You can reply to close-votes.
One way is to address to close voters directly by pinging them in comments (if they were the sole close-voters). Of you can comment generally under your question, defending why your question shouldn't be closed. The close voters may or may not read your comments (they may have found your post through review, for example, so maybe they aren't coming back to your question).
But usually, the best way to handle this is to edit your question so it is a better fit with StackOverflow, and can be re-opened.
After a question is closed or put on hold, the first edit will put it to the re-open queue, where reviewers will consider if your edit pushed your question over the closable threshold.
Replying to downvoters (or to votes in general) doesn't really work as an idea, since votes are anonymous by design, and commenting on votes is discouraged to reduce friction.
There are many, many discussions about the subject on votes and comments. Best is probably to start reading this one, and look around in meta for more examples.
Regarding the specific main question that brought up this issue... trying to address either close-voters or down-voters wouldn't have helped you much. The question was simply off-topic for StackOverflow, and the best course of action is to learn the rules of the site and post questions that follow more closely the our rules for topicality.
Much more often than not, this will be the case. So attempting to communicate with close-voters wouldn't be productive in any way. The most best course of action is to read the close-reason, re-read the rules, and try to think in which ways you question could be changed (if at all) to fit the site's model