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Department of Pharmacology, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
The phasic contraction to phenylephrine
of the rat isolated portal vein was investigated using functional
studies. Phasic contractions to phenylephrine and caffeine could be
produced after several minutes in Ca2+-free Krebs solution,
which were inhibited by cyclopiazonic acid or ryanodine. The
phenylephrine and caffeine contractions were abolished, however, within
10 min in Ca2+-free Krebs solution and by nifedipine. This
indicated the Ca2+ stores were depleted in the absence of
Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated channels. The phasic
contraction to phenylephrine was also abolished by niflumic acid even
in Ca2+-free Krebs solution. This showed that the response
depended on intracellular Ca2+ release stimulated directly
by depolarization, resulting from opening of Ca2+-activated
Cl
channels, but did not require Ca2+ influx.
In support of this, K+-induced phasic contractions were
also produced in Ca2+-free Krebs solution. The
phenylephrine but not K+-induced phasic contractions in
Ca2+-free Krebs solution were inhibited by ryanodine or
cyclopiazonic acid. This would be consistent with Ca2+
release from more superficial intracellular stores (affected most by
these agents), probably by inositol 1,4,5-trisphospate, being required to stimulate the phenylephrine depolarization.
voltage-sensitive Ca2+ release; Ca2+-activated Cl
channels; niflumic acid
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