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1.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 7248, 2023 11 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37945687

ABSTRACT

Progesterone (≥1 µM) is used in recovery of cerebral ischemia, an effect likely contributed to by cerebrovascular dilation. The targets of this progesterone action are unknown. We report that micromolar (µM) progesterone activates mouse cerebrovascular myocyte BK channels; this action is lost in ß1-/- mice myocytes and in lipid bilayers containing BK α subunit homomeric channels but sustained on ß1/ß4-containing heteromers. Progesterone binds to both regulatory subunits, involving two steroid binding sites conserved in ß1-ß4: high-affinity (sub-µM), which involves Trp87 in ß1 loop, and low-affinity (µM) defined by TM1 Tyr32 and TM2 Trp163. Thus progesterone, but not its oxime, bridges TM1-TM2. Mutation of the high-affinity site blunts channel activation by progesterone underscoring a permissive role of the high-affinity site: progesterone binding to this site enables steroid binding at the low-affinity site, which activates the channel. In support of our model, cerebrovascular dilation evoked by µM progesterone is lost by mutating Tyr32 or Trp163 in ß1 whereas these mutations do not affect alcohol-induced cerebrovascular constriction. Furthermore, this alcohol action is effectively counteracted both in vitro and in vivo by progesterone but not by its oxime.


Subject(s)
Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels , Progesterone , Mice , Animals , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels/metabolism , Progesterone/pharmacology , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel beta Subunits/chemistry , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel beta Subunits/genetics , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel beta Subunits/metabolism , Steroids/pharmacology , Binding Sites , Ethanol/pharmacology , Oximes/pharmacology
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37846408

ABSTRACT

Despite the significant number of people who may be taking pregnenolone supplements while drinking alcohol (ethanol), the widely documented cerebrovascular actions of pregnenolone and ethanol, and the critical dependence of cerebrovascular function on cerebral artery diameter, there are no studies addressing the effect of pregnenolone + ethanol in combination on cerebral artery diameter. We investigated this by evaluating the effect of this combination on middle cerebral artery diameter in male and female C57BL/6J mice, both in vivo and in vitro. The use of de-endothelialized, in vitro pressurized middle cerebral artery segments allowed us to conduct a concentration-response study of constriction induced by pregnenolone ± ethanol, in which drug action could be evaluated independently of circulating and endothelial factors. In both male and female animals, pregnenolone at lower concentrations (≤1 µM) was found to synergize with 50 mM ethanol to cause vasoconstriction. In both sexes, this synergism was lost as one or both vasoconstrictors approached their maximally effective concentrations (75 mM and 10 µM for ethanol and pregnenolone, respectively), whether this was evaluated in vitro or in vivo using a cranial window. Vasoconstriction by pregnenolone + ethanol was abolished by 1 µM paxilline, indicating BK channel involvement. Moreover, cell-free recordings of BK channel activity in cerebral artery myocyte membranes showed that 10 µM pregnenolone and pregnenolone +50 mM ethanol reduced channel activity to an identical extent, suggesting that these drugs inhibit cerebrovascular BK channels via a common mechanism or mechanisms. Indeed, pregnenolone was found to disrupt allosteric coupling to Ca2+-driven gating, as previously reported for ethanol.

3.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol ; 325(6): R769-R781, 2023 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37867475

ABSTRACT

Moderate-to-heavy episodic ("binge") drinking is the most common form of alcohol consumption in the United States. Alcohol at binge drinking concentrations reduces brain artery diameter in vivo and in vitro in many species including rats, mice, and humans. Despite the critical role played by brain vessels in maintaining neuronal function, there is a shortage of methodologies to simultaneously assess neuron and blood vessel function in deep brain regions. Here, we investigate cerebrovascular responses to ethanol by choosing a deep brain region that is implicated in alcohol disruption of brain function, the hippocampal CA1, and describe the process for obtaining simultaneous imaging of pyramidal neuron activity and diameter of nearby microvessels in freely moving mice via a dual-color miniscope. Recordings of neurovascular events were performed upon intraperitoneal injection of saline versus 3 g/kg ethanol in the same mouse. In male mice, ethanol mildly increased the amplitude of calcium signals while robustly decreasing their frequency. Simultaneously, ethanol decreased microvessel diameter. In females, ethanol did not change the amplitude or frequency of calcium signals from CA1 neurons but decreased microvessel diameter. A linear regression of ethanol-induced reduction in number of active neurons and microvessel constriction revealed a positive correlation (R = 0.981) in females. Together, these data demonstrate the feasibility of simultaneously evaluating neuronal and vascular components of alcohol actions in a deep brain area in freely moving mice, as well as the sexual dimorphism of hippocampal neurovascular responses to alcohol.


Subject(s)
Calcium , Neurons , Female , Humans , Mice , Rats , Male , Animals , Ethanol/pharmacology , Hippocampus , Microvessels
4.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol ; 324(4): R480-R496, 2023 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36717168

ABSTRACT

Alcohol intake leading to blood ethanol concentrations (BEC) ≥ legal intoxication modifies brain blood flow with increases in some regions and decreases in others. Brain regions receive blood from the Willis' circle branches: anterior, middle (MCA) and posterior cerebral (PCA), and basilar (BA) arteries. Rats and mice have been used to identify the targets mediating ethanol-induced effects on cerebral arteries, with conclusions being freely interchanged, albeit data were obtained in different species/arterial branches. We tested whether ethanol action on cerebral arteries differed between male rat and mouse and/or across different brain regions and identified the targets of alcohol action. In both species and all Willis' circle branches, ethanol evoked reversible and concentration-dependent constriction (EC50s ≈ 37-86 mM; below lethal BEC in alcohol-naïve humans). Although showing similar constriction to depolarization, both species displayed differential responses to ethanol: in mice, MCA constriction was highly sensitive to the presence/absence of the endothelium, whereas in rat PCA was significantly more sensitive to ethanol than its mouse counterpart. In the rat, but not the mouse, BA was more ethanol sensitive than other branches. Both interspecies and regional variability were ameliorated by endothelium. Selective large conductance (BK) channel block in de-endothelialized vessels demonstrated that these channels were the effectors of alcohol-induced cerebral artery constriction across regions and species. Variabilities in alcohol actions did not fully matched KCNMB1 expression across vessels. However, immunofluorescence data from KCNMB1-/- mouse arteries electroporated with KCNMB1-coding cDNA demonstrate that KCNMB1 proteins, which regulate smooth muscle (SM) BK channel function and vasodilation, regulate interspecies and regional variability of brain artery responses to alcohol.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Arteries , Ethanol , Animals , Male , Mice , Rats , Ethanol/pharmacology , Ethanol/metabolism , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel beta Subunits/genetics , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel beta Subunits/metabolism , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels/metabolism , Muscle, Smooth, Vascular/metabolism , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
5.
Mol Pharmacol ; 101(3): 132-143, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34969832

ABSTRACT

Calcium- and voltage-gated K+ channels of large conductance (BKs) are expressed in the cell membranes of all excitable tissues. Currents mediated by BK channel-forming slo1 homotetramers are consistently inhibited by increases in membrane cholesterol (CLR). The molecular mechanisms leading to this CLR action, however, remain unknown. Slo1 channels are activated by increases in calcium (Ca2+) nearby Ca2+-recognition sites in the slo1 cytosolic tail: one high-affinity and one low-affinity site locate to the regulator of conductance for K+ (RCK) 1 domain, whereas another high-affinity site locates within the RCK2 domain. Here, we first evaluated the crosstalking between Ca2+ and CLR on the function of slo1 (cbv1 isoform) channels reconstituted into planar lipid bilayers. CLR robustly reduced channel open probability while barely decreasing unitary current amplitude, with CLR maximal effects being observed at 10-30 µM internal Ca2+ CLR actions were not only modulated by internal Ca2+ levels but also disappeared in absence of this divalent. Moreover, in absence of Ca2+, BK channel-activating concentrations of magnesium (10 mM) did not support CLR action. Next, we evaluated CLR actions on channels where the different Ca2+-sensing sites present in the slo1 cytosolic domain became nonfunctional via mutagenesis. CLR still reduced the activity of low-affinity Ca2+ (RCK1:E379A, E404A) mutants. In contrast, CLR became inefficacious when both high-affinity Ca2+ sites were mutated (RCK1:D367A,D372A and RCK2:D899N,D900N,D901N,D902N,D903N), yet still was able to decrease the activity of each high-affinity site mutant. Therefore, BK channel inhibition by CLR selectively requires optimal levels of Ca2+ being recognized by either of the slo1 high-affinity Ca2+-sensing sites. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Results reveal that inhibition of calcium/voltage-gated K+ channel of large conductance (BK) (slo1) channels by membrane cholesterol requires a physiologically range of internal calcium (Ca2+) and is selectively linked to the two high-affinity Ca2+-sensing sites located in the cytosolic tail domain, which underscores that Ca2+ and cholesterol actions are allosterically coupled to the channel gate. Cholesterol modification of BK channel activity likely contributes to disruption of normal physiology by common health conditions that are triggered by disruption of cholesterol homeostasis.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Cholesterol/metabolism , Cytosol/metabolism , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel alpha Subunits/antagonists & inhibitors , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel alpha Subunits/metabolism , Animals , Calcium Channel Blockers/pharmacology , Cytosol/drug effects , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels/antagonists & inhibitors , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels/metabolism , Membrane Potentials/drug effects , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Protein Structure, Secondary , Rats
6.
Neuropharmacology ; 192: 108603, 2021 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34023335

