Abstract

Endothelin-1 contracts porcine carotid arterial smooth muscle with an ED50 of 10 nM. Contraction is associated with phosphorylation of the 20,000 dalton-regulatory light chain subunits of vascular myosin. Phosphopeptide mapping of light chains isolated from 32PO4-loaded muscle strips stimulated by endothelin-1 (5 x 10(-8) M) and comparison with maps generated from light chains phosphorylated in vitro or muscles stimulated with KCl (110 mM) or angiotensin-II (5 x 10(-8) M) indicates that Ca2(+)-calmodulin activation of myosin light chain kinase is a biochemical pathway stimulated by all three agonists. However, a small amount of phosphate (17%) was detected in a light chain peptide phosphorylated by protein kinase C. Endothelin-1 also stimulated phosphorylation of the thin filament protein, caldesmon, (from 0.35 mol PO4/mol caldesmon to 0.52 mol PO4/mol). Collectively, these results provide evidence that the effects of endothelin-1 on force generation and maintenance in vascular muscle may be dependent upon myosin light chain phosphorylation by Ca2+ calmodulin--requiring myosin light chain kinase and upon a thin filament mechanism that is modulated by phosphorylation of caldesmon.

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