The aim of the present study was to evaluate the role of a possible interaction between cannabinoid and muscarinic systems, both widely expressed in the ocular structure and involved in the control of bovine ciliary muscle contractility and intraocular pressure modulation. The ciliary muscle strips isolated by bovine eyes were exposed cumulatively to anandamide in the presence and in the absence of carbachol (5nM), in a miograph system for isometric recording. The experiments were also conducted in the presence of AM251 (100nM), 4-DAMP (100nM), Pertussis toxin (500ng/ml), U73122 (0.1 and 1μM), chelerythrine (1 and 10μM) and Y27632 (1 and 10μM). Contractile responses were expressed as the percentage of 10μM carbachol-induced contraction. The anandamide-induced contraction on bovine ciliary muscle strips was enhanced by the previous stimulation of Gq-protein-coupled muscarinic M3 receptors with carbachol. The contractile response to anandamide plus carbachol was affected by different inhibitors such as Pertussis toxin, phospholipase C, protein kinase C and Rho-kinase. The key results of the present study show that sequential activation of muscarinic M3 receptors and cannabinoid CB1 receptors produce synergistic contractile effects of the bovine ciliary muscle by involving the activation of Rho-kinase and protein kinase C.
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