AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how the endocannabinoid anandamide affects large conductance Ca-dependent K channels in endothelial cells, particularly its receptor-independent effects.
  • Anandamide was found to hyperpolarize endothelial cells and increase whole-cell current that was sensitive to specific inhibitors but not affected by G-protein signaling.
  • Findings suggest that anandamide directly opens BK channels without needing endothelial cannabinoid receptors, emphasizing its effects on channel activity rather than cell integrity.

Article Abstract

Endocannabinoid anandamide induces endothelium-dependent relaxation commonly attributed to stimulation of the G-protein coupled endothelial anandamide receptor. The study addressed the receptor-independent effect of anandamide on large conductance Ca-dependent K channels expressed in endothelial cell line EA.hy926. Under resting conditions, 10µM anandamide did not significantly influence the resting membrane potential. In a Ca-free solution the cells were depolarized by ~10mV. Further administration of 10µM anandamide hyperpolarized the cells by ~8mV. In voltage-clamp mode, anandamide elicited the outwardly rectifying whole-cell current sensitive to paxilline but insensitive to GDPβS, a G-protein inhibitor. Administration of 70µM Mn, an agent used to promote integrin clustering, reversibly stimulated whole-cell current, but failed to further facilitate the anandamide-stimulated current. In an inside-out configuration, anandamide (0.1-30µM) facilitated single BK channel activity in a concentration-dependent manner within a physiological Ca range and a wide range of voltages, mainly by reducing mean closed time. The effect is essentially eliminated following chelation of Ca from the cytosolic face and pre-exposure to cholesterol-reducing agent methyl-β-cyclodextrin. O-1918 (3µM), a cannabidiol analog used as a selective antagonist of endothelial anandamide receptor, reduced BK channel activity in inside-out patches. These results do not support the existence of endothelial cannabinoid receptor and indicate that anandamide acts as a direct BK opener. The action does not require cell integrity or integrins and is caused by direct modification of BK channel activity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6520242PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2017.03.038DOI Listing

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