Nakajima Y, Kizawa Y, Nakano J, Kotake H, Inami T, Kusama T, Murakami H
Department of Physiology and Anatomy, Nihon University College of Pharmacy, Chiba, Japan.
Receptor. 1995 Fall;5(3):177-83.
ETs-induced contractions were resistant to ET(A)-selective antagonists and believed to be mediated by activation of ETB receptors in guinea pig bronchus. In the present study, the effects of the ET antagonists, PD143296 (Ac-D-Phe-L-Leu-L-Phe-L-Ile-L-Ile-L-Trp.2Na) and PD145065 (Ac-[(R)-2-10, 11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a, d]cyclohepten-5-yl]Gly)-L-Leu-L-Asp-L-Ile-L-Ile- L-Trp.2Na), on contractions induced by ET-1, ET-3, sarafotoxin S6c (STXc), and IRL1620 in the isolated hilar bronchus of the guinea pig were investigated. An ETA/B nonselective antagonist, PD145065 antagonized contractions induced by ET-1, ET-3, STXc, and IRL1620. Its antagonistic activity against ET-1, with pKB of 5.77 +/- 0.02 (n = 16, 3-10 microM), was significantly lower than that against ET-3, with pKB of 6.18 +/- 0.02 (n = 12, 3-10 microM), STXc, with pKB of 5.97 +/- 0.01 (n = 14, 3-10 microM), and IRL1620, with pKB of 6.80 +/- 0.04 (n = 14, 0.3-1 microM). Conversely, although a putative ETB-selective antagonist, PD143296 (10 microM) slightly but significantly antagonized the concentration-response curve of IRL1620 (pKB = 5.28 +/- 0.14, n = 6), it had no effect on ET-1-,ET-3-, or STXc-induced contractions. These results suggest that ETs possibly activate ETB2 or an atypical ETB receptor subtype in guinea pig hilar bronchus.