| Literature DB >> 10411573 |
J B Shen1, B Jiang, A J Pappano.
Abstract
We asked whether agonist occupancy of M(1) muscarinic receptor (mAChR) causes increased L-type Ca(2+) [I(Ca(L))] and contractions in ventricular myocytes. Voltage-clamp pulses evoked I(Ca(L)) in guinea pig ventricular myocytes superfused with Tyrode's solution (22-24 degrees C). The mAChR agonists carbachol (Cch, nonselective), McN-A-343 (McN, M(1)-selective), and oxotremorine (Oxo, M(2)-selective) were tested at 0.1 mM. None of these agonists affected basal I(Ca(L)). McN did not change isoproterenol-stimulated I(Ca(L)) in 13 of 15 cells. The slight decrease in two cells was not muscarinic because atropine (1 microM) did not antagonize it. Carbachol or Oxo decreased isoproterenol-stimulated I(Ca(L)) by 87 +/- 6.7 (n = 8 cells) and 49 +/- 9.0% (n = 4 cells), respectively. Atropine blocked inhibition by Cch or Oxo. External stimulation evoked contractions of single myocytes (35 degrees C). McN increased contraction in 1 of 22 cells stimulated at 0.2 Hz and in 0 of 16 cells stimulated at 1.0 Hz. Carbachol significantly increased contraction in 10 of 15 cells at 0.2 Hz and in 8 of 10 cells at 1.0 Hz stimulus frequency. Summarily, the M(1)-selective agonist McN had a negligible role to regulate I(Ca(L)). The antiadrenergic effect of mAChR agonists is attributable to M(2) receptor occupancy. That Cch, but not McN, increased cell shortening excludes participation of M(1) mAChR in the stimulant effect of Cch on guinea pig ventricular myocyte contractions.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10411573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharmacol Exp Ther ISSN: 0022-3565 Impact factor: 4.030