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  • Effects of nicorandil on cytosolic calcium concentrations and on tension development in the rabbit femoral artery.

Effects of nicorandil on cytosolic calcium concentrations and on tension development in the rabbit femoral artery.

The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics (1994-02-01)
S Abe, J Nishimura, M Nakamura, H Kanaide
ABSTRACT

By using front-surface fluorometry and fura-2-loaded strips of the rabbit femoral artery, the effects of 2-nicotinamidoethyl nitrate (nicorandil) on cytosolic Ca++ concentration ([Ca++]i) and on tension development were measured simultaneously, and findings were compared with those of SG-209 (2-nicotinamidoethyl acetate), nitroglycerin and cromakalim. During contraction induced by 25 mM K(+)-depolarization or by 3 x 10(-7) M noradrenaline stimulation, application of nicorandil, nitroglycerin or cromakalim, decreased [Ca++]i and tension, in a concentration-dependent manner. With a given amount of reduction in [Ca++]i, the extent of relaxation was in the following order: nitroglycerin > nicorandil > cromakalim. The [Ca++]i-tension relations of the relaxations induced by nitroglycerin and cromakalim were shifted to the right and to the left from that observed with the nicorandil-induced relaxation, respectively. During the contraction induced both by 25 mM K(+)-depolarization and by 3 x 10(-7) M noradrenaline, glibenclamide almost fully antagonized cromakalim- and SG-209-induced relaxation, and partially antagonized the nicorandil-induced relaxation, but not the nitroglycerin-induced relaxation. In the absence of extracellular Ca++, the noradrenaline-induced contraction due to release of Ca++ from the intracellular store was inhibited by nicorandil and by nitroglycerin. Cromakalim and SG-209 had no such effects. Both nitroglycerin and nicorandil increased intracellular cyclic GMP content. We suggest that nicorandil relaxes the rabbit femoral artery both by directly reducing [Ca++]i and by directly controlling Ca++ sensitivity of the contractile apparatus, through second messengers. The reduction of [Ca++]i involves inhibition of the release of stored Ca++ and Ca++ influx, the latter due in part to opening of ATP-sensitive K+ channels.