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Molecular and Cellular Biology, August 2005, p. 6980-6989, Vol. 25, No. 16
0270-7306/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/MCB.25.16.6980-6989.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Volkmar Gross,2
Ursula Storch,1
Galyna Dubrovska,2
Michael Obst,2
Eda Yildirim,3
Birgit Salanova,2
Hermann Kalwa,1
Kirill Essin,2
Olaf Pinkenburg,1
Friedrich C. Luft,2
Thomas Gudermann,1* and
Lutz Birnbaumer3
Institut für Pharmakologie und Toxikologie, Philipps-Universität Marburg, Marburg, Germany,1 Franz-Volhard Klinik, HELIOS Klinikum-Berlin, Medizinische Fakultät der Charité, Max-Delbrück-Centrum, Berlin, Germany,2 National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 277093
Received 17 February 2005/ Returned for modification 24 March 2005/ Accepted 29 May 2005
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In contrast to members of other TRP families, the functional importance of most members of the TRPC subfamily is still poorly understood. A TRPC channel for which considerable evidence has accumulated for a specific role is TRPC6, which has been proposed to regulate smooth muscle function. The TRPC6 mRNA was originally isolated from mouse brain and was also identified in lung cells (4). By comparative biophysical characterization and gene suppression using antisense oligonucleotides, TRPC6 was suggested to be the molecular correlate of the
1-adrenoceptor-activated nonselective cation channel in vascular smooth muscle cells (16) and the vasopressin-activated cation channel in an aortic smooth muscle cell line (18). In addition, TRPC6 has been proposed to play a critical role in the intravascular pressure-induced depolarization and constriction of small arteries and arterioles in the brain (29). Activation of nonselective cation channels in vascular smooth muscle cells subsequent to receptor activation leads to cation influx and depolarization followed by the recruitment of voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channels, which mediate the bulk of the Ca2+ influx, resulting in smooth muscle contraction (reviewed in reference 12). The experimental studies just mentioned (16, 18, 29) strongly support the notion that TRPC6 is an essential component of receptor-operated Ca2+-permeable nonselective cation channels in smooth muscle cells.
We have developed mice deficient in TRPC6, and based on the data reviewed above, we predicted that loss of TRPC6 function would lead to a loss of vascular smooth muscle tone and attendant hypotension. Unexpectedly, we observed a higher agonist-induced contractility in isolated aortic rings prepared from these mice and an elevated systemic blood pressure that was further increased by inhibition of nitric oxide synthase. These effects were brought about by in vivo replacement of TRPC6 by channels of the TRPC3 type, a closely related but constitutively active member of the DAG-activated TRPC3/6/7 family. This resulted in enhanced basal and agonist-induced cation entry into smooth muscle cells, leading to more depolarized membrane potentials and increased smooth muscle contractility. The higher basal cation entry, however, was completely abolished by the expression of a TRPC3-specific small interference RNA (siRNA) in primary TRPC6/ smooth muscle cells.
To summarize, we provide in vivo and in vitro evidence that TRPC3 and TRPC6 are not freely functionally interchangeable. Thus, TRPC6 plays a cardinal role in receptor-operated control of vascular smooth muscle tone and has distinct and nonredundant roles in whole-animal vascular smooth muscle physiology.
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After linearization, the vector was used to target EK-CCE embryonic stem (ES) cells as described previously (17). A heterozygous ES clone (48F) was identified by Southern blotting. This clone was devoid of vector (pBS) or phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK)-Neo DNA elsewhere in the genome and showed integration of the PGK-Neo sequence at the correct site as shown by screening with both the 5' external probe and the Neo probe. Germ line chimeras were obtained by injection of the correctly targeted ES cell clone 48F into C57BL/6J blastocysts and crossed to homozygosity in a 1:1 129Sv:C57BL/6J background.
Offspring were analyzed by PCR using as template the genomic DNA extracted from mouse tail biopsy samples and the forward and reverse primer pair C6-E7F and C6-E7R, which annealed to exon 7 of the TRPC6 gene for wild-type (WT) detection, and primer pair C6-IFF and PgkR, which annealed to the intron downstream of exon 7 of the TRPC6 gene and the PGK promoter of the disrupting PGK-Neo cassette for mutant detection. Predicted reaction products were 234 bp for the wild type and 339 bp for the mutated genotypes. Primer sequences were as follows: C6-E7F, 5'-CAG ATC ATC TCT GAA GGT CTT TAT GC; C6-E7R, 5'-TGT GAA TGC TTC ATT CTG TTT TGC GCC; C6-IFF, 5'-GGG TTT AAT GTC TGT ATC ACT AAA GCC TCC; PgkR, 5'-ACG AGA CTA GTG AGA CGT GCT ACT TCC.
