Abstract

Colforsin, a water-soluble forskolin derivative, directly activates adenylate cyclase and thereby increases the 3',5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) level in vascular smooth muscle cells. In this study, we investigated the vasodilatory action of colforsin on structurally remodeled pulmonary arteries from rats with pulmonary hypertension (PH). A total of 32 rats were subjected to hypobaric hypoxia (380 mmHg, 10% oxygen) for 10 days to induce chronic hypoxic PH, while 39 rats were kept in room air. Changes in isometric force were recorded in endothelium-intact (+E) and -denuded (-E) pulmonary arteries from the PH and control (non-PH) rats. Colforsin-induced vasodilation was impaired in both +E and -E arteries from PH rats compared with their respective controls. Endothelial removal did not influence colforsin-induced vasodilation in the arteries from control rats, but attenuated it in arteries from PH rats. The inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) synthase did not influence colforsin-induced vasodilation in +E arteries from controls, but attenuated it in +E arteries from PH rats, shifting its concentration-response curve closer to that of -E arteries from PH rats. Vasodilation induced by 8-bromo-cAMP (a cell-permeable cAMP analog) was also impaired in -E arteries from PH rats, but not in +E arteries from PH rats, compared with their respective controls. cAMP-mediated vasodilatory responses without beta-adrenergic receptor activation are impaired in structurally remodeled pulmonary arteries from PH rats. In these arteries, endothelial cells presumably play a compensatory role against the impaired cAMP-mediated vasodilatory response by releasing NO (and thereby attenuating the impairment). The results suggest that colforsin could be effective in the treatment of PH.

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