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Publication : Endothelial GqPCR activity controls capillary electrical signaling and brain blood flow through PIP<sub>2</sub> depletion.

First Author  Harraz OF Year  2018
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  115
Issue  15 Pages  E3569-E3577
PubMed ID  29581272 Mgi Jnum  J:261423
Mgi Id  MGI:6153640 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1800201115
Citation  Harraz OF, et al. (2018) Endothelial GqPCR activity controls capillary electrical signaling and brain blood flow through PIP2 depletion. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115(15):E3569-E3577
abstractText  Brain capillaries play a critical role in sensing neural activity and translating it into dynamic changes in cerebral blood flow to serve the metabolic needs of the brain. The molecular cornerstone of this mechanism is the capillary endothelial cell inward rectifier K(+) (Kir2.1) channel, which is activated by neuronal activity-dependent increases in external K(+) concentration, producing a propagating hyperpolarizing electrical signal that dilates upstream arterioles. Here, we identify a key regulator of this process, demonstrating that phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) is an intrinsic modulator of capillary Kir2.1-mediated signaling. We further show that PIP2 depletion through activation of Gq protein-coupled receptors (GqPCRs) cripples capillary-to-arteriole signal transduction in vitro and in vivo, highlighting the potential regulatory linkage between GqPCR-dependent and electrical neurovascular-coupling mechanisms. These results collectively show that PIP2 sets the gain of capillary-initiated electrical signaling by modulating Kir2.1 channels. Endothelial PIP2 levels would therefore shape the extent of retrograde signaling and modulate cerebral blood flow.
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