Only 129Sv/C57BL/6J littermates (WT, TRPC6/, or TRPC6+/) were analyzed. All experiments involving animals were approved by the local council on animal care.
Reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) and Western blot analysis. Total RNA from lung cells was isolated using the TriFast reagent (PeqLab, Erlangen, Germany). First-strand synthesis was carried out with random hexamers (pdN6; Amersham Bioscience, Freiburg, Germany) as primers, using REVERTAID reverse transcriptase (MBI-Fermentas, Sankt Leon-Roth, Germany). Products were amplified using TRPC6-specific primer pairs F1 and R1, F2 and R2, and F3 and R3, giving predicted product sizes of 456 bp, 1,172 bp, and 584 bp, respectively, and ß-actin primers (ACTF and ACTR) as controls. Primer sequences were as follows: F1, 5'-GCT CCC GCT GCC ACC GTA TG; F2, 5'-ACT TCG GCC GTC CAA ATC TCA GC; F3, 5'-TCT GGG CTA TCT TTG GTC TTT CTG; R1, 5'-CTG GGG CTT GTC GCT AAC CTT TTG; R2, 5'-GGC CCT TGC AAA CTT CCA CTC CA; R3, 5'-ATC AAT CTG GGC CTG CAA TAC ATA; ACTF, 5'-GGC TAC AGC TTC ACC ACC AC; ACTR, 5'-GAG TAC TTG CGC TCA GGA GG. PCRs were carried out using the following conditions: initial denaturation for 3 min at 94°C and 45 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 55°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 1 min, followed by a final extension at 72°C for 7 min. Western blot analysis of proteins from embryonic brain was carried out as described previously (27) using a TRPC6-specific antiserum (Alomone Labs, Jerusalem, Israel).
Contraction of arterial smooth muscle rings. Thoracic aortas were transferred to cold (4°C) oxygenated (95% O2-5% CO2) physiological salt solution (119 mM NaCl, 4.7 mM KCl, 25 mM NaHCO3, 1.2 mM KH2PO4, 1.6 mM CaCl2, 1.2 mM MgSO4, 0.03 mM EDTA, and 11 mM glucose) and dissected into 2-mm rings as described previously (19). Arterial segments were stretched in a stepwise manner to preloads of approximately 0.8 g. Mesenteric arteries were prepared as described previously (21) and mounted into a small-vessel myograph (Danish Myotechnology, Aarhus, Denmark).
Blood pressure analysis by telemetric techniques. Experiments were performed on seven male TRPC6/ mice weighing 26 ± 1 g and five male controls (four TRPC6+/ and one wild type) weighing 27 ± 1 g. L-NAME (N'-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester) treatment was performed on six TRPC6/ mice and four controls. One mouse was lost from each group for technical reasons. Body weights of L-NAME-treated mice were stable (body weights at the end of treatment were as follows: TRPC6/ mice, 27 g; controls, 26 g). Telemetric techniques are described in detail elsewhere (11), with the exception that the catheter of the telemetry device was advanced via the femoral artery into the abdominal aorta and the body of the transmitter was placed subcutaneously along the animal's flank. We quantified L-NAME uptake by weighing drinking bottles and calculating daily water uptake. Averaged over 5 to 7 days, the daily L-NAME uptake was 101 and 102 mg/kg of body weight/day in the case of control mice and TRPC6/ mice, respectively.
Analysis of the myogenic tone in mouse cerebral arteries. After decapitation of mice, the brain was removed and quickly transferred to cold (4°C), oxygenated (95% O2-5% CO2) physiological salt solution. Arteries were mounted onto glass cannulas on both sides, allowing an application of hydrostatic pressure to the vessel as described previously (20). For calibration and details, see reference 10.
Quantitative real-time PCR.
