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Vol. 284, Issue 2, 561-567, February 1998
Laboratorio di Fisiologia Generale, Paclitaxel (Taxol) is an anticancer agent with clinical activity
against various human cancer types. Paclitaxel blocks cell division by
stabilizing microtubules, a mechanism that also underlies its major
side effects (neutropenia and neurotoxicity). Paclitaxel can also alter
cardiac function, and to elucidate the mechanism of this activity, we
tested the mechanical and electrical effects of paclitaxel and a series
of analogs (docetaxel, taxol B, taxol C and N-methyltaxol C; 5-20
µM) on two different cardiac preparations, the isolated coronary
perfused heart and the papillary muscle of the guinea pig. Paclitaxel
and N-methyltaxol C induced conduction arrhythmias and reduced coronary
flow and left ventricular systolic pressure in the isolated heart,
whereas the other taxol derivatives tested had no significant effect.
Moreover, paclitaxel blocked the vasodilator effect of bradykinin in
the isolated heart. Paclitaxel and N-methyltaxol C produced a positive
inotropic effect in papillary muscle, without alterations in the action
potential. In the latter preparation, no significant variations were
observed after treatment with the other taxol derivatives. The in
vitro cardiodepressant and arrhythmogenic activity of paclitaxel
is similar to that reported after its clinical administration and might
be due to coronary vasoconstriction. The precise role of microtubules
as modulators of intracellular calcium in cardiac and smooth muscle
cells is at present unclear, because docetaxel and other taxol analogs, though they exhibited similar activity on tubulin, lacked cardiac effects.
0022-3565/98/2842-0561$03.00/0
THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS
Copyright © 1998 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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