Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (hypercapnia)
7,939 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The role of carbonic anhydrase (CNA) in the dynamics of carotid body (CB) function was tested by studying the effects of the membrane-permeable CNA inhibitor methazolamide on the chemosensory responses of the cat CB, perfused and superfused in vitro with cell-free and modified Tyrode solution at 36.5 +/- 0.5 degrees C in the presence of CO2-HCO3- (PO2 = 120 Torr, PCO2 = 32 Torr, pH = 7.40). The bulk of CO2 flow to the CB from the external milieu was overwhelmingly large relative to the metabolic production of CO2 in the CB. Accordingly, the relative contribution of the endogenous CO2 to the CB responses was small. The chemosensory nerve discharges were recorded from the whole desheathed carotid sinus nerve. The responses to acidic hypercapnia (PCO2 = 50-60 Torr, pH = 7.20-7.10), hypoxia (PO2 = 25 and 50 Torr), perfusate flow interruption, and bolus injections of sodium cyanide (20-40 nmol) were tested. To contrast, we also measured the effects of nicotine (2-4 nmol), which may act at sites other than those for O2 and CO2. Methazolamide (30 mg/l) in the perfusate at constant PCO2 and pH reduced the baseline activity and delayed the responses to step changes in PCO2 (and concomitantly pH) and PO2 and to cyanide but not to nicotine. The steady-state responses to these stimuli, measured as differences from control, were reduced, but not significantly. The initial overshoots seen with step changes in both high PCO2 and low PO2 were eliminated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Dynamics of carotid body responses in vitro in the presence of CO2-HCO3-: role of carbonic anhydrase. 828 7

The hypotheses that the chemosensory discharge rate parallels the intracellular pH (pHi) during hypercapnia and that the initial change in pHi (delta pHi) is always more than the stead-state delta pHi were studied by using cat carotid bodies in vitro at 36.5 degrees C in the absence and presence of methazolamide (30-100 mg/l). Incremental acidic hypercapnia was followed by an incremental initial peak response and a greater adaptation. A given acidic hypercapnia elicited a rapid initial response followed by a slower adaptation; isohydric hypercapnia produced an equally rapid initial response but of smaller magnitude that returned to near-baseline level; alkaline hypercapnia induced a similar rapid initial response but one of still smaller magnitude that decreased rapidly to below the baseline. Methazolamide eliminated the initial overshoot, which also suggested involvement of the initial rapid pHi in the overshoot. These results show that the initial delta pHi is always greater than the steady-state delta pHi and during hypercapnia. Also, the steady-state chemoreceptor activity varied linearly with the extracellular pH, indicating a linear relationship between extracellular pH and pHi.
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PMID:Adaptation to hypercapnia vs. intracellular pH in cat carotid body: responses in vitro. 892 31

In order to test the hypothesis that carotid body (CB) chemoreception depends on the functions of anion channels and HCO3-/Cl- exchangers, we studied the effects of the anion channel blocker anthracene-9-carboxylic acid (9-ANC), the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor methazolamide, and the HCO3-/Cl- exchanger blocker 4,4 diisothiocyanatostilbene-2-2'disulfonic acid (DIDS) on the chemosensory discharges of cat CB, perfused-superfused in vitro at 36.5 +/- 0.5 degrees C, with a modified Tyrode solution. The chemosensory responses to hypoxia (PO2 approximately 50 Torr), hypercapnia (PCO2 approximately 60 Torr, pH = 7.10), nicotine (2-4 nmol) and NaCN (20-40 nmol) were recorded. 9-ANC (2 microM) and DIDS (10 microM) decreased the chemosensory baseline activity, and eliminated the initial peak responses to hypercapnia and hypoxia and increased the time to achieve it. Methazolamide (0.13 mM) did not alter the effect of 9-ANC. The steady state responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia were not diminished after 9-ANC but DIDS lowered the responses. Responses to NaCN effects were all diminished but those to nicotine were not affected. The results suggest that the functions of anion channels and HCO3-/Cl- exchangers are important for the resting dischargers and for the fast responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia.
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PMID:Anion exchanger and chloride channel in cat carotid body chemotransduction. 968