Abstract

The influence of amiloride, a known blocker of Na/H exchange, on the positive inotropic action of α-adrenoceptor stimulation was investigated in isolated rat left atria. Amiloride (300 μ m) rapidly (within 10 min) and reversibly abolished the positive inotropic effect of phenylephrine (10 μ m; 3 μ m propranolol present). Lower concentrations of amiloride inhibited the increase in contractile force caused by phenylephrine in a concentration dependent manner (IC 50 of 50 μ m). At a concentration of 50 μ m, amiloride caused a rightward and downward shift in the concentration-response curve to phenylephrine. Amiloride (10 to 300 μ m) affected to only a small extent the increased contractile force in the presence of inotropic interventions known to increase Ca 2+ influx via L-type calcium channels (Bay K 8644) and the Na/Ca exchanger (reduced extracellular Na +). To provide evidence that amiloride inhibits the Na/H antiporter intact atria, a contracture that depends on Na + influx by the Na/H antiporter was examined. Amiloride fully relaxed the contracture induced by ouabain (1 m m) or potassium-free solutions in the identical concentration range over which amiloride inhibited the positive inotropic effect of phenylephrine. Phenylephrine increased the rate of development and the peak amplitude of the amiloride-sensitive contracture (ouabain-induced). The inhibitory action of amiloride on the positive inotropic response to phenylephrine may, in part, be the result of inhibition of the Na/Hantiporter.

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