Publication | Closed Access
Arachidonic Acid and Other Fatty Acids Directly Activate Potassium Channels in Smooth Muscle Cells
352
Citations
37
References
1989
Year
Muscle FunctionPotassium ChannelCellular PhysiologyPhysiological ResearchSkeletal MuscleFatty AcidsCell PhysiologyMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistrySmooth Muscle CellsArachidonic AcidIon ChannelsPharmacologySignal TransductionPhysiologyCatabolismMetabolismMedicineLipid Synthesis
Arachidonic acid, as well as fatty acids that are not substrates for cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase enzymes, activated a specific type of potassium channel in freshly dissociated smooth muscle cells. Activation occurred in excised membrane patches in the absence of calcium and all nucleotides. Therefore signal transduction pathways that require such soluble factors, including the NADPH-dependent cytochrome P450 pathway, do not mediate the response. Thus, fatty acids directly activate potassium channels and so may constitute a class of signal molecules that regulate ion channels.
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