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M Kobayashi, H Nakamura, J Kobayashi and Y Ohizumi
Mitsubishi Kasei Institute of Life Sciences, Tokyo, Japan.
Xestoquinone (XQN) isolated from the sea sponge Xestospongia sapra produced dose-dependent cardiotonic effects on guinea pig left and right atria. A direct action of XQN (1-30 microM) on the contractile machinery of cardiac myofilaments was demonstrated in chemically skinned fiber preparations from guinea pig papillary muscles. In atrial preparations, the XQN-induced inotropic effect was markedly inhibited by verapamil or nifedipine, but was not affected by practolol, chlorpheniramine, cimetidine, tetrodotoxin or reserpine. The Ca++ dependence curve for the contractile response of the atria was substantially shifted to the left by XQN (10 microM), and this XQN- induced shift was reversed by verapamil. The time-to-peak tension and relaxation times of the atrial contractions were shortened by XQN, and the action potential duration was markedly prolonged. Whole-cell patch clamp recordings in left atrial strips confirmed that XQN (30 microM) increased the slow inward current. However, there was a temporal dissociation between altered tension development and prolongation of the action potential duration. Cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity was inhibited and tissue cyclic AMP content of guinea pig left atria was increased by XQN (0.3-10 microM) in a concentration-dependent manner, but increases in cyclic AMP content did not occur in parallel with increases in contractile response. These observations suggest that an enhancement of intracellular cyclic AMP content and Ca++ influx across the cell membrane contribute to the late phase of XQN-caused cardiotonic responses, whereas the early phase may largely be elicited through direct activation of contractile elements. XQN may provide a novel leading compound for valuable cardiotonic agents.
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