Abstract

The stimulation of large-conductance, calcium-activated (BK) potassium channels by somatostatin through protein dephosphorylation in rat pituitary tumor cells (White et al., 1991) is blocked by drugs that interfere with arachidonic acid release by phospholipase A2 and metabolism by 5-lipoxygenase. In contrast, higher concentrations of the same drugs had no effect on BK channel gating in cell-free patches, on the inhibition of adenylyl cyclase by somatostatin, or on the stimulation of BK channels by protein dephosphorylation through a cGMP-dependent pathway (White et al., 1993). Exogenous arachidonic acid (1–20 μM) stimulated BK channel activity through protein dephosphorylation as effectively as somatostatin and was also blocked by inhibitors of lipoxygenases but not by inhibitors of phospholipase A2. These results support the hypothesis that lipoxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid are second messengers linking pertussis toxin sensitive G-proteins to protein phosphatases regulating potassium channel activity (Armstrong and White, 1992). Published by Elsevier Science Ltd

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