Total RNA and first-strand synthesis was carried out as described above. The following primers pairs were used for the amplification of specific fragments from the first-strand synthesis: TRPC1, C1F (5'-TGG GCC CAC TGC AGA TTT CAA) and C1R (5'-AAG ATG GCC ACG TGC GCT AAG GAG); TRPC2, C2F (5'-TTG CCT CCC TCA TCT TCC TCA CCA) and C2R (5'-CCG CAA GCC CTC GAT CCA CAC CT); TRPC3, C3F (5'-AGC CGA GCC CCT GGA AAG ACA C) and C3R (5'-CCG ATG GCG AGG AAT GGA AGA C); TRPC4, C4F (5'-GGG CGG CGT GCT GCT GAT) and C4R (5'-CCG CGT TGG CTG ACT GTA TTG TAG); TRPC5, C5F (5'-AGT CGC TCT TCT GGT CTG TCT TT) and C5R (5'-TTT GGG GCT GGG AAT AAT G); TRPC6, C6F (5'-GAC CGT TCA TGA AGT TTG TAG CAC) and C6R (5'-AGT ATT CTT TGG GGC CTT GAG TCC); TRPC7, C7F (5'-GTG GGC GTG CTG GAC CTG) and C7R (5'-AGA CTG TTG CCG TAA GCC TGA GAG); CaV1.2
1,
1CF (5'-GAC GTT CCC CCA GGC TGT GTT ACT) and
1CR (5'-GTG ATG GGG ACC GAG GAT AGA CC); and ß-actin (ACTF and ACTR) primers as described above. Real-time PCR was done using the 2x master mix from the Quantitect SYBR Green PCR kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) containing a HotStar Taq polymerase, buffer, nucleotides, 5 mM MgCl2 (final concentration, 2.5 mM), and SYBR Green. Ten picomoles of each primer pair and 0.2 µl from the first-strand synthesis were added to the reaction mixture, and PCR was carried out in a light cycler apparatus (Roche, Mannheim, Germany) using the following conditions: 15 min of initial activation and 45 cycles of 12 s at 94°C, 30 s at 50°C, 30 s at 72°C, and 10 s at 80°C each. Fluorescence intensities were recorded after the extension step at 80°C after each cycle to exclude fluorescence of primer dimers melting at temperatures lower than 80°C. All primers were tested by using diluted cDNA from the first-strand synthesis (10- to 1,000-fold) to confirm linearity of the reaction. Samples containing primer dimers were excluded by melting curve analysis and identification of the products by agarose gel electrophoresis. Crossing points were determined by the software program. The relative gene expression was quantified using the formula [2e(crossing point of ß-actin crossing point X)] x 100 = % of reference gene expression.
Smooth muscle cell isolation and Ba2+ influx experiments. Thoracic aortas were placed in cold (4°C) solution I (127 mM NaCl, 5.9 mM KCl, 1.2 mM MgCl2, 11.8 mM glucose, 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 2.4 mM CaCl2). After blood vessels were washed once in solution I without CaCl2 added, aortas were cut longitudinally into two pieces and placed into solution EI containing enzymes (from Sigma-Aldrich, Deisenhofen, Germany; 5 mg of albumin per ml [A4503], 3.5 mg of papain per ml [P4762], and 5 mg of dithiothreitol per ml [43815] in Ca2+-free solution I) for 30 min at 37°C. Afterwards, pieces were incubated in enzyme solution EII containing 5 mg of albumin per ml, 5 mg of collagenase per ml (C8051), and 5 mg of hyaluronidase per ml (H3506) in solution I but with 50 µM CaCl2 added for 10 min. Smooth muscle cells were isolated by pipetting aortic pieces with a blunt-ended Pasteur pipette and placed in the middle of a glass coverslip coated with a solution containing laminin (20 µg/ml, L2020). Cells were loaded with fura-2-acetoxymethyl ester and analyzed as described previously (7).
Design of a small interference RNA and production of recombinant adeno-associated viruses.
The multiple cloning site (MCS) of the vector N1-EGFP (BD Bioscience, Heidelberg, Germany) was removed by digestion with the restriction enzymes NheI and AgeI. Cohesive ends were filled up by Klenow fragment and religated for the production of the N1-EGFP
MCS vector. A cassette with a filled-up NotI site and a BspLU11 site containing the H1 promoter from the pSUPER vector (5) was then cloned into the linearized N1-EGFP
MCS vector. After digestion with Acc65I and AflII cohesive ends were again filled up by Klenow fragment and cloned into the blunt ends of an HpaI and a filled-up XbaI site of the pHpa7 vector to generate the pH 1-EGFP-dsAAV2 vector.
Sequences for the production of an siRNA homologous to TRPC3 (indicated by underlining) were designed using the extended rule set of Reynolds et al. (25): siRNA TRPC3 sense (5'-GAT CCC CGT GTC AAA CTT GCC ATT AAT TCA AGA GAT TAA TGG CAA GTT TGA CAC TTT TTG GAA A) and siRNA TRPC3 antisense oligonucleotide (5'-AGC TTT TCC AAA AAG TGT CAA ACT TGC CAT TAA TCT CTT GAA TTA ATG GCA AGT TTG ACA CGG G).
Oligonucleotides were commercially synthesized, annealed, phosphorylated by T4 polynucleotide kinase, and inserted into the HindIII and BglII sites of the pH 1-EGFP-dsAAV2 vector.
Virus was generated using triple transfection of the p80XX6, the pAAV2/1, and the pH 1-EGFP-dsAAV2 vector into HEK 293 cells. Adeno-associated type 1 viruses were purified using a CsCl gradient. The virus titer was quantified by quantitative PCR, and 5 x 108 viruses were used to infect 3 x 105 cells.
Transfection of smooth muscle cells by electroporation. Smooth muscle cells from thoracic aortas of wild-type and TRPC6/ mice were prepared as described above and nucleofected with pcDNA3 vectors coding for TRPC3GFP or TRPC6GFP. Control cells were electroporated with the pCDNA3-green fluorescent protein (GFP) vector. Electroporation was carried out by using a nucleofector (Amaxa GmbH, Cologne, Germany) and the protocol and solutions for human aortic smooth muscle cells (human AOSMC Nucleofector kit) as described by the supplier (Amaxa GmbH, Cologne, Germany).
Patch clamp recordings and preparation of cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells.
Single smooth muscle cells were enzymatically isolated from cerebellar and basilar arteries of mice as described in detail elsewhere (24). Electrophysiological recordings were made essentially as described previously (7) using patch pipettes with resistances of 5.5 to 8.0 M
when filled with the intracellular solution (CsCl, 120 mM; NaCl, 9.4 mM; MgCl2, 1 mM; Na3GTP, 0.2 mM, buffered at 100 nM free Ca2+ with 10 mM BAPTA {N,N'-[1,2-ethanediylbis-(oxy-2,1-phenylene)]bis[N-(carboxymethyl)glycine]} and 10 mM HEPES, titrated to pH 7.2 by CsOH and with or without 1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl-sn-glycerol [SAG, 50 µM; Calbiochem, Darmstadt, Germany]). Patch clamp recordings were carried out on the stage of an inverted microscope (Olympus IX 70) at room temperature (23°C). Adherent smooth muscle cells were superfused in a cell culture dish mounted to a small perfusion chamber with the extracellular solution (NaCl, 140 mM; CsCl, 5 mM; CaCl2, 2 mM; MgCl2, 1 mM; glucose, 10 mM; HEPES, 10 mM; titrated to pH 7.4 with NaOH). Data from conventional whole-cell recordings were collected with an EPC10 patch clamp amplifier (HEKA, Lambrecht, Germany) using the Pulse software (HEKA). Patch pipettes made of borosilicate glass (Science Products, Hofheim, Germany) had resistances of 5.5 to 8.0 M
when filled with the intracellular solution (CsCl, 120 mM; NaCl, 9.4 mM; MgCl2, 1 mM; Na3GTP, 0.2 mM; buffered at 100 nM free Ca2+ with 10 mM BAPTA and 10 mM HEPES, titrated to pH 7.2 with CsOH) or the second intracellular solution containing additionally the potent non-membrane-permeable diacylglycerol derivate SAG. This intracellular solution with 50 µM SAG (Calbiochem, Darmstadt, Germany) had a dimethyl sulfoxide concentration of 0.05% and was sonicated for more than 7 min directly before pipette filling. The liquid junction potential was +4.3 mV, and the correction of this offset was made by the Pulse software. The cells were held at a potential of 60 mV, and current-voltage relations were obtained from triangular voltage ramps from 100 to +60 mV with a slope of 0.4 V s1 applied at a frequency of 1 Hz. Data were acquired at a frequency of 5 kHz after filtering at 1.67 kHz.
For the Na+-free extracellular solution, Na+ was replaced by an equimolar concentration of N-methyl-D-glucamine (NMDG+). Nimodipine (10 µM) was added to the standard extracellular solution to check for voltage-dependent Ca2+ currents activated by depolarizing ramps. Each of the Cl channel blockers 5-nitro-2-(3-phenyl-propylamino)-benzoate (NPPB), niflumic acid, and 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (DIDS) was tested in the standard extracellular solution to analyze the contribution of Cl currents to whole-cell currents by applying ramps.
Membrane potentials from isolated cerebral smooth muscle cells were recorded using the conventional whole-cell configuration at an acquisition rate of 200 Hz for more than 10 min. To imitate physiological conditions, current clamp measurements were performed with the intracellular solution (KCl, 80 mM; potassium glutamate, 50 mM; MgCl2, 2 mM; MgATP, 2 mM; HEPES, 10 mM; buffered at 100 nM free Ca2+ with 10 mM BAPTA, titrated to pH 7.2 by KOH) and the extracellular solution (NaCl, 140 mM; KCl, 5.4 mM; MgCl2, 1 mM; CaCl2, 2 mM; glucose, 10 mM; and HEPES, 10 mM; titrated to pH 7.4 with NaOH). The liquid junction potential was +8.0 mV. Criteria for the acceptance of recordings were (i) stable membrane potentials for at least 5 min, (ii) membrane potentials of
20 mV, and (iii) membrane potentials with one bell-shaped frequency distribution.
Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)-induced store-operated membrane currents in freshly isolated smooth muscle cells of brain arteries were also analyzed by the whole-cell patch clamp technique. Pipette infusions were made by adding 100 µM IP3 into the SAG-free pipette solution. To exclude calcium-induced effects on membrane currents, the free calcium was buffered to 100 nM by BAPTA. For some recordings we used an IP3-containing SAG-free pipette solution with less chloride which was replaced equimolarly with methanosulfate. The fold amplification of current densities at ±60 mV was calculated as the quotient of the mean of current densities from 0 to 5 and from 120 to 125 s after patch rupture.
The osmolarity of all solutions was measured with the vapor osmometer Vapro 5520 (Wescor Inc.) to be in the range of 294 to 309 mosmol l1.
Statistical analysis. Error bars represent standard errors of the means (SEM). Statistical analysis was performed using an unpaired Student t test, and significance was accepted at P < 0.05 (two-tailed P value), if not stated otherwise.
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FIG. 1. Targeted disruption of the murine TRPC6 gene. (A) cDNA with delineation of intron-exon boundaries and location of hydrophobic segments presumed to code for transmembrane domains, genomic organization of the TRPC6 gene, and restriction maps of the mTRPC6 target locus before (WT) and after (MUT) targeting. Exons and introns are shown as filled boxes and lines, respectively. Exon 7 of the mTRPC6 gene contains the coding region of the depicted amino acid sequence of the mTRPC6 protein. The targeting vector contains 8.7 kb of murine TRPC6 genomic sequence (bold line in all restriction maps). The 5' external and the Neo probe used for the Southern analysis are indicated by gray bars. (B) Identification of targeted ES cell clone 48F by Southern blot analysis. As controls, WT ES cells and clone 48D with a misintegrated targeting vector are shown. (C) Agarose gel electrophoresis of PCR products identifying the genotypes of the F2 generation from a chimera obtained from the targeted 48F ES cell clone. Approximate locations of the genotyping primers are shown in the diagram above the photograph of the electrophoretic separation of the PCR products. (D) Analysis of RT-PCR products by agarose gel electrophoresis identifying the indicated regions of the TRPC6 mRNA in total RNA from lung cells of WT and TRPC6-deficient (TRPC6/) mice. The coding region of exon 7 is deleted in the diagram showing the approximate locations of primers. Lanes 1 to 3 show PCR products using primer pairs F1/R1, F2/R2, and F3/R3, respectively; lane 4 shows RT-PCR products obtained by using primers for ß-actin. (E) Immunoblot analysis of equal amounts of brain microsomal proteins from wild-type and TRPC6/ embryos by a TRPC6-specific antiserum.
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TRPC6/ mice are viable and show no gross phenotype. Fertility and litter sizes were normal compared to those of TRPC6WT mice.
Contractility of aortic and mesenteric rings.
Subsequently, we explored the behavior of vascular smooth muscle, as seen in aortic rings stimulated with increasing concentrations of the
1-adrenoceptor agonist phenylephrine. Agonist-induced contractility was increased (P < 0.05 at 0.3 to 100 µM phenylephrine) in aortic rings from TRPC6-deficient mice compared to wild-type controls (Fig. 2A). While overall contraction in response to 3 µM phenylephrine was reduced in the presence of 100 µM CdCl2, a blocker of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels, the increased responsiveness of aortic rings from TRPC6-deficient mice was still observed (Fig. 2B, P < 0.05). To examine small peripheral resistance blood vessels, we isolated mesenteric arteries and monitored phenylephrine-dependent smooth muscle contractility. In the presence of CdCl2, the phenylephrine (30 µM)-induced contractile force of arteries from TRPC6/ mice was significantly higher than that of wild-type littermates (Fig. 2C, P < 0.05).
