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Title: Endothelin-induced contractions of tracheal smooth muscle and identification of specific endothelin binding sites in the trachea of the rat. Author: Turner NC, Power RF, Polak JM, Bloom SR, Dollery CT. Journal: Br J Pharmacol; 1989 Oct; 98(2):361-6. PubMed ID: 2479437. Abstract: 1. The presence of specific binding sites and the contractile activity of the novel peptide, endothelin have been investigated in rat trachea. 2. Endothelin (10(-8)-10(-5) M) induced long-lasting contraction of rat tracheal rings superfused with Krebs solution (EC50 5.4 x 10(-6) M). Contractions of the tissue to 10(-6) M endothelin were attenuated in Ca2+-free medium containing 0.1 mM EGTA but unaffected by nicardipine (10(-7) M). 3. After equilibration in Ca2+-free medium (without EGTA) a return to normal Ca2+ concentrations (2.5 mM), 30 min or 60 min following endothelin (10(-6) M), produced a sustained contraction of the tissue. 4. Specific binding sites for endothelin were identified on rat tracheal smooth muscle (KD 1.34 x 10(-10) M, maximal binding 1.2 fmol mm-2). Specific binding sites were also identified on nerve trunks. Endothelin binding was unaffected by co-incubation with nicardipine (10(-7) M) or verapamil (10(-7) M). 5. The discrepancy between the apparent KD for endothelin binding and the EC50 for endothelin-induced contraction suggests that the endothelin binding sites identified in this study may not be associated with the receptors mediating contraction. 6. These results indicate that endothelin binding sites are present on tracheal smooth muscle. The mechanism of endothelin-induced contraction, whilst being dependent on extracellular calcium, does not appear to involve binding to the dihydropyridine- or verapamil-sensitive sites on the voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel. Its long duration of action may be associated with a sustained increase in Ca2+ permeability.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]