Insulin inhibits vascular smooth muscle contraction at a site distal to intracellular Ca2+concentration

1998 
Several hypertensive states are associated with resistance to insulin-induced glucose disposal and insulin-induced vasodilation. Insulin can inhibit vascular smooth muscle (VSM) contraction at the level of the VSM cell, and resistance to insulin’s inhibition of VSM cell contraction may be of pathophysiological importance. To understand the VSM cellular mechanisms by which insulin resistance leads to increased VSM contraction, we sought to determine how insulin inhibits contraction of normal VSM. It has been shown that insulin lowers the contractile agonist-stimulated intracellular Ca2+( Ca i 2 + ) transient in VSM cells. In this study, our goal was to see whether insulin inhibits VSM cell contraction at steps distal to Ca i 2 + and, if so, to determine whether the mechanism is dependent on nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and cGMP. Primary cultured VSM cells from canine femoral artery were bathed in a physiological concentration of extracellular Ca2+ and permeabilized to Ca2+ with a Ca2+ ionophore, either iono...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    48
    References
    19
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []