Electromechanical Dynamics and Myogenic Responses in Cerebral Smooth Muscle Cells and Capillary Pericytes
Electromechanical Dynamics and Myogenic Responses in Cerebral Smooth Muscle Cells and Capillary Pericytes
Khakpour, N.; Sancho, M.; Klug, N. R.; Ferris, H. R.; Dabertrand, F.; Nelson, M. T.; Tsoukias, N. M.
AbstractCerebral blood flow (CBF) control is essential for normal brain function and is disrupted in pathological conditions. Arterial diameters are tightly regulated to provide on demand increases in blood flow in regions of neuronal activity. Pericytes (PCs) exhibit robust myogenic tone and may also respond to neuronal activity to fine-tune local resistance and blood flow. Thus, mural control of microcirculatory resistance may extend beyond arteries and arterioles. Yet, PC's electrophysiology and contractility have not been thoroughly characterized, and this prohibits an integrated view of brain blood flow control. In this study, we develop a detailed mathematical model of mural cell electrophysiology, Ca2+ dynamics and biomechanics. The model is informed by electrophysiological data in smooth muscle cells (SMCs) or PCs and predictions are compared against pressure-induced responses in isolated arterioles and capillaries, respectively. Simulations recapitulate myogenic constrictions and examine differences in contractile dynamics as we move from arterioles to proximal and distal capillaries. In arteriole-to-capillary transitional (ACT) zone PCs, increased mechanosensitivity, more Ca2+ influx through non-selective cation (NSC) channels and/or a higher sensitivity of the contractile apparatus to Ca2+ can compensate for reduced L-type voltage-operated (VOCC) Ca2+ influx and allow for robust constrictions at the lower operating pressures of capillaries relative to the arterioles. A significant Ca2+ influx through NSC relative to VOCC, however, can decouple the PC's contractile apparatus from electrical signaling. Vasoactivity to chemomechanical stimuli along the arteriole to capillary axis is progressively driven by VOCC-independent Ca2+ influx and Ca2+ sensitization with slow kinetics. The proposed cell model can form the basis for detailed multiscale and multicellular models that will examine physiological function at a single vessel or vascular network levels and investigate CBF control in health and in disease.