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Vol. 296, Issue 2, 322-328, February 2001
Department of Physiology and Physiopathology, Ghent University,
Ghent, Belgium
The possibility that anandamide is an endothelium-derived
hyperpolarizing factor was explored in the rat mesenteric vasculature by use of conventional microelectrode techniques. In the main mesenteric artery, anandamide and its more stable analog methanandamide hardly caused a measurable change in membrane potential of the smooth
muscle cells, which promptly hyperpolarized to EDHF liberated by
acetylcholine. Inhibition of endogenous anandamide breakdown by
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride did not increase membrane
responses to acetylcholine. The CB1 receptor antagonist
SR141716 did not significantly influence EDHF-mediated
hyperpolarization except at extremely high concentrations. Smooth
muscle cells of third to fourth order branches of the mesenteric
artery, which have a more negative resting membrane potential and show
smaller responses to acetylcholine, hyperpolarized by about 6 mV to
both anandamide and methanandamide, whereas another CB1
receptor agonist, WIN 55,212-2, had no effect. Mechanical endothelium
removal or pre-exposure to SR141716A did not affect anandamide- and
methanandamide-induced hyperpolarizations. However, in the presence of
capsazepine, a selective vanilloid receptor antagonist, these membrane
potential changes were reversed to a small depolarization, whereas
EDHF-induced hyperpolarizations were not affected. Pretreating small
vessels with capsaicin, causing desensitization of vanilloid receptors and/or depletion of sensory neurotransmitter, completely blocked methanandamide-induced hyperpolarizations. These findings show that
anandamide cannot be EDHF. In smooth muscle cells of small arteries,
anandamide-induced changes in membrane potential are mediated by
vanilloid receptors on capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves. The
different membrane response to the cannabinoids between the main
mesenteric artery and its daughter branches might be explained by the
different density of perivascular innervation.
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