Journal article
Removal of half the sympathetic innervation does not reduce vasoconstrictor responses in rat tail artery
D Tripovic, EM Mclachlan, JA Brock
Journal of Physiology | WILEY-BLACKWELL | Published : 2013
Abstract
Following reinnervation of denervated rat tail arteries, nerve-evoked contractions are at least as large as those evoked in normally innervated arteries despite a much lower nerve terminal density. Here nerve-evoked contractions have been investigated after transection of half the sympathetic innervation of normal tail arteries. After 1 week, the noradrenergic plexus 50-70 mm along the tail was about half as dense as control. Excitatory junction potentials recorded in smooth muscle cells of arterial segments isolated in vitro were half their normal amplitude. Surprisingly, nerve-evoked contractions of isometrically mounted segments were not reduced in amplitude, as was also the case after on..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Svetlana Pianova for assistance with histochemistry. This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia under a Project Grant (350903) and a Fellowship Grant to J.B. (350904).