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Bicarbonate-dependent action of Bay K 8644 in the smooth muscle of the rat vas deferens.
Author(s) -
Norihiro Suzuki,
Yasuo Gomi
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
japanese journal of pharmacology/japanese journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1347-3506
pISSN - 0021-5198
DOI - 10.1254/jjp.52.413
Subject(s) - vas deferens , methacholine , bicarbonate , nifedipine , chemistry , medicine , endocrinology , contraction (grammar) , norepinephrine , calcium , sodium bicarbonate , methoxamine , potassium , muscle contraction , agonist , receptor , organic chemistry , respiratory disease , lung , dopamine
Effects of Bay K 8644, partial depolarization with high potassium, and nifedipine on the dose-response curves of the rat vas deferens to norepinephrine, methacholine and KCI were investigated in HEPES-buffered physiological salt solution (PSS) with or without 20 mM sodium bicarbonate. In the bicarbonate-containing PSS, Bay K 8644 at 10(-6) M enhanced the maximal contractions in response to norepinephrine, methacholine and KCI by 31.4, 103.3 and 40.1%, respectively. In the bicarbonate-free PSS, where the maximal contractions induced by norepinephrine, methacholine and KCI were 77.5, 75.0 and 68.2% of those in the bicarbonate-containing PSS, respectively. Bay K 8644 did not enhance the maximal contractile response to any of the agonists, although the contractions induced by low concentrations of KCI were increased by Bay K 8644. Increasing the potassium concentration in the PSS from 6 to 20 mM enhanced the maximal contractions in response to norepinephrine and methacholine in the bicarbonate-containing PSS, whereas in the bicarbonate-free PSS, the treatment decreased the contractions. In the two PSSs, nifedipine similarly inhibited the contraction in response to either 10(-5) M norepinephrine or 68 mM KCI. These results suggest that bicarbonate ion modulates the function of the voltage-dependent calcium channel in the smooth muscle of the rat vas deferens.

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