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Vol. 295, Issue 1, 284-290, October 2000
Neuroscience Drug Discovery, Eli Lilly & Company, Indianapolis,
Indiana
Thrombin and trypsin activate protease-activated receptors (PARs) that
modulate vascular tone. In addition to the PARs, thrombin also binds to
thrombomodulin via exosite 1, a domain also involved in the interaction
of thrombin with PAR-1 but not PAR-2. The purpose of this study was to
determine whether thrombomodulin would alter thrombin-induced
vasoconstriction, thought to be mediated predominantly by PAR-1, but
not PAR-2, which mediates vascular relaxation. For comparison,
thrombomodulin was examined for its effect on both thrombin and
trypsin-induced responses. Trypsin was 2000-fold more potent as a
relaxant than as a contractile peptide, whereas thrombin was only
7.8-fold more potent as a relaxant than contractile agonist, consistent
with activation of PAR-1 predominantly mediating contraction and PAR-2
predominantly mediating relaxation. Although thrombomodulin
(10
7 M) alone did not alter vascular tone or the rate of
thrombin-induced vascular responses, thrombomodulin (10
8
and 10
7 M) attenuated maximal thrombin (10
8
and 10
7 M)-induced vasoconstriction preferentially
compared with thrombin-induced relaxation and had no effect on
equieffective trypsin-induced responses. The inhibition of
thrombin-induced contraction resulted from the interaction of thrombin
with thrombomodulin rather than any direct effect of thrombomodulin on
tissue PARs. Thus, this study describes a novel vascular action of
thrombomodulin to selectively attenuate thrombin-induced vascular
contractility. This action of thrombomodulin may serve to protect
vasculature from thrombin-induced vasoconstriction during conditions of
endothelial injury known to increase plasma and cellular levels of thrombomodulin.
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