Ruthenium Red (RuR) is widely used as an inhibitor of ryanodine receptor Ca(2+) release channels, but has additional effects such as the induction of Ca(2+) sensitization of contraction of permeabilized smooth muscles. To address the mechanism underlying this process, we examined the effects of RuR on contractility in permeabilized guinea-pig ileum and on the activity of myosin-light-chain phosphatase (MP). RuR increased the force at submaximal [Ca(2+)] (pCa 6.3) approx. 4-fold. This effect was not observed after thiophosphorylation of MP. RuR also seemed capable of preventing the thiophosphorylation of MP, suggesting a direct interaction of RuR with MP. Consistent with this possibility, smooth-muscle MP was inhibited by RuR in a concentration-dependent manner (IC(50) 23 microM). Exogenous calmodulin significantly increased RuR-induced contraction at pCa 6.3 but had little effect on contraction induced by microcystin at this [Ca(2+)]. Ca(2+)-independent contraction was induced by RuR (EC(50) 843 microM) and by microcystin (EC(50) 59 nM) but the maximal force induced by RuR was smaller than that induced by microcystin. The addition of 300 microM RuR enhanced the contraction induced by 30 nM microcystin but markedly decreased that induced by 1 microM microcystin. Such a dual action of RuR on microcystin-induced effects was not observed in experiments using purified MP. We conclude that the RuR-induced Ca(2+) sensitization of smooth-muscle contraction is due to the direct inhibition of MP by RuR.
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