Publication | Open Access
The effect of ouabain on tension in isolated respiratory tract smooth muscle of humans and other species
53
Citations
13
References
1987
Year
Muscle FunctionMolecular PharmacologyKinesiologyBiomechanicsPulmonary PharmacologySmooth MuscleStrong Spontaneous ContractionsAirway HyperreactivityHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyMolecular PhysiologyIon ChannelsRespiratory MechanicsRespiration (Physiology)PharmacologyHuman PhysiologyNeurophysiologyPhysiologyExercise PhysiologyPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsElectrophysiologyOther SpeciesMedicineAnesthesiology
1. The Na+,K+-pump has been implicated in animal models of airway hyperreactivity. We examined the effects of inhibiting the Na+,K+-pump and Na+,Ca2+-exchange on isometric tone of isolated trachealis from humans and other species. 2. In preparations from 5 out of 9 humans, strong spontaneous contractions (36-48 h-1; up to 1.8 g) developed within 25 min. 3. Ouabain (10(-7)-10(-5) M) caused an immediate and sustained contraction. This response was not blocked by atropine, diphenhydramine, or cimetidine. 4. Contractions were also elicited when the normal physiological solution was changed to a K+-free solution, a procedure which inhibits the Na+,K+-pump, and in reduced (15 mM) Na+ solution, which inhibits Na+,Ca2+ exchange. 5. In preparations of dog and guinea-pig isolated trachea, ouabain (10(-5) M) caused a multiphasic response; in the rabbit, ouabain was without effect. K+-free solution was without effect in the dog preparations and produced relaxation of the guinea-pig trachea. Guinea-pig tracheae responded to a low Na+ solution with a strong contraction. 6. Our findings indicate that: (a) human airway smooth muscle may be a spontaneously contracting muscle, at least in vitro, (b) a prolonged contraction to ouabain is unique for the human airway smooth muscle among the animals tested, as is the contraction in a K+-free medium, and (c) the contractile response does not involve acetylcholine or histamine release, but may involve a Na+,Ca2+-exchange mechanism. These results suggest that the level of Na+,K+-pump activity could play a role in determining the degree of bronchomotor tone in humans.
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