Multiple sources of calcium for contraction of the human urinary bladder muscle
Open Access
- 1 November 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Pharmacology
- Vol. 98 (3) , 1021-1031
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.1989.tb14634.x
Abstract
1 KCl, carbachol, neurokinin A and endothelin produced concentration-dependent contractions of mucosa-free muscle strips from the dome of the human urinary bladder. The maximal response to carbachol or neurokinin A exceeded that to KCl, while the maximal response to endothelin approached that to KCl. 2 Nifedipine (1 μm) abolished the response to KCl, reduced the response to carbachol or neurokinin A but had no effect on the response to endothelin. Bay K 8644 (1 μm) markedly potentiated the response to KCl but had little or no effect on the response produced by the other stimulants. 3 Superfusion of the strips with a nominally calcium (Ca)-free medium containing EDTA (1 mm) for 30 min markedly reduced the response to carbachol, neurokinin A and endothelin, although a small response was still evident at high concentrations. Likewise, after a prolonged (60 min) superfusion of the strips with a high K (80 mm) Ca-free medium plus EDTA (1 mm) these three agonists still produced a small contractile response. 4 The nifedipine (1 μm) resistant response to carbachol, neurokinin A or endothelin was markedly depressed by LaCl3 (1 mm). In contrast, the nifedipine-(1 μm) resistant response to carbachol was not modified by NiCl2 (0.1 mm) or ω-conotoxin (0.1 μm). 5 Caffeine produced divergent effects depending upon the temperature of incubation: a relaxation at 37°C and a concentration-dependent (2.5–20 mm) contraction at 25°C. The latter was markedly inhibited by procaine (3 mm) but unaffected by nifedipine (1 μm). 6 After a prolonged (60 min) superfusion with a high K, Ca-free medium containing EDTA the response to carbachol (100 μm) was abolished by previous exposure to procaine (3 mm). Conversely, the response to endothelin (1 μm) was unaffected by procaine. The response to endothelin in these experimental conditions was also resistant to LaCl3 (1 mm). 7 These findings indicate that multiple sources of Ca are mobilized for contraction of the human bladder muscle by different stimulants. Dihydropyridine- and voltage-sensitive Ca channels provide the major if not the sole source of Ca for the response to KCl, play some role in the response to muscarinic (carbachol) or NK-2 tachykinin receptor stimulation but are not involved in the response to endothelin. Carbachol, neurokinin A and endothelin all mobilize a Ca pool (either extracellular or located at membrane level) which is LaCl3-sensitive but nifedipine-resistant. Neither T- nor N-type channels appear to be involved in the response to carbachol. In addition, these agents mobilize a tightly bound Ca pool independently from membrane depolarization. This latter pool is probably a procaine-sensitive intracellular source of activator Ca mobilized by caffeine and carbachol. The failure of procaine to prevent the response to endothelin in high K, Ca-free medium raises the possibility that this peptide mobilizes an intracellular source of activator Ca, distinct from the caffeine- and carbachol-sensitive pool.This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
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