Abstract

We have compared the cardioprotective agents prenylamine and glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) with respect to their effects on the bioenergetics of catecholamine storage vesicles. Chromaffin granule ghosts, which have a well preserved ability to actively transport and store catecholamines, were used as a model for adrenergic synaptic vesicles due to their functional similarity. Prenylamine, which partially and reversibly deplete the endogenous stores of noradrenaline in adrenergic nerves and ganglia, was found to inhibit the generation of the transmembrane proton electrochemical gradient driven by a H +-lATPase, mainly by acting as an uncoupler of this ATPase. The inhibition of the energy dependent dopamine uptake (and noradrenaline biosynthesis) by prenylamine could be accounted for by its effect on the bioenergetics of the storage vesicles. The organic nitrates glyceryl trinitrate and isosorbide dinitrate also partly inhibited the catecholamine uptake in parallel with their effects on the proton electrochemical gradient. It is concluded that GTN is a weak catecholamine depletor. Experiments with 3-morpholinosydnonimin-hydrochloride, a source of nitric oxide (NO), opens up the possibility that the mechanism of inhibition of the bioenergetics of chromaffin granule ghosts by GTN is mediated by NO.

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