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. 1988 Aug 15;154(3):868-75.
doi: 10.1016/0006-291x(88)90220-3.

Cellular mechanism of action by a novel vasoconstrictor endothelin in cultured rat vascular smooth muscle cells

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Cellular mechanism of action by a novel vasoconstrictor endothelin in cultured rat vascular smooth muscle cells

Y Hirata et al. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. .

Abstract

Specific binding sites for synthetic porcine endothelin (pET), a novel potent vasoconstrictor peptide isolated from the supernatant of cultured porcine endothelial cells, and its effects on cytosolic free Ca2+ concentrations ([Ca2+]i) and phosphatidylinositol (PI) response were studied in cultured rat aortic vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC). Binding of 125I-labeled-pET to rat VSMC was time- and temperature-dependent and the cell-bound 125I-labeled-pET was resistant to dissociate. Scatchard analysis of binding studies indicated the presence of a single class of high-affinity binding sites: the apparent Kd was 2-4 X 10(-10) M and the maximal binding capacity was 11,000-13,000 sites/cell. The binding was highly specific for pET because neither well-recognized vasoconstrictors, peptide neurotoxins, nor Ca2+-channel blockers affected the binding. pET dose-dependently (10(-9)-10(-7) M) induced a transient and sustained increase in [Ca2+]i in fura-2-loaded cells of which effect was largely dependent on extracellular Ca2+, whereas it had no significant effect on PI response in 3H-myoinositol-prelabeled cells. The present data clearly demonstrates the presence of specific receptors for pET distinct from those of the well-recognized vasoconstrictors and voltage-dependent Ca2+-channels in cultured rat VSMC, and suggest that pET-induced increase in [Ca2+]i is involved in the mechanism of its vasoconstriction.

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