4.5 Article

Heat-induced force suppression and HSP20 phosphorylation in swine carotid media

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 93, Issue 2, Pages 484-488

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00009.2002

Keywords

guanosine 3 ',5 '-cyclic monophosphate; heat shock proteins; nitric oxide; vascular smooth muscle

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In vascular smooth muscle, cyclic nucleotide-ependent phosphorylation of heat shock protein 20 (HSP20) on serine-16 (Ser(16)) has been suggested to cause force suppression, i.e., reduced force with only minimal myosin regulatory light chain (MRLC) dephosphorylation. We hypothesized that heat pretreatment also suppresses force by increasing HSP20 phosphorylation. After heat pretreatment of swine carotid artery at 44.5degreesC for 4 h and reduction to 37degreesC for 1 h, Ser(16)-HSP20 phosphorylation was increased and histamine-induced increases in contractile force were suppressed. Subsequent addition of nitroglycerin induced additive force suppression. Heat and nitroglycerin induced a similar relation between Ser(16)-HSP20 phosphorylation and force. Heat pretreatment induced a small, but significant, increase in total HSP20 immunostaining. These results demonstrate that vascular smooth muscle responds to thermal stress by increasing Ser(16)-HSP20 phosphorylation in addition to a possible small increase in total HSP20 concentration. The resulting heat-induced reduction in force should be considered force suppression because histamine-induced increases in MRLC phosphorylation were not significantly altered by heat pretreatment. These processes may bring about a resistance to contractile agonists, which could have clinical significance in conditions such as hyperthermia and/or sepsis with vasodilatory shock.

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