The conducted vasomotor response and the principles of electrical communication in resistance arteries

Physiol Rev. 2024 Jan 1;104(1):33-84. doi: 10.1152/physrev.00035.2022. Epub 2023 Jul 6.

Abstract

Biological tissues are fed by arterial networks whose task is to set blood flow delivery in accordance with energetic demand. Coordinating vasomotor activity among hundreds of neighboring segments is an essential process, one dependent upon electrical information spreading among smooth muscle and endothelial cells. The "conducted vasomotor response" is a functional expression of electrical spread, and it is this process that lies at the heart of this critical review. Written in a narrative format, this review first highlights historical manuscripts and then characterizes the conducted response across a range of preparations. Trends are highlighted and used to guide subsequent sections, focused on cellular foundations, biophysical underpinnings, and regulation in health and disease. Key information has been tabulated; figures reinforce grounding concepts and reveal a framework within which theoretical and experimental work can be rationalized. This summative review highlights that despite 30 years of concerted experimentation, key aspects of the conducted response remain ill defined. Of note is the need to rationalize the regulation and deterioration of conduction in pathobiological settings. New quantitative tools, along with transgenic technology, are discussed as a means of propelling this investigative field forward.

Keywords: arteries; blood flow; endothelial cells; gap junctions; ion channels; smooth muscle cells.

Publication types

  • Review