Abstract

1. The effect of substance P on the phasic longitudinal contractions of the isolated rabbit ileum has been investigated. The contractions were recorded isotonically. Substance P in concentrations below those which cause tonic contraction (0.2-2 nM) increased the height of the phasic contractions in a concentration-dependent fashion without affecting their frequency (8-12/min).2. The effect of substance P was inhibited by verapamil, ouabain, noradrenaline, and isoprenaline, but was unaffected by tetrodotoxin, atropine, D-2-ala,5-metenkephalin, somatostatin, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide.3. Tetraethylammonium, which blocks voltage-dependent K(+) channels, enhanced the phasic contractile activity of the rabbit ileum in a manner quite similar to substance P, but the maximal response to tetraethylammonium was larger than that to substance P.4. The effect of matched concentrations of substance P and tetraethylammonium, which enhanced the phasic contractions to a similar extent, was investigated at various concentrations of K(+), Na(+), Ca(2+) and Cl(-) in the bathing medium. Both substance P and tetraethylammonium lost their ability to enhance the phasic contractions when K(+) was omitted from the medium or when its concentration therein was increased by a factor of 4, or when the NaCl concentration was reduced to less than 10%. The relative increase in phasic contractile activity evoked by substance P was smaller than that evoked by tetraethylammonium when more than 90% of the Cl(-) was replaced with propionate.5. Noradrenaline, in a concentration which just abolished the spontaneous phasic contractions (200-300 nM), reduced the enhancing effect of substance P on the phasic activity by 40-50%, but did not influence the effect of tetraethylammonium.6. These results indicate that substance P enhances the phasic longitudinal contractions of the isolated rabbit ileum by a direct action on the smooth muscle cells and that this effect is brought about by facilitation of the myogenically controlled action potential discharges in the ileum. Circumstantial evidence suggests that the underlying ionic mechanism of action of substance P is a decrease in K(+) and Cl(-) conductances.

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