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Query: UNIPROT:P20366 (
substance P
)
21,176
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The interaction of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and bradykinin was investigated in isolated bovine and human coronary arteries. Rings with and without endothelium were mounted in organ chambers for measurement of isometric force. The effects of the ACE inhibitors lisinopril, enalaprilat, fosinoprilat, ramiprilat, and captopril were determined during submaximal stimulation with bradykinin or other vasodilators. Lisinopril and captopril alone did not affect vascular tone; however, in rings with endothelium partially relaxed with bradykinin (> or = 10(-10) M), all ACE inhibitors caused further relaxations. Lisinopril did not affect bradykinin concentrations in the incubation medium. Mechanical removal of the endothelium or incubation with nitro-L-arginine or the bradykinin2-receptor antagonist
Hoe
140 prevented the relaxations to bradykinin and lisinopril. Other vasodilators including acetylcholine, adenosine diphosphate,
substance P
, or SIN-1 did not prime the rings to respond to ACE inhibitors. Endothelium-dependent relaxations to lisinopril were also observed in human coronary arteries treated with bradykinin (> or = 10(-7) M). Thus, ACE inhibitors potentiate endothelium-dependent relaxations to submaximal concentrations of bradykinin in bovine and human coronary arteries. This local mechanism occurs regardless of elevated bradykinin concentrations in the blood and reduced angiotensin II generation.
...
PMID:Local potentiation of bradykinin-induced vasodilation by converting-enzyme inhibition in isolated coronary arteries. 128 32
Bradykinin (BK) has been reported to have mixed excitatory/inhibitory effects on gastrointestinal motility. The present study examined the mechanism responsible for the inhibition of gastric motor activity caused by intraperitoneal administration of BK. Gastric motor activity was measured by recording the intragastric pressure (IGP) of phenobarbital-anesthetized rats via a transesophageal catheter. To facilitate the study of inhibitory influences, gastric motility was stimulated by
neurokinin A
(
NKA
), which on intravenous injection evoked reproducible gastric contractions as measured by a rise of IGP. Intraperitoneal injection of BK (0.1-10 nmol) inhibited the
NKA
-induced increase in IGP in a dose-dependent manner, and the effect of epigastric administration of BK was not significantly different from that of intraperitoneal administration. The inhibitory effect of intraperitoneal BK on gastric motility was due to an effect on BK2 receptors because it was blocked by prior intraperitoneal injection of the BK2 antagonist
Hoe
140. The specificity of this BK antagonist was demonstrated by its inability to antagonize the effect of intraperitoneal hydrochloric acid (HCl), which, like BK, inhibited the
NKA
-induced gastric contractions. Because the BK- and HCl-induced inhibition of the
NKA
-induced rise of IGP was abolished by acute removal of the celiac-superior mesenteric ganglion complex, but left unaltered by acute bilateral subdiaphragmatic vagotomy, it is inferred that intraperitoneal BK inhibits gastric motor activity via activation of an autonomic reflex that involves prevertebral ganglia.
...
