Literature DB >> 17395635

Blockade of acid sensing ion channels attenuates the exercise pressor reflex in cats.

Shawn G Hayes1, Angela E Kindig, Marc P Kaufman.   

Abstract

Although thin fibre muscle afferents possess acid sensing ion channels (ASICs), their contribution to the exercise pressor reflex is not known. This lack of information is partly attributable to the fact that there is no known selective in vivo antagonist for ASICs. Although amiloride has been shown to antagonize ASICs, it also has been shown to antagonize voltage-gated sodium channels, thereby impairing impulse conduction in sensory nerves. Our aim was to test the hypothesis that lactic acid accumulation in exercising muscle acted on ASICs located on thin fibre muscle afferents to evoke the metabolic component of the exercise pressor reflex. To test this hypothesis, we determined in decerebrate cats if amiloride attenuated the pressor and cardioaccelerator responses to static contraction, to tendon stretch and to arterial injections of lactic acid and capsaicin. We found a dose of amiloride (0.5 microg kg(-1); i.a.) that attenuated the pressor and cardioaccelerator responses to both contraction and lactic acid injection, but had no effect on the responses to stretch and capsaicin. A higher dose of amiloride (5 microg kg(-1), i.a.) not only blocked the pressor and cardioaccelerator responses to lactic acid and contraction, but also attenuated the responses to stretch and to capsaicin, manoeuvers in which ASICs probably play no significant role. In addition, we found that the low dose of amiloride (0.5 microg kg(-1)) had no effect on the responses of muscle spindles to tendon stretch and to succinylcholine, whereas the high dose (5 microg kg(-1)) attenuated the responses to both. Our data suggest the low dose of amiloride used in our experiments selectively blocked ASICs, whereas the high dose blocked ASICs and impulse conduction in muscle afferents. We conclude that ASICs play a role in the metabolic component of the exercise pressor reflex.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17395635      PMCID: PMC2170826          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2007.129197

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  37 in total

1.  Role played by purinergic receptors on muscle afferents in evoking the exercise pressor reflex.

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2.  Activation of muscle spindles by succinylcholine and decamethonium, the effects of curare.

Authors:  R GRANIT; S SKOGLUND; S THESLEFF
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3.  Cyclooxygenase blockade attenuates responses of group III and IV muscle afferents to dynamic exercise in cats.

Authors:  Shawn G Hayes; Angela E Kindig; Marc P Kaufman
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6.  Amiloride-sensitive Na+ channels in pelvic uroepithelium involved in renal sensory receptor activation.

Authors:  U C Kopp; K Matsushita; R D Sigmund; L A Smith; S Watanabe; J B Stokes
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Authors:  R G Victor; L A Bertocci; S L Pryor; R L Nunnally
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8.  Cyclooxygenase products sensitize muscle mechanoreceptors in healthy humans.

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9.  Prostaglandins contribute to cardiovascular reflexes evoked by static muscular contraction.

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10.  Glycogen depletion-induced lactate reductions attenuate reflex responses in exercising humans.

Authors:  L I Sinoway; K J Wroblewski; S A Prophet; S M Ettinger; K S Gray; S K Whisler; G Miller; R L Moore
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  32 in total

1.  Blockade of acid sensing ion channels attenuates the augmented exercise pressor reflex in rats with chronic femoral artery occlusion.

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2.  Heart failure induces changes in acid-sensing ion channels in sensory neurons innervating skeletal muscle.

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3.  Dorsal root ganglion neurons innervating skeletal muscle respond to physiological combinations of protons, ATP, and lactate mediated by ASIC, P2X, and TRPV1.

Authors:  Alan R Light; Ronald W Hughen; Jie Zhang; Jon Rainier; Zhuqing Liu; Jeewoo Lee
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Authors:  Heather A Drummond; Nikki L Jernigan; Samira C Grifoni
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2008-03-31       Impact factor: 10.190

5.  Combined, but not individual, blockade of ASIC3, P2X, and EP4 receptors attenuates the exercise pressor reflex in rats with freely perfused hindlimb muscles.

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Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2015-10-15

6.  Role for NGF in augmented sympathetic nerve response to activation of mechanically and metabolically sensitive muscle afferents in rats with femoral artery occlusion.

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7.  Acid-sensing ion channel subtype 3 function and immunolabelling increases in skeletal muscle sensory neurons following femoral artery occlusion.

Authors:  Jihong Xing; Jian Lu; Jianhua Li
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2011-12-19       Impact factor: 5.182

Review 8.  Acid-sensing ion channels in sensory signaling.

Authors:  Marcelo D Carattino; Nicolas Montalbetti
Journal:  Am J Physiol Renal Physiol       Date:  2020-01-27

9.  Functional expression of α7-nicotinic acetylcholine receptors by muscle afferent neurons.

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10.  NADPH oxidase-derived reactive oxygen species in skeletal muscle modulates the exercise pressor reflex.

Authors:  Han-Jun Wang; Yan-Xia Pan; Wei-Zhong Wang; Irving H Zucker; Wei Wang
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