Vascular oxidative stress increases with advancing age. We hypothesized that resistance vessels develop resilience to oxidative stress to protect functional integrity and tested this hypothesis by exposing isolated pressurized superior epigastric arteries (SEAs) of old and young mice to H2O2. H2O2‐induced death was greater in smooth muscle cells (SMCs) than endothelial cells (ECs) and lower in SEAs from old Inhibiting NO synthase or scavenging peroxynitrite reduced SMC death; endothelial denudation or inhibiting gap junctions increased SMC death; delocalization of cytochrome C activated caspases 9 and 3 to induce apoptosis. Vascular cells develop resilience to H2O2during ageing by preventing Ca2+overload and endothelial integrity promotes SMC survival.
Advanced age is associated with elevated oxidative stress and can protect the endothelium from cell death induced by H2O2. Whether such protection occurs for intact vessels or differs between smooth muscle cell (SMC) and endothelial cell (EC) layers is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that ageing protects SMCs and ECs during acute exposure to H2O2(200 µ