The contribution of diffusion to the entry of catecholamines into guinea-pig trachealis smooth muscle cells
- PMID: 6493357
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00500907
The contribution of diffusion to the entry of catecholamines into guinea-pig trachealis smooth muscle cells
Abstract
In smooth muscle or cartilage preparations of guinea-pig trachea incubated in 0.1 mumol/l 3H-isoprenaline, extraneuronal uptake inhibitors (corticosterone, normetanephrine, phenoxybenzamine) caused only partial inhibition (64-75%) of the formation of 3-O-methylisoprenaline. Thus, isoprenaline appeared to be exposed to catechol-O-methyltransferase by diffusional entry as well as by extraneuronal uptake in both the smooth muscle and cartilage regions of the trachea. Fluorescence microphotometric measurements of catecholamine uptake in trachealis smooth muscle cells, when tissues were incubated in 200 or 1,200 mumol/l isoprenaline, adrenaline or noradrenaline in the absence and presence of extraneuronal uptake inhibitors (corticosterone, normetanephrine, phenoxybenzamine), showed that the contribution of diffusional entry to the uptake of the amines into the cells fitted with the order of their lipophilicities, viz. isoprenaline much greater than adrenaline greater than noradrenaline. A kinetic analysis of the uptake of isoprenaline into the trachealis smooth muscle cells was carried out in the absence and presence of 100 mumol/l corticosterone. The kinetic analysis (a) showed that the corticosterone-resistant component of total uptake was not saturable, supporting the view that it represented diffusional entry of isoprenaline into the cells, and (b) provided Km and Vmax values (112 mumol/l and 101 F/min, respectively) for the saturable extraneuronal uptake of isoprenaline into the cells. The study provided evidence for marked diffusional entry of the lipophilic amine isoprenaline into guinea-pig trachealis smooth muscle cells. The diffusional entry of adrenaline was much less and that of noradrenaline negligible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)