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Vol. 301, Issue 3, 987-992, June 2002
Department of Renal and Urology Research, GlaxoSmithKline, King of
Prussia, Pennsylvania
Two endogenous receptors for the potent smooth muscle-stimulating
peptide neuromedin U (NmU) have recently been identified and
cloned. Pharmacological, binding, and expression studies were conducted in an attempt to determine the receptor(s) involved in the
smooth muscle-stimulating effects of NmU. The NmU peptides caused a
concentration-dependent contraction of canine isolated urinary bladder.
NmU did not have this same effect in the urinary bladder from rat,
guinea pig, rabbit, mouse, or ferret. Although NmU had no effect on
canine uterus it did cause contraction of canine stomach, ileum, and
colon. As well as causing contraction of canine bladder in vitro, NmU
administered systemically resulted in a significant increase in urinary
bladder pressure in vivo. High-affinity binding sites for NmU were
identified in canine bladder. The four NmU peptides porcine NmU-8, rat
NmU-23, human NmU-25, and porcine NmU-25 displaced
125I-NmU-25 binding with similar
Ki values (0.08-0.24 nM). A different binding profile was revealed in human embryonic kidney-293 cells transiently expressed with the canine NmU-2 receptor where porcine NmU-8 (Ki = 147.06 nM) was much less
potent than the other NmU peptides. Using TaqMan, expression of NmU-1
was detected in human urinary bladder, small intestine, colon, and
uterus. Expression of NmU-2 was much lower or absent in these human
tissues and undetectable in canine bladder and stomach. The results of
this study reveal significant species differences in the activity of
NmU. The contractile activity in human and canine smooth muscle seems
to be mediated by the recently cloned NmU-1 receptor.
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