Oleksandr V. Povstyan
St George's, University of London
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Featured researches published by Oleksandr V. Povstyan.
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2005
Maksym I. Harhun; Vladimír Pucovský; Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Dmitri Gordienko; Thomas B. Bolton
Interstitial cells of Cajal are believed to play an important role in gastrointestinal tissues by generating and propagating electrical slow waves to gastrointestinal muscles and/or mediating signals from the enteric nervous system. Recently cells with similar morphological characteristics have been found in the wall of blood vessels such as rabbit portal vein and guinea pig mesenteric artery. These non‐contractile cells are characterised by the presence of numerous processes and were easily detected in the wall of the rabbit portal vein by staining with methylene blue or by antibodies to the marker of Interstitial Cells of Cajal c‐kit. These vascular cells have been termed “interstitial cells” by analogy with interstitial cells found in the gastrointestinal tract. Freshly dispersed interstitial cells from rabbit portal vein and guinea pig mesenteric artery displayed various Ca2+‐release events from endo/sarcoplasmic reticulum including fast localised Ca2+ transients (Ca2+ sparks) and longer and slower Ca2+ events. Single interstitial cells from the rabbit portal vein, which is a spontaneously active vessel, also demonstrated rhythmical Ca2+ oscillations associated with membrane depolarisations, which suggests that in this vessel interstitial cells may act as pacemakers for smooth muscle cells. The function of interstitial cells from the mesenteric arteries is yet unknown. This article reviews some of the recent findings regarding interstitial cells from blood vessels obtained by our laboratory using electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry, tight‐seal patch‐clamp recording, and fluorescence confocal imaging techniques.
Circulation Research | 2004
Maksym I. Harhun; Dmitri Gordienko; Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Ray F. Moss; Thomas B. Bolton
Interstitial cells of Cajal (ICCs) were identified in the intact fixed media of the rabbit portal vein (RPV) using c-kit staining. The following experiments were performed using single cell preparations of the enzyme-dispersed vessel. Surviving contacts between the processes of single ICCs and the bodies of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) were observed in electron micrographs and by confocal microscopy. Spontaneous rhythmical [Ca2+]i oscillations were observed in ICCs after loading with the calcium indicator fluo-3 and were associated with depolarizations of the ICCs recorded by tight-seal patch pipette. To investigate signal transmission from ICCs to SMCs in dispersed cell pairs, or within small surviving fragments of the ICC network, an ICC was stimulated under voltage-clamp, while changes in [Ca2+]i in the stimulated cell as well as in a closely adjacent SMC or ICCs were monitored using fast x- y confocal imaging of fluo-3 fluorescence. After stimulation of single voltage-clamped ICC by a depolarizing step similar in duration to depolarizations associated with spontaneous [Ca2+]i oscillations, a depolarization and transient elevation of [Ca2+]i was observed in a closely adjacent SMCs after a delay of up to 4 seconds. In contrast, signal transmission from ICC to ICC was much faster, the delay being less than 200 ms. These results suggest that the an ICC may, in addition to generating an electrical signal (such as a slow wave) and thereby acting as a pacemaker for vascular SMCs of RPV, also release some unknown diffusible substance, which depolarizes the SMCs.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2011
Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Maksym I. Harhun; Dmitri Gordienko
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE P2X receptors mediate sympathetic control and autoregulation of the renal circulation triggering contraction of renal vascular smooth muscle cells (RVSMCs) via an elevation of intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i). Although it is well‐appreciated that the myocyte Ca2+ signalling system is composed of microdomains, little is known about the structure of the [Ca2+]i responses induced by P2X receptor stimulation in vascular myocytes.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2010
Maksym I. Harhun; Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Dmitri Gordienko
Background and purpose: Ionotropic purinoreceptors (P2X) in renal vascular smooth muscle cells (RVSMCs) are involved in mediating the sympathetic control and paracrine regulation of renal blood flow (RBF). Activation of P2X receptors elevates [Ca2+]i in RVSMCs triggering their contraction, leading to renal vasoconstriction and decrease of RBF. The goal of the present work was to characterize the P2X receptor‐mediated ionic current (IP2X) and to identify the types of P2X receptors expressed in myocytes isolated from interlobar and arcuate arteries of rat kidney.
