| Literature DB >> 29899230 |
Ana Carolina Cardoso-Teixeira1, Francisco Walber Ferreira-da-Silva2, Dieniffer Peixoto-Neves3, Klausen Oliveira-Abreu4, Átila Pereira-Gonçalves5, Andrelina Noronha Coelho-de-Souza6, José Henrique Leal-Cardoso7.
Abstract
The present study used isometric tension recording to investigate the vasorelaxant effect of limonene (LM), carveol (CV), and perillyl alcohol (POH) on contractility parameters of the rat aorta, focusing in particular on the structure-activity relationship. LM, CV, and POH showed a reversible inhibitory effect on the contraction induced by electromechanical and pharmacomechanical coupling. In the case of LM, but not CV and POH, this effect was influenced by preservation of the endothelium. POH and CV but not LM exhibited greater pharmacological potency on BayK-8644-induced contraction and on electromechanical coupling than on pharmacomechanical coupling. In endothelium-denuded preparations, the order of pharmacological potency on electrochemical coupling was LM < CV < POH. These compounds inhibited also, with grossly similar pharmacological potency, the contraction induced by phorbol ester dibutyrate. The present results suggest that LM, CV and POH induced relaxant effect on vascular smooth muscle by means of different mechanisms likely to include inhibition of PKC and IP3 pathway. For CV and POH, hydroxylated compounds, it was in electromechanical coupling that the greater pharmacological potency was observed, thus suggesting a relative specificity for a mechanism likely to be important in electromechanical coupling, for example, blockade of voltage-dependent calcium channel.Entities:
Keywords: carveol; limonene; perillyl alcohol; structure-activity relationship; vascular smooth muscle; vasorelaxant effect
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29899230 PMCID: PMC6099955 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23061430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Chemical structure of the monoterpene limonene and monoterpenoids carveol and perillyl alcohol [8].
Figure 2Effects of limonene, carveol, and perillyl alcohol on the resting tonus of rat aortic rings. * indicates statistical difference compared to the control (p < 0.05, one-way ANOVA and Holm-Sidak test). Each control consisted of the same concentration of vehicle as in the experimental case, but without the experimental substance.
Figure 3Relaxant effect of limonene, carveol, and perillyl alcohol on electromechanical coupling. Sustained contractions induced by K+ (60 mM) in endothelium-intact (A) and endothelium-denuded (B) rat aortic rings. Results are shown as means ± SEM. # indicates statistical difference of limonene, carveol, and perillyl alcohol compared to the control (p < 0.05, two-way ANOVA and Holm-Sidak test). Each control consisted of the same concentration of vehicle as in the experimental case, but without the experimental substance.
EC50 values summarizing the relaxant effects of perillyl alcohol, carveol, and limonene on rat aortic rings. Values are expressed as means ± SEM.
| Contractile Agent | Perillyl Alcohol (µM) | Carveol (µM) | Limonene (µM) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| K+ | E+ | 277.7 ± 5.46 (6) | 662.1 ± 32.85 (7) a | 941.6 ± 28.02 (6) b |
| K+ | E− | 279.7 ± 22.01 (7) | 619.8 ± 37.15 (7) a | 1474.5 ± 27.08 (7) b,c |
| PHE | E+ | 443.3 ± 66.83 (6) d | 1333.3 ± 225.20 (10) a,e | 2159.1 ± 203.62 (7) b,f |
| PHE | E− | 433.3 ± 44.31 (7) d | 1237.34 ± 117.90 (9) a,e | 1216.7 ± 57.50 (7) c,f |
| BayK | E− | 221.4 ± 4.09 (5) | 598.2 ± 42.05 (5) a | 439.0 ± 31.76 (5) b,g |
E+, endothelium-intact aorta; E−, endothelium-denuded aorta; PHE, phenylephrine; a, p < 0.05, in compared to the corresponding POH value; b, p < 0.05, compared to the corresponding CV value; c, p < 0.05, endothelium-intact vs. endothelium-denuded; d, p < 0.05, compared to 277.7, 279.7, and 221.4 µM; e, p < 0.05 compared to 662.1, 619.8, and 598.2 µM; f, p < 0.05, compared to 941.6, 1474.5, and 439.0 µM; g, p < 0.05, BayK vs. limonene K+ E+ and K+ E−; Values are expressed as means ± SEM (n), n = number of experiments.
Figure 4Relaxant effect of limonene, carveol, and perillyl alcohol on pharmacomechanical coupling. Sustained contractions induced by PHE (0.1 μM) in endothelium-intact (A) and endothelium-denuded (B) rat aortic rings. Results are shown as means ± SEM. * indicates statistical difference of limonene, carveol, and perillyl alcohol compared to the control (p < 0.05, two way ANOVA and Holm-Sidak test). # indicates statistical difference between limonene (600 μM) compared to the control (p < 0.05, one-way ANOVA and Holm-Sidak test). Each control consisted of the same concentration of vehicle as in the experimental case, but without the experimental substance.
Figure 5Relaxant Effect of perillyl alcohol, carveol, and limonene on sustained contractions induced by BayK-8644 (2 μM) in endothelium-denuded rat aortic rings. Results are shown as means ± SEM. # indicates statistical difference between limonene, carveol, and perillyl alcohol vs. control (p < 0.05, two-way ANOVA and Holm-Sidak test). Each control consisted of the same concentration of vehicle as in the experimental case, but without the experimental substance.
Figure 6Relaxant effect of perillyl alcohol, carveol, and limonene on sustained contractions induced by PDB (1 μM) in endothelium-denuded rat aortic rings. Results are shown as means ± SEM. * indicates a significant effect (p < 0.05, ANOVA on Rank’s followed by Dunn’s test).