PMID:Reflex gastric motor inhibition caused by intraperitoneal bradykinin: antagonism by Hoe 140, a bradykinin antagonist. 133 75
1. The effects of intrathecal (i.t.) pretreatment with selective B1 or B2 kinin receptor antagonists were studied on the cardiovascular response to i.t. injection of bradykinin (BK) in conscious freely moving rats. 2. BK (81 pmol) produced an increase in mean arterial pressure (MAP: 9-13 mmHg) and decrease in heart rate (HR: 20-30 beats min-1) that reached a maximum 2 min after injection. 3. The BK-induced cardiovascular responses were dose-dependently and reversibly reduced by four antagonists with the following rank order of potency: Tyr, D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]-BK = D-Arg[Tyr3,D-Phe7,Leu8]-BK = D- Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7,Leu8]-BK > D-Arg[Hyp3,Thi5,D-Tic7,Oic8]-BK (
Hoe
140). These compounds failed to alter the cardiovascular response to i.t. injection of 8.1 nmol of
substance P
. 4. Other compounds acting on the B2 receptor, namely D-Arg[Hyp3,Gly6,Leu8]-BK, D-Arg[Hyp3,D-Phe7]-BK, D-Arg[Hyp2,Thi5,8,D-Phe7]-BK and D-Arg[Hyp3,Gly6,D-Phe7,Leu8]-BK or on the B1 receptor, [Leu8]-desArg9-BK, did not influence the cardiovascular responses to BK at doses devoid of intrinsic activity on MAP and HR. 5. None of the kinin receptor antagonists caused motor impairment, respiratory arrest or persisting cardiovascular changes. 6. These results confirm that the cardiovascular effects induced by i.t. BK are mediated by the activation of a B2 receptor in the rat spinal cord. However, the rank order of potency of antagonists does not conform to the classical B2 functional site characterized in peripheral tissues.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular effects of intrathecally administered bradykinin in the rat: characterization of receptors with antagonists. 750 24
Bradykinin (Bk) induced a contraction in all small bronchi samples (diameter, 0.5 to 1 mm) from 20 patients. pD2 was 7.7 +/- 0.1 (pD2 = -log EC50) and maximal effect (Emax) was 36.2 +/- 4.7% of the maximal response to acetylcholine. The B2 agonist [Hyp3TyrMe8]Bk contracted airway smooth muscle with a pD2 of 7.8 +/- 0.2 and an Emax of 39 +/- 9%. The B1 agonist [Sar1dPhe8desArg9]Bk induced only a weak contraction at 10(-6) M. The effect of Bk was abolished by the B2 (
Hoe
140) but not by the B1 [Leu8desArg9]Bk receptor antagonist. Indomethacin 10(-6) M abolished Bk-induced contraction, suggesting that cyclooxygenase products are involved in Bk action. Capsaicin 10(-5) M, which selectively depletes C fibers from airway mediators through the ruthenium red pathway, and ruthenium red 10(-5) M significantly inhibited the concentration-response curves to Bk. However, tetrodotoxin (+/-)-CP-96,345, SR 48968, and atropine did not significantly affect Bk concentration-response curves, suggesting that nerve conduction,
substance P
(SP),
neurokinin A
(
NKA
), and acetylcholine release are not involved in Bk action. Our data indicate that Bk contracts human distal airway smooth muscle through the Bk B2 receptor and a cyclooxygenase pathway. This effect appears to involve capsaicin and ruthenium red pathways but neither acetylcholine nor
NKA
and SP release.
...
PMID:Contractile effects of bradykinin on the isolated human small bronchus. 750 45
1. The topical application of bradykinin (BK) (0.05-5000 pmol/rat) onto the serosal surface of the urinary bladder in urethane-anaesthetized rats, evoked low amplitude tonic contractions (not exceeding 25 mmHg) or high amplitude (about 50 mmHg), phasic reflex contractions (chemoceptive micturition reflex) which were abolished by bilateral ablation of the pelvic ganglia. In ganglionectomized rats, BK induced only a local, tonic-type contraction. 2. Systemic capsaicin pretreatment (164 mumol kg-1, 4 days before) reduced the incidence of chemoceptive reflex induced by BK (500 pmol/rat) but had no effect on the magnitude of the tonic-type contraction elicited by BK in ganglionectomized rats. Indomethacin (11 mumol kg-1, 20 min before) reduced the incidence but not the amplitude of the reflex contractions induced by topical application of BK (500 pmol/rat). In ganglionectomized rats, indomethacin (11 mumol kg-1, 20 min before) decreased the amplitude of the tonic contraction evoked by BK. Indomethacin did not affect the chemoceptive reflex induced by topical application of capsaicin (15 nmol/rat) onto the bladder. 3. Intrathecal administration of the
tachykinin
NK1 receptor antagonists, RP 67,580 (10 nmol/rat) or SR 140,333 (10 nmol/rat), abolished the chemoceptive reflex induced by BK without modifying the magnitude of the tonic contraction. SR 140,333 (10 nmol/rat) also abolished the occurrence of the chemoceptive reflex induced by capsaicin. 4. Intravenous administration of the B2 receptor antagonist,
Hoe
140 (35 nmol kg-1, 10 min before) abolished the reflex and local effects induced by BK on bladder motility but failed to modify the chemoceptive reflex induced by topical application of capsaicin (15 nmol/rat). 5. Intrathecal administration of
Hoe
140 (10 nmol/rat) reduced the incidence of the chemoceptive reflex induced by BK but had no effect on the amplitude of the local motor response. Likewise,
Hoe
140(10 nmol/rat, i.t.) reduced the incidence of reflex bladder contractions induced by topical application of capsaicin (15 nmol/rat) without affecting the magnitude of the tonic-type contraction.6. These findings indicate that BK stimulates motility through B2 receptors in the rat urinary bladder.BK activates the reflex response by stimulating capsaicin-sensitive afferent nerves with a contribution from prostanoids. At the spinal cord level,
tachykinin
NK1 and BK B2 receptors could also be involved in the chemoceptive reflex induced by BK or capsaicin.
...
PMID:Pharmacological analysis of the local and reflex responses to bradykinin on rat urinary bladder motility in vivo. 753 95
1. The effect of bradykinin, capsaicin,
substance P
and low pH medium on plasma extravasation in the guinea-pig conjunctiva has been studied. Evans blue dye was measured in the conjunctiva after local instillation of the agents into the conjunctival sac. 2. Bradykinin (2-50 nmol), capsaicin (20-50 nmol) and
substance P
(0.5-5 nmol) caused a dose-dependent increase in plasma extravasation with the following order of potency:
substance P
> bradykinin = capsaicin. The effect of capsaicin (50 nmol) and
substance P
(5 nmol) was abolished by the
tachykinin
NK1 receptor antagonist, CP-99,994 (8 mumol kg-1, i.v.) (P < 0.01), whereas CP-100,263 (8 mumol kg-1, i.v.) the inactive enantiomer of CP-99,994 was without effect. CP-99,994 inhibited by 70% (P < 0.01) the effect of bradykinin. 3. The kinin B2 receptor antagonist,
Hoe
140 (icatibant, 10 nmol kg-1, i.v.) abolished the response to bradykinin (50 nmol) (P < 0.01), but did not affect the responses to capsaicin (50 nmol) or
substance P
(5 nmol). Plasma extravasation induced by low pH medium (pH 1) was abolished by CP-99,994 (P < 0.01) and by
Hoe
140 (P < 0.01). 4. The present findings suggest that: endogenous or exogenous tachykinins increase plasma extravasation in the guinea-pig conjunctiva by activation of NK1 receptors; bradykinin-induced plasma extravasation is mediated by
tachykinin
release from sensory nerve endings; low pH media cause plasma extravasation via release of kinins that by activation of B2 receptors release tachykinins from sensory nerve endings.
...
PMID:Involvement of tachykinins in plasma extravasation induced by bradykinin and low pH medium in the guinea-pig conjunctiva. 754 95
We previously demonstrated that the bradykinin-induced contraction of human isolated small bronchi is inhibited by indomethacin, capsaicin (N-methyl-N-6-nonenamide) and ruthenium red but not by
tachykinin
receptor antagonists. The thromboxane A2 receptor (TP receptor) antagonist GR32191 ((1R-(1 alpha(Z),2 beta,3 beta,5 alpha))-(+)-7-(5-(((1,1'-biphenyl)-4-yl)- methoxy)-3-hydroxy-2-(1-piperidinyl)cyclopentyl)-4-heptenoic acid, hydrochloride) (10(-10) to 10(-8) M) dose dependently inhibited the effect of bradykinin, suggesting the mediation of the TP receptor in the action of bradykinin. With higher concentrations of GR32191 (10(-7) and 10(-6) M) bradykinin induced a relaxation which was inhibited by indomethacin and by the bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist
Hoe
140 (D-Arg0[Hyp3,Thi-5,D-Tic7,Oic8]bradykinin). The thromboxane A2 synthase inhibitor dazoxiben (4-(-2-(1H-imidazol-1-yl)ethoxy) benzoic acid hydrochloride) 10(-6) M inhibited the bradykinin-induced contraction, suggesting that thromboxane A2 was involved in TP receptor stimulation. The thromboxane A2 mimetic U-46619 (9,11-dideoxy-11 alpha,9 alpha-epoxy-methano-prostaglandin F2 alpha)-induced contraction of human distal bronchi was not inhibited by capsaicin and ruthenium red. Our data suggest that bradykinin contracts human isolated small bronchi through thromboxane A2 release. The inhibitory effect of ruthenium red and capsaicin on the bradykinin response may be due to inhibition of thromboxane A2 release or arachidonic mobilisation.
...
PMID:Role of thromboxane A2 in bradykinin-induced human isolated small bronchi contraction. 754 24
1. This study analyses the receptors mediating the effects of bradykinin (BK) and analogues on neurogenic twitch contractions of the mouse isolated vas deferens evoked, in the presence of captopril (3 microM), by electrical field stimulation with trains of 4 rectangular 0.5 ms pulses of supramaximal strength, delivered at a frequency of 10 Hz every 20 s. 2. BK (0.1-300 nM) induced a graded potentiation of twitches, with an EC50 (geometric mean and 95% confidence limits) of 4.5 nM (1.7-11.6) and an Emax of 315 +/- 19 mg per 10 mg of wet tissue (n = 6). Similar results were obtained in tissues challenged with Lys-BK, [Hyp3]-BK, Met,Lys-BK and the selective B2 receptor agonist [Tyr(Me)8]-BK (0.1-300 nM). 3. The selective B2 receptor antagonists,
Hoe
140 (1-10 nM) and NPC 17731 (3-30 nM), caused graded rightward shifts of the curve to BK-induced twitch potentiation, yielding apparent pA2 values of 9.65 +/- 0.09 and 9.08 +/- 0.13, respectively, and Schild plot slopes not different from 1. Both antagonists (100 nM) failed to modify similar twitch potentiations induced by
substance P
(3 nM) or endothelin-1 (1 nM). Preincubation with the selective B1 receptor antagonist, [Leu8,des-Arg9]-BK (1 microM), increased the potentiating effect of BK on twitches at 30-300 nM. 4. In contrast to BK, the selective B1 receptor agonist, [des-Arg9]-BK (0.3-1000 nM) reduced the amplitude of twitches in a graded fashion, with an IC50 of 13.7 nM (10.4-16.1) and an Imax of 175 +/- 11 mg (n = 4). The twitch depression induced by [des-Arg9]-BK (300 nM) was not affected by Hoe140 (30nM) or NPC 17731 (100nM), but was abolished by the selective B1 receptor antagonist,[Leu8,des-Arg9]-BK (1 microM), which did not modify the twitch inhibitory effect of clonidine (1 nM) or morphine (300 nM).5. In non-stimulated preparations, BK (100 nM) also potentiated, in a
Hoe
140-sensitive (10 nM)manner, the contractions induced by ATP (100 microM), but not by noradrenaline (10 microM), whereas[des-Arg9]-BK (300 nM) did not modify the contractions induced by either agonist.6. It is concluded that the mouse vas deferens expresses both B1 and B2 receptors, which modulate sympathetic neurotransmission in opposing ways. Neurogenic contractions are inhibited by stimulation of possibly prejunctional B, receptors, whereas activation of B2 receptors increases twitch contractions,in part by amplifying the responsiveness of the smooth muscle cells to the sympathetic co-transmitter ATP.
...
PMID:Characterization of kinin receptors modulating neurogenic contractions of the mouse isolated vas deferens. 760 50
The effects of the bradykinin receptor selective antagonist,
Hoe
140, and of the
tachykinin
NK-1 receptor antagonist (+/-)CP 96,345 were investigated in a rat model of chemically-induced cystitis (intravesical instillation of xylene in female rats). Intravenous injection of bradykinin (1 mumol./kg.) or
substance P
(3 nmol./kg.) produced plasma protein extravasation (PPE) in the rat urinary bladder. Bradykinin response was prevented by
Hoe
140 (100 nmol./kg. intravenously) and unaffected by (+/-)CP 96,345 (10 mumol./kg. intravenously). Plasma protein extravasation produced by
substance P
was inhibited by (+/-)CP 96,345 but unchanged by
Hoe
140. Catheterization required for intravesical xylene instillation into the female rat bladder produced per se an inflammatory response which was abolished by either
Hoe
140 or (+/-)CP 96,345. Intravesical instillation of xylene produced a large PPE response which was reduced by about 65% by
Hoe
140 or (+/-)CP 96,345. Combined administration of the two antagonists produced an additive effect on the PPE response to xylene. We conclude that both bradykinin and tachykinins are involved in the inflammatory reaction of the rat urinary bladder to catheterization and xylene irritation.
