Endothelial and smooth muscle cell conduction in arterioles controlling blood flow.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] B. Duling,et al. Electromechanical coupling and the conducted vasomotor response. , 1995, The American journal of physiology.
[2] J. Bény,et al. Bidirectional electrical communication between smooth muscle and endothelial cells in the pig coronary artery. , 1994, The American journal of physiology.
[3] P. Pratt,et al. Identification of epoxyeicosatrienoic acids as endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factors. , 1996, Circulation research.
[4] D. W. Cheung,et al. Characterization of acetylcholine-induced membrane hyperpolarization in endothelial cells. , 1992, Circulation research.
[5] B. Duling,et al. Connexin 43 and connexin 40 gap junctional proteins are present in arteriolar smooth muscle and endothelium in vivo. , 1995, The American journal of physiology.
[6] S S Segal,et al. Conduction of vasomotor responses in arterioles: a role for cell-to-cell coupling? , 1989, The American journal of physiology.
[7] P. Brink,et al. Selectivity of connexin-specific gap junctions does not correlate with channel conductance. , 1995, Circulation research.
[8] D. Welsh,et al. Coactivation of resistance vessels and muscle fibers with acetylcholine release from motor nerves. , 1997, The American journal of physiology.
[9] S S Segal,et al. Flow control among microvessels coordinated by intercellular conduction. , 1986, Science.
[10] M. Wolin,et al. Endothelium-associated vasodilators in rat skeletal muscle microcirculation. , 1989, The American journal of physiology.
[11] F. Edwards,et al. Sympathetic neuroeffector transmission in arteries and arterioles. , 1989, Physiological reviews.
[12] T. Neild,et al. Relation between membrane potential and contractile force in smooth muscle of the rat tail artery during stimulation by norepinephrine, 5-hydroxytryptamine, and potassium. , 1987, Circulation research.
[13] M. Mulvany,et al. Role of membrane potential in the response of rat small mesenteric arteries to exogenous noradrenaline stimulation. , 1982, The Journal of physiology.
[14] B. Sakmann,et al. Action potential initiation and propagation in rat neocortical pyramidal neurons , 1997, The Journal of physiology.
[15] J. Brayden. Membrane hyperpolarization is a mechanism of endothelium-dependent cerebral vasodilation. , 1990, The American journal of physiology.
[16] G. Meininger,et al. Cellular mechanisms involved in the vascular myogenic response. , 1992, The American journal of physiology.
[17] J. Angus,et al. Endothelium-dependent relaxation of coronary arteries by noradrenaline and serotonin , 1983, Nature.
[18] F. Markwardt,et al. Acetylcholine‐induced K+ currents in smooth muscle cells of intact rat small arteries. , 1997, The Journal of physiology.
[19] G. Hirst,et al. An analysis of excitatory junctional potentials recorded from arterioles. , 1978, The Journal of physiology.
[20] J. Bény. Endothelial and smooth muscle cells hyperpolarized by bradykinin are not dye coupled. , 1990, The American journal of physiology.
[21] T. Neild,et al. Conducted depolarization in arteriole networks of the guinea‐pig small intestine: effect of branching of signal dissipation. , 1996, The Journal of physiology.
[22] T. Bolton,et al. Mechanisms of action of noradrenaline and carbachol on smooth muscle of guinea‐pig anterior mesenteric artery. , 1984, The Journal of physiology.
[23] D. Clapham,et al. Muscarinic‐Activated K+ Current in Bovine Aortic Endothelial Cells , 1988, Circulation Research.
[24] S. Segal,et al. Interaction between conducted vasodilation and sympathetic nerve activation in arterioles of hamster striated muscle. , 1995, Circulation research.
[25] W. W. Stewart. Lucifer dyes—highly fluorescent dyes for biological tracing , 1981, Nature.
[26] B. Duling,et al. Dye tracers define differential endothelial and smooth muscle coupling patterns within the arteriolar wall. , 1995, Circulation research.
[27] David C. Spray,et al. Structure-activity relations of the cardiac gap junction channel. , 1990 .
[28] B. Nilius,et al. Ion channels in vascular endothelium. , 1997, Annual review of physiology.
[29] S. Segal,et al. Intracellular recording and dye transfer in arterioles during blood flow control. , 1992, The American journal of physiology.
[30] W. Large,et al. Membrane ionic mechanisms activated by noradrenaline in cells isolated from the rabbit portal vein. , 1988, The Journal of physiology.
[31] B. Duling,et al. Cellular pathways of the conducted electrical response in arterioles of hamster cheek pouch in vitro. , 1995, The American journal of physiology.
[32] R. Cohen,et al. Nitric oxide directly activates calcium-dependent potassium channels in vascular smooth muscle , 1994, Nature.
[33] H. Suzuki,et al. Calcium dependency of the endothelium‐dependent hyperpolarization in smooth muscle cells of the rabbit carotid artery. , 1990, The Journal of physiology.
[34] D. Mcmahon,et al. Modulation of hybrid bass retinal gap junctional channel gating by nitric oxide. , 1997, The Journal of physiology.
[35] P. Brink,et al. Gap junctions in excitable cells , 1996, Journal of bioenergetics and biomembranes.
[36] T I Tóth,et al. The ‘window’ component of the low threshold Ca2+ current produces input signal amplification and bistability in cat and rat thalamocortical neurones , 1997, The Journal of physiology.