AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the vasorelaxant effects of trans-4-chloro-β-nitrostyrene (T4CN) on rat aortic rings, demonstrating its ability to relax blood vessel contractions induced by phenylephrine and KCl.
  • It was found that T4CN's relaxation effects were consistent regardless of the presence of the endothelial layer, indicating that its mechanism does not rely on the endothelial-derived pathways.
  • The results suggest that T4CN may inhibit calcium influx from outside the cell and calcium release from internal stores, contributing to its vasorelaxation properties.

Article Abstract

Previously, we showed that 1-nitro-2-phenylethene, a nitrostyrene derivative of 1-nitro-2-phenylethane, induced vasorelaxant effects in rat aorta preparations. Here, we studied mechanisms underlying the vasorelaxant effects of its structural analog, trans-4-chloro-β-nitrostyrene (T4CN), in rat aortic rings. Increasing concentrations of T4CN (0.54-544.69 µm) fully and similarly relaxed contractions induced by phenylephrine (PHE, 1 µm) or KCl (60 mm) in endothelium-intact aortic rings with IC values of 66.74 [59.66-89.04] and 79.41 [39.92-158.01] µm, respectively. In both electromechanical and pharmacomechanical couplings, the vasorelaxant effects of T4CN remained unaltered by endothelium removal, as evidenced by the IC values (108.35 [56.49-207.78] and 65.92 [39.72-109.40] µm, respectively). Pretreatment of endothelium-intact preparations with L-NAME, ODQ, glibenclamide, or TEA did not change the vasorelaxant effect of T4CN. Under Ca -free conditions, T4CN significantly reduced the phasic contractions induced by caffeine or PHE, as well as the contractions due to exogenous CaCl in aortic preparations stimulated with PHE (in the presence of verapamil). These results suggest that in rat aortic rings, T4CN induced vasorelaxation independently from the activation of soluble guanylate cyclase/cGMP pathway, an effect that may be related to the electrophilicity of the substituted chloro-nitrostyrene. This vasorelaxation seems to involve inhibition of both calcium influx from the extracellular milieu and calcium mobilization from intracellular stores mediated by IP receptors and by ryanodine-sensitive Ca channels.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/fcp.12624DOI Listing

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