Abstract

1. Substance P (SP), physalaemin, eledoisin and kassinin induced concentration-related contractions of the longitudinal muscle of the mouse distal colon. The responses were not antagonized by atropine (1.5 x 10(-7) M), mepyramine (2.5 x 10(-7) M), methysergide (5 x 10(-7) M), timolol (10(-6) M), phentolamine (10(-6) M) or naloxone (4 x 10(-7) M). They were enhanced by tetrodotoxin (TTX, 1.5 x 10(-7) M). These observations indicate that the contractile responses to the tachykinins result from a direct activation of smooth muscle cells. 2. The contractile activity provoked by SP and physalaemin was inhibited by nifedipine (a Ca2+-entry blocker) and was abolished in Ca2+-free EGTA solution. Such data suggest that the myogenic effects of SP and physalaemin are mainly dependent on their ability to promote Ca2+ influx. 3. Eledoisin and kassinin evoked a contractile response in the absence of external Ca2+ and their myogenic activity was, to some extent, resistant to the inhibitory effect of nifedipine. This may indicate that an additional process, probably the release of an intracellularly bound Ca2+ store, participates in the mechanism by which eledoisin and kassinin contract the mouse distal colon. 4. After desensitization of the mouse distal colon to SP, the contractile activity provoked by SP or physalaemin was totally abolished whilst the responses evoked by eledoisin and kassinin were barely affected. These observations and other experimental findings indirectly support the assumption that the mouse distal colon could possess different tachykinin-binding sites.

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