ABSTRACT

Pregnenolone is a neurosteroid that modulates glial growth and differentiation, neuronal firing, and several brain functions, these effects being attributed to pregnenolone actions on the neurons and glial cells themselves. Despite the vital role of the cerebral circulation for brain function and the fact that pregnenolone is a vasoactive agent, pregnenolone action on brain arteries remain unknown. Here, we obtained in vivo concentration response curves to pregnenolone on middle cerebral artery (MCA) diameter in anesthetized male and female C57BL/6J mice. In both male and female animals, pregnenolone (1 nM-100 µM) constricted MCA in a concentration-dependent manner, its maximal effect reaching ~22-35% decrease in diameter. Pregnenolone action was replicated in intact and de-endothelialized, in vitro pressurized MCA segments with pregnenolone evoking similar constriction in intact and de-endothelialized MCA. Neurosteroid action was abolished by 1 µM paxilline, a selective blocker of Ca2+ - and voltage-gated K+ channels of large conductance (BK). Cell-attached, patch-clamp recordings on freshly isolated smooth muscle cells from mouse MCAs demonstrated that pregnenolone at concentrations that constricted MCAs in vitro and in vivo (10 µM), reduced BK activity (NPo), with an average decrease in NPo reaching 24.2%. The concentration-dependence of pregnenolone constriction of brain arteries and inhibition of BK activity in intact cells were paralleled by data obtained in cell-free, inside-out patches, with maximal inhibition reached at 10 µM pregnenolone. MCA smooth muscle BKs include channel-forming α (slo1 proteins) and regulatory ß1 subunits, encoded by KCNMA1 and KCNMB1, respectively. However, pregnenolone-driven decrease in NPo was still evident in MCA myocytes from KCNMB1-/- mice. Following reconstitution of slo1 channels into artificial, binary phospholipid bilayers, 10 µM pregnenolone evoked slo1 NPo inhibition which was similar to that seen in native membranes. Lastly, pregnenolone failed to constrict MCA from KCNMA1-/- mice. In conclusion, pregnenolone constricts MCA independently of neuronal, glial, endothelial and circulating factors, as well as of cell integrity, organelles, complex membrane cytoarchitecture, and the continuous presence of cytosolic signals. Rather, this action involves direct inhibition of SM BK channels, which does not require ß1 subunits but is mediated through direct sensing of the neurosteroid by the channel-forming α subunit.


Subject(s)
Brain/drug effects , Cerebral Arteries/drug effects , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel alpha Subunits/antagonists & inhibitors , Neurosteroids/toxicity , Pregnenolone/toxicity , Vasoconstriction/drug effects , Animals , Brain/blood supply , Brain/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Cerebral Arteries/metabolism , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Female , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel alpha Subunits/metabolism , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels/antagonists & inhibitors , Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels/metabolism , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , Vasoconstriction/physiology
7.
Alcohol ; 73: 45-55, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30268908

ABSTRACT

Alcohol (ethyl alcohol; ethanol) and caffeine are the two most widely used psychoactive substances in the world. Caffeine and ethanol have both been reported to constrict cerebral arteries in several species, including humans. We have recently shown that application of 10-µM caffeine mixed with 50 mM ethanol to in vitro pressurized cerebral arteries of rats reduced ethanol-induced constriction. This effect was dependent on the presence of nitric oxide (NO•) and could be observed in de-endothelialized arteries supplied with the NO donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP). The molecular target(s) of ethanol-caffeine interaction in cerebral arteries has remained unknown. In the present work, we used rat and mouse middle cerebral arteries (MCA) to identify the extra-endothelial effectors of NO-mediated, caffeine-induced protection against ethanol-evoked arterial constriction. Constriction of intact MCA of rat by either 50 mM ethanol or 10 µM caffeine was ablated in the presence of a selective TRPV1 pharmacological blocker. TRPV1 pharmacological block, but not block of TRPA1, PKG, or BK channels, removed caffeine-induced protection against ethanol-evoked rat MCA constriction, whether evaluated in arteries with intact endothelium or in SNP-supplemented, de-endothelialized arteries. In mouse arteries, caffeine-induced protection against ethanol-induced MCA constriction was significantly amplified, resulting in actual vasodilation, upon pharmacological block of TRPV1, and in TRPV1 knock-out arteries. Despite some species-specific differences, our study unequivocally demonstrates the presence of functional, extra-endothelial TRPV1 that participates in both endothelium-independent MCA constriction by separate exposure to ethanol or caffeine and caffeine-induced protection against ethanol-evoked MCA constriction.


Subject(s)
Caffeine/pharmacology , Central Nervous System Depressants/pharmacology , Central Nervous System Stimulants/pharmacology , Cerebral Arteries/drug effects , Ethanol/pharmacology , TRPV Cation Channels/drug effects , Animals , Cerebral Arteries/anatomy & histology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Middle Cerebral Artery/drug effects , Nitric Oxide/metabolism , Nitric Oxide Donors/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , TRPV Cation Channels/antagonists & inhibitors , Vasoconstriction/drug effects , Vasodilation/drug effects
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