HNS-32, a novel azulene-1-carboxamidine derivative, inhibits nifedipine-sensitive and -insensitive contraction of the isolated rabbit aorta.

Autor: Tanaka, Yoshio, Mitani, Akiko, Igarashi, Tomomi, Someya, Shinnosuke, Otsuka, Kazuoki, Imai, Toshiyasu, Yamaki, Fumiko, Tanaka, Hikaru, Saitoh, Masaki, Nakazawa, Tomoo, Noguchi, Kazuo, Hashimoto, Keitaro, Shigenobu, Koki
Předmět:
Zdroj: Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology; Mar2001, Vol. 363 Issue 3, p344-352, 9p
Abstrakt: The vasorelaxant profile of a novel azulene-1-carboxamidine derivative, HNS-32 [N1,N1-dimethyl-N2-(2-pyridylmethyl)-5-isopropyl-3,8-dimethyl-azulene-1-carboxamidine, CAS 186086-10-2], was investigated in the isolated rabbit aorta precontracted with high KCl, noradrenaline (NA) or phorbol 12, 13-dibutyrate (PDBu) and compared with those of nifedipine and nitroglycerin. In preparations without endothelium, HNS-32 elicited concentration-dependent, full inhibition of contractions elicited by high KCl (80 mM), NA (3×10–6 M) or PDBu (10–6 M). In contrast, nifedipine inhibited only the contraction elicited by membrane depolarization with high KCl. Nitroglycerin also attenuated high-KCl-, NA- and PDBu-elicited contractions effectively, although full suppression was obtained only for NA-elicited contraction. Whilst the relaxant effect of HNS-32 was not affected by the presence of endothelium, the relaxant response to acetylcholine was endothelium dependent. Addition of excess Ca2+ restored both the HNS-32-reduced tension in muscle precontracted with high KCl and the nifedipine-mediated tension decrease. Relaxation elicited by HNS-32 was not affected by the adenylate cyclase inhibitor, 9-(tetrahydro-2′-furyl)adenine (SQ 22,536, 10–4 M), the soluble guanylate cyclase inhibitor, 1H-(1,2,4)-oxadiazolo-(4,3-a)-quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ, 10–5 M) or a cocktail of K+ channel blockers (glybenclamide 10–6 M, tetraethylammonium 2×10–3 M, apamin 10–7 M, 4-aminopyridine 10–4 M and Ba2+ 10–5 M). These findings indicate that HNS-32 inhibits both L-type Ca2+ channel-dependent and -independent vascular contraction. Blockade of Ca2+ entry through L-type Ca2+ channels may be involved in the inhibitory effect of HNS-32 on the contraction due to membrane depolarization with high KCl. On the other hand, HNS-32 seems to inhibit Ca2+ channel-independent contraction via mechanism(s) other than elevation of cyclic nucleotides (cAMP and cGMP) and opening of K+ channels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index