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2007
Vladimír Pucovský; Maksym I. Harhun; Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Dmitri Gordienko; Ray F. Moss; Thomas B. Bolton
This work aimed to establish the lineage of cells similar to the interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC), the arterial ICC‐like (AIL) cells, which have recently been described in resistance arteries, and to study their location in the artery wall. Segments of guinea‐pig mesenteric arteries and single AIL cells freshly isolated from them were used. Confocal imaging of immunostained cells or segments and electron microscopy of artery segments were used to test for the presence and cellular localization of selected markers, and to localize AIL cells in intact artery segments. AIL cells were negative for PGP9.5, a neural marker, and for von Willebrand factor (vWF), an endothelial cell marker. They were positive for smooth muscle α‐actin and smooth muscle myosin heavy chain (SM‐MHC), but expressed only a small amount of smoothelin, a marker of contractile smooth muscle cells (SMC), and of myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), a critical enzyme in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction. Cell isolation in the presence of latrunculin B, an actin polymerization inhibitor, did not cause the disappearance of AIL cells from cell suspension. The fluorescence of basal lamina protein collagen IV was comparable between the AIL cells and the vascular SMCs and the fluorescence of laminin was higher in AIL cells compared to vascular SMCs. Moreover, cells with thin processes were found in the tunica media of small resistance arteries using transmis‐sion electron microscopy. The results suggest that AIL cells are immature or phenotypically modulated vascular SMCs constitutively present in resistance arteries.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Jennifer B. Stott; Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Georgina Carr; Vincenzo Barrese; Iain A. Greenwood
Significance The Kv7.4 potassium channel is a critical regulator of vascular contractility both at rest and as a functional endpoint for a number of endogenous vasodilators. Despite its key role, nothing is known about the processes that determine Kv7.4 channel activity. We reveal an interaction between G-protein βγ subunits and Kv7.4 that is crucial for channel responses to membrane voltage. Blocking this interaction ablates channel activity, prevents β-adrenoceptor–mediated relaxation, and constricts renal arteries. Conversely, Gβγ subunits enhance Kv7.4 channels and produce arterial relaxation in a Kv7-dependent manner. This reveals a fundamental reliance of an ion channel on Gβγ subunits for basal activity, a previously unidentified finding, which has profound implications for vascular physiology and disease pathogenesis. Kv7.4 channels are a crucial determinant of arterial diameter both at rest and in response to endogenous vasodilators. However, nothing is known about the factors that ensure effective activity of these channels. We report that G-protein βγ subunits increase the amplitude and activation rate of whole-cell voltage-dependent K+ currents sensitive to the Kv7 blocker linopirdine in HEK cells heterologously expressing Kv7.4, and in rat renal artery myocytes. In excised patch recordings, Gβγ subunits (2–250 ng /mL) enhanced the open probability of Kv7.4 channels without changing unitary conductance. Kv7 channel activity was also augmented by stimulation of G-protein–coupled receptors. Gallein, an inhibitor of Gβγ subunits, prevented these stimulatory effects. Moreover, gallein and two other structurally different Gβγ subunit inhibitors (GRK2i and a β-subunit antibody) abolished Kv7 channel currents in the absence of either Gβγ subunit enrichment or G-protein–coupled receptor stimulation. Proximity ligation assay revealed that Kv7.4 and Gβγ subunits colocalized in HEK cells and renal artery smooth muscle cells. Gallein disrupted this colocalization, contracted whole renal arteries to a similar degree as the Kv7 inhibitor linopirdine, and impaired isoproterenol-induced relaxations. Furthermore, mSIRK, which disassociates Gβγ subunits from α subunits without stimulating nucleotide exchange, relaxed precontracted arteries in a linopirdine-sensitive manner. These results reveal that Gβγ subunits are fundamental for Kv7.4 activation and crucial for vascular Kv7 channel activity, which has major consequences for the regulation of arterial tone.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2014
Thomas A. Jepps; Bo Hjorth Bentzen; Jennifer B. Stott; Oleksandr V. Povstyan; K Sivaloganathan; W Dalby-Brown; Iain A. Greenwood
The KCNQ‐encoded voltage‐gated potassium channel family (Kv7.1‐Kv7.5) are established regulators of smooth muscle contractility, where Kv7.4 and Kv7.5 predominate. Various Kv7.2–7.5 channel enhancers have been developed that have been shown to cause a vasorelaxation in both rodent and human blood vessels. Recently, two novel Kv7 channel enhancers have been identified, ML213 and NS15370, that show increased potency, particularly on Kv7.4 channels. The aim of this study was to characterize the effects of these novel enhancers in different rat blood vessels and compare them with Kv7 enhancers (S‐1, BMS204352, retigabine) described previously. We also sought to determine the binding sites of the new Kv7 enhancers.
