Abstract

The effect of the centrally acting antihypertensive agent, rilmenidine, was examined on the contractile properties of isolated rat portal vein strips and on the free cytosolic [Ca 2+] ([Ca 2+] i) in isolated myocytes. Rilmenidine (1–30 μM) relaxed strips precontracted with noradrenaline. This effect was not inhibited by the α 2-adrenoceptor antagonist, yohimbine, and was not mimicked by the α 2-adrenoceptor agonist, 5-bromo- N-(4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)-6-quinoxalinamine (UK 14,304). Rilmenidine dose dependently shifted to the right the concentration–response curves to noradrenaline and to phenylephrine but not that to carbachol. Rilmenidine alone (0.1–30 μM) caused a contraction which maximally corresponded to 18% of the maximal noradrenaline-induced contraction. This effect was not produced by UK 14,304, was not affected by yohimbine, but was inhibited by the α 1-adrenoceptor antagonist, prazosin. In isolated myocytes, rilmenidine reduced the noradrenaline-induced [Ca 2+] i increase but alone, it produced a rise in [Ca 2+] i, the peak amplitude of which averaged 15% of the noradrenaline-induced transient [Ca 2+] i rise. It is concluded that rilmenidine acts as a partial agonist of α 1-adrenoceptors of vascular smooth muscle, causing relaxation of vessels precontracted by full agonists of α 1-adrenoceptors.

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