Vasopressin-stimulated water flow is decreased by thromboxane synthesis inhibition or antagonism

Abstract
The time course of vasopressin stimulation of water flow and immunoreactive thromboxane B2 (iTXB2) and prostaglandin E (iPGE) biosynthesis was studied in the isolated toad urinary bladder. Vasopressin (25 mU/ml) significantly stimulated iTXB2 synthesis within 8 min, synthesis reaching a maximum rate by 17 min. iPGE synthesis was significantly stimulated within 8 min, remaining unchanged for 24 min. Maximum vasopressin-stimulated water flow was reached between 16 and 24 min. 7-(1-Imidazolyl)-heptanoic acid (7IHA), a thromboxane synthetase inhibitor, inhibited both vasopressin-stimulated water flow and iTXB2 synthesis in a dose-dependent fashion, but did not affect iPGE synthesis. Vasopressin-stimulated water flow and iTXB2 synthesis were significantly correlated (r = 0.75, n = 24, P less than 0.001). 13-Azaprostanoic acid (13APA), a thromboxane antagonist, inhibited vasopressin-stimulated water flow in a dose-dependent fashion. Inhibition of arachidonic acid metabolism abolished the effects of 7IHA and 13APA on vasopressin-stimulated water flow. 7IHA and 13APA had no effect on cAMP-stimulated water flow. These results confirm that vasopressin stimulates TXA2 and PGE synthesis and support the hypothesis that TXA2 is a positive modulator of vasopressin-stimulated water flow in the toad urinary bladder.