Cardiovascular Research | 2016
Georgina Carr; Vincenzo Barrese; Jennifer B. Stott; Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Thomas A. Jepps; Hericka B. Figueiredo; Dongling Zheng; Yalda Jamshidi; Iain A. Greenwood
Aims Kv7.4, a voltage-dependent potassium channel expressed throughout the vasculature, controls arterial contraction and is compromised in hypertension by an unknown mechanism. MicroRNAs (miRs) are post-transcriptional regulators of protein production and are altered in disease states such as hypertension. We investigated whether miRs regulate Kv7.4 expression. Methods and results In renal and mesenteric arteries (MAs) of the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), Kv7.4 protein decreased compared with the normotensive (NT) rat without a decrease in KCNQ4 mRNA, inferring that Kv7.4 abundance was determined by post-transcriptional regulation. In silico analysis of the 3′ UTR of KCNQ4 revealed seed sequences for miR26a, miR133a, miR200b, miR153, miR214, miR218, and let-7d with quantitative polymerase chain reaction showing miR153 increased in those arteries from SHRs that exhibited decreased Kv7.4 levels. Luciferase reporter assays indicated a direct targeting effect of miR153 on the 3′ UTR of KCNQ4. Introduction of high levels of miR153 to MAs increased vascular wall thickening and reduced Kv7.4 expression/Kv7 channel function compared with vessels receiving a non-targeting miR, providing a proof of concept of Kv7.4 regulation by miR153. Conclusion This study is the first to define a role for aberrant miR153 contributing to the hypertensive state through targeting of KCNQ4 in an animal model of hypertension, raising the possibility of the use of miR153-related therapies in vascular disease.
Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2017
Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Vincenzo Barrese; Jennifer B. Stott; Iain A. Greenwood
Kv7.4 channels are key determinants of arterial contractility and cochlear mechanosensation that, like all Kv7 channels, have an obligatory requirement for phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). βγ G proteins (Gβγ) have been identified as novel positive regulators of Kv7.4. The present study ascertained whether Gβγ increased Kv7.4 open probability through an increased sensitivity to PIP2. In HEK cells stably expressing Kv7.4, PIP2 or Gβγ increased open probability in a concentration dependent manner. Depleting PIP2 prevented any Gβγ-mediated stimulation whilst an array of Gβγ inhibitors prohibited any PIP2-induced current enhancement. A combination of PIP2 and Gβγ at sub-efficacious concentrations increased channel open probability considerably. The stimulatory effects of three Kv7.2-7.5 channel activators were also lost by PIP2 depletion or Gβγ inhibitors. This study alters substantially our understanding of the fundamental processes that dictate Kv7.4 activity, revealing a more complex and subtle paradigm where the reliance on local phosphoinositide is dictated by interaction with Gβγ.
Cell and Tissue Research | 2013
Christopher Huggins; Oleksandr V. Povstyan; Maksym I. Harhun
Various in vitro models are used for studying phenotypic modulation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and the established culture of vascular smooth muscle cells (cVSMCs) is most often used for this purpose. On the other hand, vascular interstitial cells (VICs) are native phenotypically modulated VSMCs present in blood vessels under normal physiological conditions. The aim of this work has been to compare the difference in expression of a number of VSMC-specific markers, which are commonly used for the characterisation of phenotypic modulation of VSMCs, between freshly dispersed VSMCs, VICs and cVSMCs from rat abdominal aorta. Our experiments show that VICs are present in the rat aorta and express markers of VSMCs. Both VICs and cVSMCs display the presence of sparse individual stress fibres enriched in alpha smooth muscle actin (αSM-actin), whereas in VSMCs, this protein is more densely packed. Compared with contractile VSMCs, both VICs and cVSMCs display decreased expression of VSMC-specific markers such as smoothelin, myosin light chain kinase and SM22α; however, the expression of two major cytoskeletal and contractile proteins (smooth muscle myosin heavy chain and αSM-actin) was downregulated in cVSMCs but not in VICs compared with contractile VSMCs. These results suggest different mechanisms for the phenotypic modulation of cVSMCs and VICs. VICs might therefore represent a novel convenient model for studying molecular mechanisms that govern the phenotypic modulation of VSMCs.