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Dive into the research topics where Raymond Tam is active.

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Featured researches published by Raymond Tam.


Microcirculation | 2012

Endothelial Feedback and the Myoendothelial Projection

Paul M. Kerr; Raymond Tam; Katarina Ondrusova; Rohan Mittal; Deepak Narang; Cam Ha T. Tran; Donald G. Welsh; Frances Plane

Please cite this paper as: Kerr PM, Tam R, Ondrusova K, Mittal R, Narang D, Tran CHT, Welsh DG, Plane F. Endothelial feedback and the myoendothelial projection. Microcirculation 19: 416‐422, 2012.


Vascular Pharmacology | 2015

Activation of endothelial IKCa channels underlies NO-dependent myoendothelial feedback

Paul M. Kerr; Ran Wei; Raymond Tam; Shaun L. Sandow; Timothy V. Murphy; Katarina Ondrusova; Stephanie E. Lunn; Cam Ha T. Tran; Donald G. Welsh; Frances Plane

Agonist-induced vasoconstriction triggers a negative feedback response whereby movement of charged ions through gap junctions and/or release of endothelium-derived (NO) limit further reductions in diameter, a mechanism termed myoendothelial feedback. Recent studies indicate that electrical myoendothelial feedback can be accounted for by flux of inositol trisphosphate (IP3) through myoendothelial gap junctions resulting in localized increases in endothelial Ca(2+) to activate intermediate conductance calcium-activated potassium (IKCa) channels, the resultant hyperpolarization then conducting back to the smooth muscle to attenuate agonist-induced depolarization and tone. In the present study we tested the hypothesis that activation of IKCa channels underlies NO-mediated myoendothelial feedback. Functional experiments showed that block of IP3 receptors, IKCa channels, gap junctions and transient receptor potential canonical type-3 (TRPC3) channels caused endothelium-dependent potentiation of agonist-induced increase in tone which was not additive with that caused by inhibition of NO synthase supporting a role for these proteins in NO-mediated myoendothelial feedback. Localized densities of IKCa and TRPC3 channels occurred at the internal elastic lamina/endothelial-smooth muscle interface in rat basilar arteries, potential communication sites between the two cell layers. Smooth muscle depolarization to contractile agonists was accompanied by IKCa channel-mediated endothelial hyperpolarization providing the first demonstration of IKCa channel-mediated hyperpolarization of the endothelium in response to contractile agonists. Inhibition of IKCa channels, gap junctions, TRPC3 channels or NO synthase potentiated smooth muscle depolarization to agonists in a non-additive manner. Together these data indicate that rather being distinct pathways for the modulation of smooth muscle tone, NO and endothelial IKCa channels are involved in an integrated mechanism for the regulation of agonist-induced vasoconstriction.


Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology | 2012

Endothelial calcium-activated potassium channels as therapeutic targets to enhance availability of nitric oxide

Paul M. Kerr; Raymond Tam; Deepak Narang; Kyle Potts; Dane McMillan; Kale McMillan; Frances Plane

The vascular endothelium plays a critical role in vascular health by controlling arterial diameter, regulating local cell growth, and protecting blood vessels from the deleterious consequences of platelet aggregation and activation of inflammatory responses. Circulating chemical mediators and physical forces act directly on the endothelium to release diffusible relaxing factors, such as nitric oxide (NO), and to elicit hyperpolarization of the endothelial cell membrane potential, which can spread to the surrounding smooth muscle cells via gap junctions. Endothelial hyperpolarization, mediated by activation of calcium-activated potassium (K(Ca)) channels, has generally been regarded as a distinct pathway for smooth muscle relaxation. However, recent evidence supports a role for endothelial K(Ca) channels in production of endothelium-derived NO, and indicates that pharmacological activation of these channels can enhance NO-mediated responses. In this review we summarize the current data on the functional role of endothelial K(Ca) channels in regulating NO-mediated changes in arterial diameter and NO production, and explore the tempting possibility that these channels may represent a novel avenue for therapeutic intervention in conditions associated with reduced NO availability such as hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, smoking, and diabetes mellitus.


Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology | 2013

Triton X-100 inhibits L-type voltage-operated calcium channels

Deepak Narang; Paul M. Kerr; Jason N Baserman; Raymond Tam; Wei Yang; Gavin J. Searle; Jocelyn E. Manning-Fox; Isabelle M. Paulsen; Janna L. Kozuska; Patrick E. MacDonald; Peter E. Light; Andrew Holt; Frances Plane

Triton X-100 (TX-100) is a nonionic detergent frequently used at millimolar concentrations to disrupt cell membranes and solubilize proteins. At low micromolar concentrations, TX-100 has been reported to inhibit the function of potassium channels. Here, we have used electrophysiological and functional techniques to examine the effects of TX-100 on another class of ion channels, L-type voltage-operated calcium channels (VOCCs). TX-100 (30 nmol·L(-1) to 3 μmol·L(-1)) caused reversible concentration-dependent inhibition of recombinant L-type VOCC (CaV 1.2) currents and of native L-type VOCC currents recorded from rat vascular smooth muscle cells and cardiac myocytes, and murine and human pancreatic β-cells. In functional studies, TX-100 (165 nmol·L(-1) to 3.4 μmol·L(-1)) caused concentration-dependent relaxation of rat isolated mesenteric resistance arteries prestimulated with phenylephrine or KCl. This effect was independent of the endothelium. TX-100 (1.6 μmol·L(-1)) inhibited depolarization-induced exocytosis in both murine and human isolated pancreatic β-cells. These data indicate that at concentrations within the nanomolar to low micromolar range, TX-100 significantly inhibits L-type VOCC activity in a number of cell types, an effect paralleled by inhibition of cell functions dependent upon activation of these channels. This inhibition occurs at concentrations below those used to solubilize proteins and may compromise the use of solutions containing TX-100 in bioassays.


The Journal of Physiology | 2018

Vasoconstrictor stimulus determines the functional contribution of myoendothelial feedback to mesenteric arterial tone

Ran Wei; Stephanie E. Lunn; Raymond Tam; S. L. Gust; B. Classen; Paul M. Kerr; Frances Plane

In isolated resistance arteries, endothelial modulation of vasoconstrictor responses to α1‐adrenoceptor agonists occurs via a process termed myoendothelial feedback: localized inositol trisphosphate (InsP3)dependent Ca2+ transients activate intermediate conductance Ca2+activated K+ (IKCa) channels, hyperpolarizing the endothelial membrane potential to limit further reductions in vessel diameter. We demonstrate that IKCa channel‐mediated myoendothelial feedback limits responses of isolated mesenteric arteries to noradrenaline and nerve stimulation, but not to the thromboxane A2 mimetic U46619 or to increases in intravascular pressure. In contrast, in the intact mesenteric bed, although responses to exogenous noradrenaline were limited by IKCa channel‐mediated myoendothelial feedback, release of NO and activation of endothelial small conductance Ca2+activated K+ (SKCa) channels in response to increases in shear stress appeared to be the primary mediators of endothelial modulation of vasoconstriction. We propose that (1) the functional contribution of myoendothelial feedback to arterial tone is determined by the nature of the vasoconstrictor stimulus, and (2) although IKCa channel‐mediated myoendothelial feedback may contribute to local control of arterial diameter, in the intact vascular bed, increases in shear stress may be the major stimulus for engagement of the endothelium during vasoconstriction.


Journal of Otolaryngology-head & Neck Surgery | 2015

Oncolytic activity of reovirus in HPV positive and negative head and neck squamous cell carcinoma

Timothy Cooper; Vincent L Biron; David Fast; Raymond Tam; Thomas E. Carey; Maya Shmulevitz; Hadi Seikaly


The Journal of Physiology | 2018

Vasoconstrictor stimulus determines the functional contribution of myoendothelial feedback to mesenteric arterial tone: Myoendothelial feedback

Ran Wei; Stephanie E. Lunn; Raymond Tam; S. L. Gust; B. Classen; Paul M. Kerr; Frances Plane


The FASEB Journal | 2012

Endothelium-dependent modulation of cerebral artery myogenic tone by cyclopiazonic acid

Raymond Tam; Paul M. Kerr; Katarina Ondrusova; Frances Plane


Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology | 2012

What did the smooth muscle cell say to the endothelial cell

Frances Plane; Raymond Tam; Shaun L. Sandow; Paul M. Kerr


Archive | 2011

Mechanisms of Vascular Disease: Endothelium

Paul M. Kerr; Raymond Tam; Frances Plane

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Ran Wei

University of Alberta

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Donald G. Welsh

University of Western Ontario

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