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FIG. 2. Vascular smooth muscle properties in wild-type and TRPC6/ mice. Agonist-induced vasoconstriction of aortic rings (A and B) and mesenteric arteries (C), telemetric measurement of mean blood pressure (D), and vasoconstriction in response to intravascular pressure (E, F, and G). (A) Response of aortic rings from wild-type (black squares, n = 14) and TRPC6/ mice (white squares, n = 21) to increasing concentrations of phenylephrine; values are in mN ± SEM. (B) Summary of the contractility of aortic rings from wild-type (WT) and TRPC6/ mice after application of phenylephrine in the absence (WT [black bar], n = 13; TRPC6/ [white bar], n = 21) and in the presence of CdCl2 (WT [black bar], n = 7; TRPC6/ [white bar], n = 12). Significant differences at P < 0.05 are indicated by asterisks. (C) Summary of contractility of mesenteric arteries from wild-type and TRPC6/ mice after application of phenylephrine in the absence (WT, black bar, eight arteries from four mice; TRPC6/, white bar, 12 arteries from six mice) and in the presence of CdCl2 (WT, black bar, eight arteries from four mice; TRPC6/, white bar, 10 arteries from five mice) before and during contraction. Significant differences are indicated by asterisks (* for P < 0.05). (D) Telemetric analysis of the mean arterial blood pressure in control (WT or TRPC6+/) and TRPC6/ mice. Blood pressure of control (n = 5, black squares) and TRPC6/ (n = 7, white squares) mice was continuously recorded under basal conditions and after applying L-NAME to the drinking water (control, n = 4; TRPC6/, n = 6). Further details are indicated in Materials and Methods. Significant differences are indicated by asterisks(* for P < 0.05). (E to G) Myogenic tone of cerebral arteries after application of intravascular pressure (E and F). Representative traces of diameter recordings in cerebral arteries from a wild-type (E) and a TRPC6/ (F) mouse. The solid black line represents the intravascular pressure applied. Where shown, extracellular Ca2+ was removed (nominal 0 Ca2+) or 60 mM KCl (60 KCl) was added. (G) Summary of increases in diameters after application of intravascular pressure to cerebral arteries from wild-type (black squares, n = 6) and TRPC6/ (white squares, n = 6) mice. The shift from vasodilatation to vasoconstriction due to the Bayliss effect is indicated by dashed lines for wild-type (black) and TRPC6/ (gray) mice. The shift was determined by data point fitting using polynomic approximation.
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Myogenic tone of cerebral arteries. We directly monitored the effect of intravascular pressure on the diameter of cerebral arteries from wild-type and TRPC6-deficient mice and found that intravascular pressure induced a similar degree of vasoconstriction in TRPC6/ and control mice (Fig. 2E and F). The pressure at which myogenic dilatation reversed into myogenic constriction due to the Bayliss effect was significantly (P < 0.05) shifted to the left towards lower values in TRPC6/ vessels compared to wild-type cerebral arteries (55 ± 6 mm Hg versus 78 ± 5 mm Hg, Fig. 2G). The constriction of brain arteries was relieved in the absence of external Ca2+, and blood vessels were fully constricted in response to depolarization by 60 mM KCl (Fig. 2E and F).
Quantitative assessment of TRPC mRNAs in TRPC6-deficient mice.
To gain insight into molecular mechanisms resulting in the phenotype of TRPC6/ mice described above, we next quantified mRNA levels of all seven TRPCs in thoracic aortas and cerebral arteries of TRPC6/ and wild-type mice (Fig. 3). Subsequently, transcription of TRPC genes was compared by means of real-time quantitative PCR. TRPC1, -3, and -6 constituted the predominant complement of TRPC channels in thoracic aortas (Fig. 3A). Most TRPC genes as well as the CaV1.2
1 subunit genes were transcribed at similar levels in wild-type and TRPC6-deficient mice. However, the TRPC3 mRNA level was elevated three- to fivefold in TRPC6/ mice (P < 0.05; Fig. 3A) concomitant with an additional twofold up-regulation of aortic TRPC7 mRNA (P < 0.05) (Fig. 3A). Along these lines a twofold up-regulation (P < 0.05) of TRPC3 was also detectable in cerebral arteries (Fig. 3B). In contrast to these results, mRNA expression of TRPM4, another TRP channel involved in myogenic constriction of cerebral arteries (8), was not elevated in TRPC6/ mice compared to wild-type mice (data not shown). Thus, increased contractility of vascular smooth muscle in TRPC6-deficient mice is correlated with an up-regulation of TRPC3/7-type mRNAs in aortas and cerebral arteries.
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FIG. 3. Quantitative analysis of mRNA levels by real-time PCR of total RNA from thoracic aortas (A) and cerebral arteries (B). Total RNA was prepared from WT (thoracic aortas, n = 4; cerebral arteries, n = 4, black bars) and TRPC6/ (thoracic aortas, n = 5; cerebral arteries, n = 5, white bars) mice and reverse transcribed, and products of the first-strand synthesis were analyzed for the presence of amplification products obtained with primer pairs described under Materials and Methods. mRNAs coding for TRPCs, ß-actin (as reference gene), and the CaV1.2 1 subunit were quantified with the aid of a light cycler. Values are presented as percentage of reference mRNA expression (ß-actin mRNA expression). Error bars indicate SEM. Significant differences are indicated by asterisks (* for P < 0.05).
