PGI2 opens potassium channels in retinal pericytes by cyclic AMP-stimulated, cross-activation of PKG

Jason O. Burnette, Richard E. White

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Pericytes exert an important influence on the control of retinal blood flow; however, little is known regarding the molecular basis of retinal pericyte excitability. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the signaling pathway of how prostacyclin (PGI2), an important endogenous regulator of retinal blood flow, stimulates potassium channel activity in retinal pericytes. Retinal pericytes were isolated from porcine eyeballs and plated on glass coverslips. Immunocytochemistry was performed to verify expression of the pericyte-specific ganglioside marker, 3G5 and smooth muscle α-actin. Activity of the large-conductance, voltage- and calcium-activated potassium (BKCa) channel was measured in retinal pericytes via single-channel patch-clamp, and channel identification was confirmed via biophysical and pharmacological characterization. PGI2 (10 μM) or beraprost (30 μM; more stable prostacyclin analog) dramatically stimulated the activity of BKCa channels isolated in cell-attached patches. These experiments strongly suggested that PGI2 stimulated BKCa channel activity via a diffusible second messenger. Similarly, chlorophenylthio (CPT)-cAMP (100 μM; membrane permeable cAMP derivative) induced a significant increase in BKCa channel activity; however, inhibition of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) with 300 nM KT5720 could not reverse the stimulatory effect of either PGI2 or CPT-cAMP. In contrast, activation of BKCa channels with either CPT-cAMP or PGI2 was abolished by 300 nM KT5823 (n = 5, p < 0.01), an inhibitor of the cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG). In addition, PGI2-stimulated channel activity was also attenuated by Rp-8-CPT-cGMPS, which inhibits PKG activity via a different mechanism. These findings demonstrate that prostacyclin, the most abundant prostanoid in the retinal circulation, is a potent stimulator of BKCa channel activity in retinal pericytes. Interestingly, this response appears to involve cAMP-stimulated cross-activation of PKG, and not PKA. Taken together, these findings could explain, at least in part, the cellular/molecular basis for PGI2-induced pericyte relaxation and augmentation of blood flow in the retina. Further, we propose PKG-dependent stimulation of BKCa channel activity as a new potential therapeutic target to combat decreased retinal blood flow seen in some disease states (e.g., diabetic retinopathy). © 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalExperimental eye research
Volume83
StatePublished - Jan 1 2006

Keywords

  • Animals
  • BKCa channel
  • Cells
  • Confocal
  • Cultured
  • Cyclic GMP-Dependent Protein Kinases
  • Epoprostenol
  • Ion Channel Gating
  • Microscopy
  • PKG
  • Patch-Clamp Techniques
  • Pericytes
  • Potassium Channels
  • alpha smooth muscle actin
  • animal
  • animal cell
  • animal tissue
  • article
  • beraprost
  • biological marker
  • biophysics
  • cAMP
  • calcium activated potassium channel
  • cell activity
  • cell culture
  • cell isolation
  • cell stimulation
  • channel gating
  • conductance
  • confocal microscopy
  • controlled study
  • cross-activation
  • cyclic AMP
  • cyclic GMP dependent protein kinase
  • cyclic GMP dependent protein kinase inhibitor
  • cytology
  • enzyme inhibition
  • eye
  • ganglioside
  • immunocytochemistry
  • kt 5720
  • kt 5823
  • measurement
  • metabolism
  • molecular dynamics
  • nonhuman
  • patch clamp
  • pericyte
  • physiology
  • potassium channel
  • priority journal
  • prostacyclin
  • prostacyclin derivative
  • prostanoid
  • protein expression
  • protein function
  • protein targeting
  • retina
  • retina blood flow
  • signal transduction
  • swine
  • upregulation
  • validation process
  • voltage gated potassium channel

Disciplines

  • Musculoskeletal, Neural, and Ocular Physiology

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