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Role of Ca2+-independent phospholipase A2 and store-operated pathway in urocortin-induced vasodilatation of rat coronary artery

Authors

Smani, Tarik , Dominguez-Rodriguez, Alejandro , Hmadcha, Abdelkrim , CALDERON SANCHEZ, EVA MARIA, Horrillo-Ledesma, Angelica , Ordonez, Antonio

External publication

No

Means

Circ.Res.

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

9.721

SJR Impact

6.122

Publication date

26/11/2007

ISI

000251225000018

Abstract

Urocortin has been shown to produce vasodilatation in several arteries, but the precise mechanism of its action is still poorly understood. Here we demonstrate the role of store operated Ca2(+) entry (SOCE) regulated by Ca2(+)- independent phospholipase A(2) (iPLA(2)) in phenylephrine hydrochloride (PE)- induced vasoconstriction, and we present the first evidence that urocortin induces relaxation by the modulation of SOCE and iPLA(2) in rat coronary artery. Urocortin produces an endothelium independent relaxation, and its effect is concentrationdependent (IC50 approximate to 4.5 nmol/L). We show in coronary smooth muscle cells (SMCs) that urocortin inhibits iPLA(2) activation, a crucial step for SOC channel activation, and prevents Ca2(+) influx evoked by the emptying of the stores via a cAMP and protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent mechanism. Lysophophatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylinositol, products of iPLA(2), exactly mimic the effect of the depletion of the stores in presence of urocortin. Furthermore, we report that long treatment with urocortin downregulates iPLA(2) mRNA and proteins expression in rat coronary smooth muscle cells. In summary, we propose a new mechanism of vasodilatation by urocortin which involves the regulation of iPLA(2) and SOCE via the stimulation of a cAMP/PKA-dependent signal transduction cascade in rat coronary artery.

Keywords

urocortin; iPLA(2); vasoconstriction; store operated Ca2+ entry; cAMP-PKA

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