoral, iliac and superior mesenteric arteries from inactivation by either PBZ or CEC, supporting our contention that the main alpha-1 AR subtype involved in the contractile regulation of these vessels is the alpha-1D AR.
The lack of complete protection seen with BMY 7378 could be taken as evidence that in addition to the alpha-1D, otheralpha-1 AR subtypes are involved in the contractile regulation of the aorta, femoral, iliac and superior mesenteric arteries. However, there are alternative explanations for the lack of complete protection. There is a dynamic interaction between the ligands and the receptors in these protection experiments. BMY 7378 is added first in concentrations sufficient to nearly saturate thealpha-1D AR but have little occupancy at either thealpha-1A or alpha-1B ARs. The ligand freely dissociates and reassociates with the receptor. When PBZ or CEC is added, it will inactivate the unprotectedalpha-1A or alpha-1B ARs as well as compete with BMY 7378 for the alpha-1D AR. Once the alkylating agent acquires a receptor and covalent modification occurs, no dissociation from the receptor will take place. Therefore, the presence of BMY 7378 should be expected to retard, not prohibit receptor inactivation. Indeed, if the incubation period is sufficiently long, either alkylating agent would be expected to completely wipe out the alpha-1D AR population. The way to enhance the degree of protection is to use very high concentrations of the protecting agent. This is not practical in this instance because as the concentration of BMY 7378 increases, the chances of alpha-1A oralpha-1B AR occupation also increase. Therefore, in these experiments, complete receptor protection was difficult to achieve. It should be noted that when the BMY 7378 concentration was increased to 100 nM, there was a greater level of protection in the aorta, femoral, iliac and superior mesenteric arteries without any protection noted in the other arteries (tables 2and 4). Finally, the fact that two different alkylating agents gave the same results further strengthens the conclusions made with these studies.
In logic similar to that discussed above, we used thealpha-1A AR-selective agonist A-61603 in protection studies with PBZ. It has an estimated dissociation constant at the clonedalpha-1A AR of 30 nM. Therefore, at 100 nM A-61603, 80% of the alpha-1A ARs would be occupied, whereas only 9% and 7% of the alpha-1B andalpha-1D AR populations, respectively, would be occupied by the agonist. A-61603 showed protective activity in the caudal and renal arteries. This indicates that the alpha-1A AR is the major regulatory receptor in these arteries and agrees with previous work using other approaches (Han et al., 1990).
The protective action of A-61603 in the femoral artery was surprising and not consistent with other results discussed above and below. The modest degree of protection could indicate that a component of the response in the femoral artery is mediated by the alpha-1A AR. In contrast, protection was not seen when A-61603 was used against inactivation by CEC. This would argue against a role for thealpha-1A AR in regulating the femoral artery contraction. Furthermore, application of antisense oligonucleotides against thealpha-1A AR to the femoral artery also had no effect on phenylephrine-induced femoral artery contraction.
We appreciate that these types of experiments lead to indirect conclusions regarding alpha-1 AR regulation. However, certain hypotheses can be made and tested with antisense oligonucleotides. In control experiments, we demonstrated that a fluorescently labeled antisense oligonucleotide can be taken up and retained by either the femoral or renal arteries 24 hr after application in a pluronic gel (fig. 9). We are in the process of quantifying the extent of oligonucleotide uptake using laser scanning confocal microscopy. Our preliminary results indicate that oligonucleotide uptake is very inefficient. The application of 150 μM to the outside of the vessel in pluronic gel yields an estimated 4 μM intracellularly. The surgical procedure and application of antisense directed against the alpha-1D AR did not affect the contractile actions of KCl or serotonin. This indicates that neither our application technique nor the mere presence of a 15-residue oligonucleotide accounts for the inhibitory actions observed. If the predictions from the protection studies are correct, then application of antisense constructs directed against the alpha-1A oralpha-1B AR should have no effect on the response of the femoral artery to phenylephrine. This is exactly what was observed. In contrast, treatment with alpha-1D AR antisense oligonucleotides significantly decreased the femoral artery response to phenylephrine. These data support the conclusion that the alpha-1D but not the alpha-1A oralpha-1B ARs are involved in mediating the contraction of the femoral artery.
