Endothelin has potent direct inotropic and chronotropic effects in cultured heart cells

To determine whether endothelin, a highly potent vasoconstrictor peptide, may affect cardiac myocyte contractility directly, we studied the effects of synthetic porcine endothelin-1 in cultured chick embryo ventricular cells. Endothelin-1 had a potent chronotropic effect (EC50 0.17 nmol/l) in sponta...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of hypertension. Supplement Vol. 7; no. 6; p. S96
Main Authors Concas, V, Laurent, S, Brisac, A M, Perret, C, Safar, M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 01.12.1989
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Summary:To determine whether endothelin, a highly potent vasoconstrictor peptide, may affect cardiac myocyte contractility directly, we studied the effects of synthetic porcine endothelin-1 in cultured chick embryo ventricular cells. Endothelin-1 had a potent chronotropic effect (EC50 0.17 nmol/l) in spontaneously beating cells. The increase in the beating rate was accompanied by a frequency-dependent decrease in the amplitude of contraction. In electrically driven cells (1 Hz), endothelin-1 increased the amplitude of contraction dose-dependently, with an EC50 of 0.3 nmol/l, smaller than that of the calcium channel blocker BAY K 8644 (EC50 3.3 nmol/l), and with an efficacy close to that of BAY K 8644 and isoproterenol. Nicardipine (100 nmol/l) shifted to the right, by two orders of magnitude, the dose-response curve of endothelin-1 for inotropism. These results indicate that endothelin-1 is one of the most potent inotropic agents in cultured cardiac myocytes, and suggest that this effect involves, at least in part, a calcium ion influx through voltage-sensitive calcium channels.
ISSN:0952-1178
DOI:10.1097/00004872-198900076-00044