Abstract

We theorized that H-8, N-[2-(methylamino)ethyl]-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide, an inhibitor of cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases, might be a useful probe to assess cyclic nucleotide-dependent relaxation of blood vessels. However, working in the rat caudal artery and aorta, we found that neither cyclic AMP- nor cyclic GMP-mediated relaxations were diminished by even large doses of H-8. For example, in the caudal artery, relaxation of a phenylephrine contraction by 8-bromo-cGMP (10(-5) M) was unaffected by H-8: control, 33 +/- 6.2%; 10 microM H-8, 41 +/- 12%; 30 microM H-8, 30 +/- 16% (p NS). The amount of relaxation by 8-bromo-cAMP (3 x 10(-4) M) was actually increased by H-8: control, 29 +/- 7.6%; 10 microM H-8, 34 +/- 7.4%; 30 microM H-8, 80 +/- 14%. In the rat aorta, H-8 also failed to diminish relaxation induced by 8-bromo-cGMP, or by atriopeptin II or sodium nitroprusside. In both caudal artery and aorta, H-8 of itself caused a dose-dependent suppression of alpha-adrenergic contraction: for example, in the caudal artery, with 10 or 30 microM H-8, peak contraction to phenylephrine was reduced to 70 (SEM) +/- 12% or 52 +/- 7% of control, respectively. The results suggest that the protein kinase inhibitor H-8 is not a useful probe to study cyclic nucleotide-dependent relaxation.

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