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FIG. 4. Ba2+ influx into isolated smooth muscle cells from control and TRPC6/ mice. (A) Ba2+ influx into isolated smooth muscle cells from thoracic aortas of control and TRPC6/ mice. Isolated cells were loaded with fura-2, and basal Ba2+ influx was assessed by the increase in fluorescence ratios. After application of EGTA (2 mM) and CdCl2 (100 µM) in a nominally Ca2+-free solution, Ba2+ (2 mM) was added to the bath solution. The black (WT, n = 12 cells from three mice) and gray (TRPC6/, n = 14 cells from four mice) lines represent the calculated means, whereas the light gray areas indicate SEM. (A, inset) Ba2+ influx into smooth muscle cells from thoracic aortas isolated from TRPC6/ mice (gray trace, n = 5 cells from three mice) and wild-type mice (black trace, n = 10 cells from three mice) loaded with fura-2 and analyzed by single-cell fluorescence imaging. After application of EGTA and CdCl2 in a nominally Ca2+-free solution, Ba2+ was added to the bath solution and cells were stimulated with OAG (100 µM) as indicated. (B) Ba2+ influx into cultured smooth muscle cells from thoracic aortas of TRPC6/ mice infected with adeno-associated viruses expressing the green fluorescent protein (AAV/GFP, gray trace, n = 12 cells from five mice) or a TRPC3-specific small interference RNA plus GFP (AAV/GFP + siRNA TRPC3, gray trace, n = 12 cells from five mice). (B, inset) Comparisonof fold increases in basal activities in cultured smooth muscle cells from wild-type (black bars) and TRPC6/ (white bars) aortas after infection with AAV/GFP or AAV/GFP + siRNA TRPC3. Data were obtained 1 s and 300 s after starting the experiment. (C) Ba2+ influx in cultured smooth muscle cells from thoracic aortas of wild-type mice (left panel) and TRPC6/ mice (right panel) electroporated with a pCDNA3 vector coding for TRPC3GFP (+ TRPC3GFP) or GFP (+ GFP) (left panel) and TRPC6GFP (+ TRPC6GFP) or GFP (+ GFP) (right panel). Black (WT, n = 10 cells from five mice) and gray (TRPC6/, n = 11 cells from five mice) lines represent the calculated means, whereas the light gray areas indicate SEM.
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FIG. 5. (A and B) Analysis of current densities by electrophysiological analysis of single smooth muscle cells isolated from cerebral arteries of control (black traces) or TRPC6/ (gray traces) mice in the absence (A, left panel) or presence (50 µM) (A, right panel) of SAG. (B) Summary of current densities of single smooth muscle cells isolated from control (black bars, n = 12 cells from eight animals) or TRPC6/ (white bars, n = 12 cells from four animals) mice in the absence (SAG, left) or in the presence (+SAG, right) of SAG (control, n = 25 cells from six animals; TRPC6/, n = 19 from four animals). Significant differences are indicated by asterisks (* for P < 0.05 and *** for P < 0.001). (C, left) Representative traces of recorded membrane potentials in single wild-type (black trace) and TRPC6/ (gray trace) cerebral smooth muscle cells. (C, right) Summary of membrane potentials in isolated smooth muscle cells from control (black bar, n = 20 cells from five animals) and TRPC6/ (white bar, n = 12 cells from four animals) mice. Significant differences are indicated by asterisks (** for P < 0.01).
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4 for each combination). Likewise, none of three Cl channel blockers, NPPB (50 µM, n = 19), niflumic acid (100 µM, n = 16), and DIDS (300 µM, n = 13), had an effect on inward and outward currents (n
3 for control and TRPC6/ cells in the absence or presence of SAG). Finally, addition of 5 µM GdCl3 to the bath solution inhibited inward currents at 60 mV by no more than 5 to 12% (n
10), excluding a significant contribution of store-operated Ca2+-permeable channels to the currents measured (data not shown). By infusion of IP3 endogenous currents were increased. The relative increases in current densities after 120 s were not significantly different (P = 0.70 at +60 mV and P = 0.70 at 60 mV), being 3.9 ± 0.8 at 60 mV and 3.8 ± 1.1 at 60 mV in cells from TRPC6+/ and 3.6 ± 0.3 at 60 mV and 3.2 ± 0.7 at 60 mV in cells from TRPC6/ mice (data not shown). Thus, it is very unlikely that TRPC6 is involved in store-operated currents activated by IP3 in these cells.
To examine the functional consequences of the described basal activity in a physiological setting, we monitored the membrane potential in isolated smooth muscle cells from cerebral arteries (Fig. 5C, left panel). The mean membrane potentials in smooth muscle cells from TRPC6/ mice were significantly (P < 0.01) more depolarized (28.3 ± 1.4 mV [n = 12]) than those in smooth muscle cells of wild-type littermates (38.6 ± 2.4 mV [n = 20]; Fig. 5C, right panel). The depolarized potential of TRPC6/ smooth muscle cells most probably results from a higher TRPC3-mediated cation influx.
