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Vol. 281, Issue 2, 634-642, 1997
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, The City University of
New York Medical School, The Sophie Davis School of Biomedical
Education, New York, New York
Calcium antagonists have routinely been assumed to inhibit the
contractions of arterial smooth muscle through block of membrane channels. The effects of nifedipine and diltiazem on contractions were
examined in in vitro preparations of cattle coronary
artery, one of the key therapeutic targets of calcium antagonists, to determine if alternate mechanisms of action are involved. Contractions elicited in calcium-free Krebs, in the presence of U 46619, to potassium channel inhibitors (4-aminopyridine and tetraethylammonium) and to a Na+-K+-ATPase inhibitor (ouabain),
were antagonized by low concentrations of nifedipine (3 × 10
9 - 3 × 10
8
M) and by diltiazem (3 × 10
8 and 1 × 10
7 M). Contractions produced in
calcium-free Krebs to KCl (50 mM) were antagonized similarly by calcium
antagonists. Contractions to depolarizing agents in calcium-free Krebs
were antagonized at lower concentrations of nifedipine than comparably
elicited responses in Krebs containing 2.3 mM calcium. In addition,
higher concentrations of nifedipine were required to antagonize
contractions to extracellular calcium, produced in preparations
maintained in calcium-free Krebs in the presence of KCl (50 mM), than
were needed to block contractions to KCl or to potassium channel
inhibitors elicited in calcium-free Krebs. Pretreatment of preparations
in calcium-free Krebs with ryanodine (30 µM) did not reduce the
nifedipine-sensitive contractions elicited in calcium-free Krebs. It is
concluded that at least some of the therapeutic effects of calcium
antagonists on arterial tone may be the consequence of antagonism at
vascular smooth muscle cell site(s) at which calcium is released or
interacts, rather than of block of calcium entry through membrane L
channels.
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