In the renal artery, application of antisense oligonucleotides directed against the start site for translation of thealpha-1B AR also had no effect on phenylephrine-induced smooth muscle contraction. A similar effect was noted for alpha-1D AR antisense oligonucleotides. The application of an alpha-1A AR sense oligonucleotide also had no effect on phenylephrine responsiveness. In contrast, the application of an alpha-1A AR antisense oligonucleotide significantly inhibited the phenylephrine response. Therefore, the inhibition of contractile function in the renal artery appears to be specific to thealpha-1A AR. These data provide independent evidence that this receptor is the dominant alpha-1 AR in the renal artery. Antisense oligonucleotide application did not result in a complete inhibition of contractile function. There are several possible reasons for this. The phosphorothioate oligonucleotides, while more stable than those containing phosphodiester linkages, still could be broken down by cellular nucleases, thus reducing the effective concentration. Higher concentrations of oligonucleotides may be necessary to achieve complete inhibition. In this regard, we did note a concentration-dependent inhibition (fig. 13) with eitheralpha-1A or alpha-1D AR antisense oligonucleotides.
This is the first demonstration of the use of antisense oligonucleotides delivered in vivo to inhibitalpha-1 AR responses. It is reasonable to suggest that we merely observed nonspecific effects due to surgery or introduction of foreign nucleotides into the smooth muscle and not specific blockade of the translation of alpha-1 AR protein. However, these studies with two different arteries demonstrated inhibition by a specific antisense construct that is predicted from pharmacological studies. A further argument for specificity is the fact that we implanted three antisense constructs each in the femoral and renal arteries. Only one of these, the alpha-1D in the femoral and the alpha-1A in the renal, inhibited phenylephrine contractility. If the inhibition was simply due to surgical manipulation or introduction of oligonucleotides, then we would expect every antisense construct to inhibit function. Despite a wide distribution of this receptor in the peripheral vasculature, the only artery in which we obtained evidence for analpha-1B AR-mediated contraction was the mesenteric resistance artery. This is interesting because the main mesenteric artery is protected by BMY 7378. Therefore, it appears that the alpha-1 AR subtype regulating contraction differs along the mesenteric vascular bed. It may be that the alpha-1A andalpha-1D AR regulate the larger vessels, whereas thealpha-1B AR controls the smaller resistance vessels. In this regard, Leech and Faber (1996) demonstrated that alpha-1B AR mediates regulation of skeletal muscle venules. Alternatively, thealpha-1B AR may serve other regulatory functions. In recent work, Siwik and Brown (1996) showed that thealpha-1B AR regulates protein synthesis in cultured aortic smooth muscle cells. Finally, we have shown the feasibility of the in vivo application of antisense oligonucleotides to the femoral and renal arteries and that this application results in a specific inhibition of alpha-1 AR subtype-mediated contractile responses.
Footnotes
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Send reprint requests to: Michael T. Piascik, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Director, Vascular Biology Research Group, Department of Pharmacology, The University of Kentucky College of Medicine, 800 Rose Street, Lexington, KY 40536. E-mail:mtp{at}pop.uky.edu
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↵1 This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants HL38120 (M.T.P.) and HL56910 (R.W.H.) and an American Heart Association, National Center, Grant-in-Aid (M.T.P.).
- Abbreviations:
- AR
- adrenergic receptor
- PSS
- physiological saline solution
- CEC
- chloroethylclonidine
- FITC
- fluorescein isothiocyanate
- PBS
- phosphate-buffered saline
- PBZ
- phenoxybenzamine
- Received January 8, 1997.
- Accepted July 18, 1997.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics