Abstract
1. On guinea-pig papillary muscle we investigated whether a prolonging effect of noradrenaline on the duration of the cardiac ventricular action potential (AP) is attributable to an action on beta-adrenoceptors. 2. Propranolol (5 X 10(-6) M), which itself shortens AP (at 90% repolarization level), inhibits both effects of noradrenaline on the AP, i.e. the sustained prolongation by low concentrations (10(-7)--10(-6)M) and the steady-state shortening which follows an initial prolongation by a high concentration (10(-5)M). In the presence of propranolol, the prlonging effect of noradrenaline is shifted to higher concentrations (10(-6)--10(-5)M). This prolongation of AP duration does not exceed the prior shortening effect by propranolol; it is not prevented by 10(-5)M phentolamine. 3. Phentolamine, which itself prolongs AP duration, inhibits neither the initial prolongation nor the steady-state shortening of the AP by 10(-5)M noradrenaline. Instead, the biphasic change in AP duration as well as the positive inotropic effect of 10(-5)M noradrenaline are enhanced in the presence of 3Z10(-6)M phentolamine. 4. The effect of isoprenaline on the duration of AP qualitatively resembles that of noradrenaline. In a concentration of 10(-8)M, isoprenaline produces a sustained prolongation of the AP; concentrations of 10(-7)M and 10(-6)M cause an initial prolongation which is followed by a steady-state shortening. These effects are inhibited by propranolol. 5. It is concluded that not only the steady-state shortening effect on AP duration by 10(-5)M noradrenaline but also the prolongation of AP, induced by lower noradrenaline concentrations (10(-7)--10(-6)M), are mediated solely by an action on beta-adrenoceptors.
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