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  • Title: Natriuretic peptide-induced relaxation of myometrium from the pregnant guinea pig is not mediated by guanylate cyclase activation.
    Author: Carvajal JA, Aguan K, Thompson LP, Buhimschi IA, Weiner CP.
    Journal: J Pharmacol Exp Ther; 2001 Apr; 297(1):181-8. PubMed ID: 11259543.
    Abstract:
    We tested both relaxation and cGMP generation by atrial (ANP), brain (BNP), and C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP) in oxytocin-stimulated myometrium from near-term pregnant guinea pigs to investigate the ability and mechanism of natriuretic peptides to inhibit myometrial contractility. Myometrial strips were contracted by 10(-8) M oxytocin, and relaxation to the cumulative addition (10(-9)-10(-6) M) of the natriuretic peptides measured. Maximal relaxation to BNP was significantly greater than to ANP (52 versus 32% respectively; p < 0.05), whereas CNP failed to produce relaxation. However, the increase in cGMP produced by BNP (10(-7) M) was significantly less than that produced by ANP (10(-7) M) (4.5 versus 7.0 times basal; p < 0.05); CNP did not increase myometrial cGMP. Anantin, a competitive blocker of the guanylate cyclase A receptor, significantly reduced the increase in cGMP produced by ANP and BNP, but had no effect on relaxation induced by either peptide. Rp-8-Br-cGMP, an inhibitor of the cGMP-dependent protein kinase, did not alter BNP-induced relaxation. The atrial natriuretic peptide-fragment 4-23 amide, a natriuretic peptide clearance receptor agonist, failed to inhibit oxytocin-stimulated myometrial contraction. We conclude that natriuretic peptide induced relaxation of oxytocin-stimulated myometrium from the pregnant guinea pig is not mediated by either guanylate cyclase A or B activation, is independent of the cGMP pathway, and does not involve clearance receptor activation. Our results suggest that natriuretic peptide-induced relaxation of pregnant myometrium is mediated via a novel mechanism.
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