Importance of magnesium and potassium concentration on basal tone and 5‐HT‐induced contractions in canine isolated coronary artery
Open Access
- 31 May 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Pharmacology
- Vol. 94 (2) , 325-334
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.1988.tb11534.x
Abstract
1 In vitro studies were undertaken to investigate the effects of external potassium ([K+]o) and magnesium ([Mg2+]o) concentration on canine coronary arterial basal tone and on 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)-induced contractions. 2 Acute withdrawal of, or reduction in, [K+]o produced relaxation of basal tone in isolated coronary arteries, whereas acute withdrawal (but not reduction) of [Mg2+]o produced contraction of these blood vessels. 3 The magnitude of coronary contraction obtained on withdrawal of [Mg2+]o was dependent upon the [K+]o; the higher the [K+]o, the greater the contraction. 4 The precise ratio of [K+]o/[Mg2+]o appeared to be important in dictating the degree of contraction (maximum response) and sensitivity (EC50) of canine coronary vascular smooth muscle cells to 5-HT. The EC50 to 5-HT was enhanced by increases in the [K+]o/[Mg2+]o ratio, whereas the ability of 5-HT to induce a maximal contraction was attenuated by decreases in the [K+]o; the latter being modulated by [Mg2+]o. Small changes in [Mg2+]o could effect large changes in the EC50 as [K+]o was lowered. 5 These actions took place over patho-physiological ranges of [K+]o and [Mg2+]o. 6 Maintenance of a constant [K+]o/[Mg2+]o ratio, irrespective of the exact [K+]o and [Mg2+]o, produced similar degrees of maximum tension. 7 Use of intact vascular ring preparations and helically-cut vascular strips produced similar results with varying [K+]o/[Mg2+]o. 8 A variety of pharmacological receptor antagonists (phentolamine, propranolol, atropine, diphenhydramine, cimetidine), as well as a prostaglandin cyclo-oxygenase inhibitor, did not modify the altered contractile responses or basal tone evoked by varying [K+]o/[Mg2+]o ratios. 9 These results suggest: (1) that basal tone and contractility of canine coronary vascular smooth muscle cells appear to be exquisitely sensitive to alterations in extracellular K+ and Mg2+; and (2) 5-HT receptor-operated Ca2+ channels, as well as those Ca2+ channels involved in generation of coronary arterial basal tone are modulated and controlled by the precise concentrations of [K+]o and [Mg2+]o.This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
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