Literature DB >> 33040619

Downregulation of M Current Is Coupled to Membrane Excitability in Sympathetic Neurons Before the Onset of Hypertension.

Harvey Davis1,2, Neil Herring1,3, David J Paterson1,2.   

Abstract

Neurohumoral activation is an early hallmark of cardiovascular disease and contributes to the etiology of the pathophysiology. Stellectomy has reemerged as a positive therapeutic intervention to modify the progression of dysautonomia, although the biophysical properties underpinning abnormal activity of this ganglia are not fully understood in the initial stages of the disease. We investigated whether stellate ganglia neurons from prehypertensive SHRs (spontaneously hypertensive rats) are hyperactive and describe their electrophysiological phenotype guided by single-cell RNA sequencing, molecular biology, and perforated patch clamp to uncover the mechanism of abnormal excitability. We demonstrate the contribution of a plethora of ion channels, in particular inhibition of M current to stellate ganglia neuronal firing, and confirm the conservation of expression of key ion channel transcripts in human stellate ganglia. We show that hyperexcitability was curbed by M-current activators, nonselective sodium current blockers, or inhibition of Nav1.1-1.3, Nav1.6, or INaP. We conclude that reduced activity of M current contributes significantly to abnormal firing of stellate neurons, which, in part, contributes to the hyperexcitability from rats that have a predisposition to hypertension. Targeting these channels could provide a therapeutic opportunity to minimize the consequences of excessive sympathetic activation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  hypertension; ion channels; primary dysautonomia; sodium; stellate ganglion

Year:  2020        PMID: 33040619     DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.120.15922

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


  8 in total

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8.  Heightened sympathetic neuron activity and altered cardiomyocyte properties in spontaneously hypertensive rats during the postnatal period.

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  8 in total

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