Abstract

1. In the present study we assessed the activity of antioquine, a bisbenzyltetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloid isolated from Pseudoxandra sclerocarpa, by examining its effects on the contractile activity of rat isolated aorta, specific binding of [3H]-(+)-cis-diltiazem, [3H]-nitrendipine and [3H]-prazosin to cerebral cortical membranes and the different molecular forms of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDE) isolated from bovine aorta. 2. Contractions in rat aorta induced by high concentrations of KCl (80 mM) and noradrenaline (1 microM) were inhibited by antioquine in a concentration-dependent manner (0.1 microM- 300 microM). The alkaloid appeared more potent against KCl-induced contractions. This inhibitory effect was observed at both 37 degrees C and 25 degrees C. 3. Paradoxically, at the highest concentration tested (300 microM) antioquine induced a contractile response of similar magnitude in the presence and absence of extracellular calcium, at 37 degrees C. This activity was greatly attenuated at 25 degrees C. Antioquine-induced contractions were not inhibited by prazosin (0.1 microM), nifedipine (1 microM) or diltiazem (100 microM). On the contrary, prazosin and nifedipine slightly increased the contractions in the presence of extracellular calcium. Papaverine (100 microM) partially inhibited the contractile response to antioquine both in the presence and absence of extracellular calcium. 4. At 25 degrees C, in Ca(2+)-free solution, antioquine (300 microM) did not modify the contractile response (phasic and tonic) evoked by noradrenaline, but increased the phasic contraction induced by caffeine. At 37 degrees C, the contraction elicited by antioquine made it impossible to observe the noradrenaline-induced one. 5. Antioquine showed affinity for the [3H]-prazosin binding site and for the [3H]-(+)-cis-diltiazembinding site of the Ca2+-channel receptor complex, but had no effect at the dihydropyridine binding site in rat cerebral cortex.6. Antioquine weakly inhibited some PDE forms isolated from bovine aorta: a CaM-PDE (PDE I)which preferentially hydrolyzes cyclic GMP and is activated by calmodulin, and a rolipram-sensitive cyclic AMP-PDE (PDE IV) which hydrolyzed cyclic AMP. Antioquine did not exert any inhibitory effect on the other forms of PDE, a cyclic GMP selective form (PDE V) and a low Km cyclic AMP-PDEthat is inhibited by cyclic GMP (CGI-PDE, PDE III).7. The present work provides evidence that antioquine has properties both as a calcium entry blocker(possibly through the benzothiazepine recognition site in the calcium channel) and as a contractile agent.Its mechanism of action as a contractile agent is not related to Ca2+-entry and is hypothetically similar to that of calyculin-A or okadaic acid. The possible involvement of a-adrenoceptors in this paradoxical effect cannot be excluded. The rigidity of the molecule provides an interesting model for analyzing this contractile mechanism and the intracellular processes involved.

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