...
PMID:Effect of bradykinin and tachykinin receptor antagonist on xylene-induced cystitis in rats. 768 30
1. The mechanisms involved in bradykinin (BK)-induced oedema in the rat paw as well as the interactions between BK and several inflammatory mediators, have been investigated. 2. Intraplantar injection of BK (1 nmol/paw) in rats pretreated with captopril (5 mg kg-1, s.c.) caused a small amount of oedema formation (0.17 +/- 0.05 ml). Des-Arg9-BK (DABK, a selective B1 receptor agonist) up to 300 nmol/paw caused minimal oedema (0.03 +/- 0.01 ml). 3. Co-administration of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), prostaglandin I2 (PGI2), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT),
substance P
(SP) or platelet activating factor (PAF) (1 pmol-1 nmol/paw) with BK (1 nmol/paw) dose-dependently potentiated BK-induced paw oedema. The rank order of potency (mean ED50, pmol/paw) for this effect was: SP (8.1) > PAF (13.7) > PGI2 (20.5) > 5-HT (23.8) > CGRP (25.7) > PGE2 (52.0). Co-administration of BK with the various inflammatory mediators resulted in maximal paw oedemas (ml) of: PGE2 (0.71 +/- 0.02); PGI2 (0.66 +/- 0.02); 5-HT (0.65 +/- 0.01); SP (0.63 +/- 0.05); CGRP (0.60 +/- 0.05) and PAF (0.47 +/- 0.02) ml. Histamine (up to 1 nmol/paw) was ineffective in potentiating the response to BK. 4.
Hoe
140 or NPC 17731 (two selective B2 receptor antagonists, 0.1-3 nmol/paw) produced dose-dependent inhibition of paw oedema potentiation induced by co-injection of BK with other mediators with the following mean ID50s (nmol/paw):
Hoe
140-1.4; 1.3; 1.5 and 1.1 and NPC 17731-1.0; 1.0; 0.9 and 0.7; in the presence of PGE2, PGI2, CGRP and SP, respectively. The selective B1 receptor antagonist des-Arg9 [Leu8]-BK (DALBK, up to 300 nmol/paw) had no effect.5. Daily intraplantar injections of BK (10 nmol/paw) once a day for 7 consecutive days caused a progressive and complete desensitization of the paw oedema, which was specific for BK, since paw oedema induced by PAF, PGE2, SP or histamine was not affected. In addition, the oedema caused by BK in the paw desensitized to the peptide was almost completely reversed if BK was co-injected with PGE2, PGI2 or SP (1 nmol/paw). Injection of PGE2 or SP (10 nmol/paw) together with the first BK injection (1O nmol/paw), partially prevented BK-induced desensitization.6. When animals were completely desensitized to BK, DABK (100nmol/paw) caused paw oedema(0.25 +/- 0.03 ml) which was consistently blocked by the B1 receptor antagonist, DALBK (100 nmol/paw).7. Treatment of animals with dexamethasone (0.5 mg kg-1, s.c., 24 h previously) antagonized paw oedema induced by DABK (100 nmol/paw) in desensitized paws, but not that induced by BK (3 nmol/paw) in naive paws. The steroid also prevented the recovery of oedema seen after co-injection of BK with PGE2 or PGI2 (1 nmol/paw) in desensitized paws.8. These results suggest that both B, and B2 receptors are involved in BK-induced rat paw oedema. The B2 receptors are constitutive, but induction of expression of B, receptors seems to occur only after complete desensitization of the paw to BK. In addition, very low doses of inflammatory mediators markedly potentiate BK-induced paw oedema and can attenuate BK-induced paw oedema desensitization.Such mechanisms may be relevant for the manifestation of acute and chronic inflammatory processes.
...
PMID:Involvement of B1 and B2 receptors in bradykinin-induced rat paw oedema. 778 Jun 33
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