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Despite their high degree of structural and functional similarity, TRPC3, -6, and -7 differ substantially in their basal channel activities. While TRPC6 is a tightly regulated receptor-activated cation channel (7), TRPC3 and TRPC7 display considerable constitutive activity upon expression in various cell lines (7, 23, 33; summarized in reference 28), and we have recently shown that a discrepant N-linked glycosylation pattern is a major determinant for basal TRPC3 and TRPC6 activities (7).
To determine whether ablation of TRPC6 expression and replacement by TRPC3 and TRPC7 would increase TRPC-dependent cation fluxes in smooth muscle cells of TRPC6/ mice, we monitored basal and OAG-stimulated Ba2+ influx and the electrophysiological properties of single TRPC6-deficient smooth muscle cells. We show that basal Ba2+ influx was substantially elevated compared to control cells. The expression of a TRPC3-specific siRNA in TRPC6/ cells resulted in a reduced basal activity indistinguishable from that of wild-type cells, indicating that TRPC3 channel activity alone might be responsible for the discrepant behavior of TRPC6-deficient smooth muscle cells. Along these lines, expression of TRPC3 in wild-type cells resulted in increased basal activity, whereas TRPC6 expression in TRPC6/ smooth muscle cells reduced basal cation influx. These data favor the concept of the formation of TRPC3/6 heteromeric complexes with a tightly receptor-operated TRPC6 subunit suppressing TRPC3 basal activity (7). The ineffectiveness of a TRPC6 siRNA in increasing basal influx in wild-type smooth muscle cells strongly argues for a long-term adaptation process to the loss of TRPC6, resulting in TRPC3 up-regulation (data not shown). Ba2+ influx was increased further by application of a membrane-permeable DAG analogue. The OAG response demonstrated that TRPC3-type channels expressed in TRPC6-deficient cells are functional. In accord with these observations, whole-cell patch clamp recordings on cerebral artery smooth muscle cells revealed higher TRPC-mediated current densities in TRPC6/ mice than in control mice. The augmented cation influx results in a more depolarized membrane potential, probably leading to a higher open probability of voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channels in vascular smooth muscle cells, thus explaining the higher smooth muscle contractility and the increased sensitivity of cerebral arteries to intravascular pressure. All our data support the hypothesis that, in the TRPC6-deficient mice, constitutively active TRPC3-type channels are not able to functionally replace TRPC6, resulting in a higher basal cation influx, increased sensitivity towards constrictor agonists, and enhanced contractility of vascular smooth muscle.
Although we can only speculate about the molecular composition of a native TRPC6-containing channel complex in smooth muscle cells, expression studies show coexpression with TRPC3 in most of the analyzed smooth muscle tissues and derived cell lines (summarized in reference 2). Most interestingly, recent multimerization data show that TRPC3/6 tetramers are formed in a heterologous expression system (14), in brain synaptosomes (9), and in polarized epithelial cells (1). Our findings are fully compatible with the hypothesis that, in such heteromultimeric complexes, TRPC6 may suppress the high basal activity of TRPC3, leading to a tightly receptor-regulated cation channel complex required for the physiological regulation of smooth muscle tone. It is notable that, in the Drosophila melanogaster eye, a similar mechanism has been proposed to generate the phospholipase C-regulated cation conductance via a TRPL/TRP
complex, because either channel protein is constitutively active when expressed alone (30).
Activation of nonselective cation channels in vascular smooth muscle cells subsequent to receptor activation or rises of intravascular pressure leads to depolarization and consecutive recruitment of voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channels mediating Ca2+ influx and smooth muscle contraction (summarized in reference 12). Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels are key components of the vasopressor response sequence as illustrated by the effectiveness of Ca2+ channel blockers and K+ channel openers in the treatment of hypertension. Nevertheless, smooth muscle tone is critically determined by TRPC3 and TRPC6 channels. In line with this concept TRPC6 and TRPC3 were found to be up-regulated in lung tissues and vascular smooth muscle cells of patients suffering from idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (31).
In the present study, we provide comprehensive evidence that TRPC3 and TRPC6 are functionally nonredundant and that TRPC6 plays a unique role in the physiological control of vascular smooth muscle tone. Thus, TRPC3 and TRPC6 may represent interesting new drug targets to reduce smooth muscle tone in pathophysiological conditions such as hypertension (26, 31).
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This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (A.D., T.G., and M.G.) and by a grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, to L.B. (HL-45198).
Present address: Medizinische Klinik mit Schwerpunkt Nephrologie und internistische Intensivmedizin, Charité Campus Virchow Klinikum, Berlin, Germany. ![]()
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1-adrenoceptor-activated Ca2+-permeable cation channel. Circ. Res. 88:325-332.
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, a drosophila TRP-related subunit, forms a regulated cation channel with TRPL. Neuron 26:647-657.[CrossRef][Medline]
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