Calcium Channel Blocking Properties of Amlodipine in Vascular Smooth Muscle and Cardiac Muscle In Vitro: Evidence for Voltage Modulation of Vascular Dihydrophyridine Receptors
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology
- Vol. 9 (1) , 110-119
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005344-198709010-00018
Abstract
Amlodipine was twice as potent as nifedipine at inhibiting Ca2+-induced contractions in depolarised rat aorta (IC50 1.9 nM vs. 4.1 nM) but, unlike nifedipine, displayed a very slow onset of action. Contractions induced by depolarising steps with 45 mM K+ were much less potently blocked by amlodipine (IC50 19.4 nM), whereas the potency of nifedipine was little changed (IC50 7.1 nM). This difference may be explained by a modulated receptor hypothesis, similar to that described for cardiac muscle, in which block of vascular calcium channels by dihydropyridines is enhanced at depolarized membrane potentials, such voltage-dependence only being apparent with a slow-acting drug such as amlodipine. Recovery from amlodipine block of K+-responses in rat portal vein after drug washout was also very slow. Amlodipine and nifedipine blocked phenylephrine-induced contractions of the rat aorta with potencies similar to those against depolarisation-induced responses. Negative inotropic potencies similar to those against depolarisation-induced responses. Negative inotropic potencies of amlodipine and nifedipine in perfused guinea pig hearts were approximately one-tenth those against Ca2+-induced contractions in rat aorta. Amlodipine caused complete block of guinea pig papillary muscle single-cell slow action potentials at a concentration (5 .mu.M) that had no effect on upstroke velocity of normal, fast potentials but reduced the duration of the plateau phase.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: