Abstract

It has been well known that the integrity of airway epithelium is important in development of bronchial hyperreactivity and bronchial asthma. But the mechanisms involved are still unclear. To evaluate that airway epithelium is able to modulate the contraction of guinea pig tracheal smooth muscle, we investigated the responsiveness of intact and epithelium-denuded tracheal strips to histamine and acetylcholine. And to evaluate whether cyclooxgenase products play a role in this modulatory mechanism, we also investigated the effect of indomethacin pretreatment on the tracheal responsiveness to histamine. Results were as follows: 1) In guinea pig tracheal smooth muscle the presence of airway epithelium significantly reduced the response to histamine. 2) In the presence of indomethacin dose-response curves and values were similar between intact and epithelium-denuded tracheal strips, that is, indomethacin abolished the influence of epithelium on the contracion of tracheal smooth muscle. 3) The response of tracheal smooth muscle to acetylcholine was similar both in the presence and absence of epithelium. These results suggest that airway epithelium of guinea pig may generate an inhibitory signal to decrease the response of tracheal smooth muscle to histamine and cyclooxygenase products may contrbute to the modulation of airway epithelium on the contracion of tracheal smooth muscle.

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