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KMID : 0043320110340060979
Archives of Pharmacal Research
2011 Volume.34 No. 6 p.979 ~ p.985
Effects of trimebutine maleate on colonic motility through Ca2+-activated K+ channels and L-type Ca2+ channels
Tan Wei

Zhang Hong
Luo He Sheng
Xia Hong
Abstract
The effects of trimebutine maleate (TM) on spontaneous contractions of colonic longitudinal muscle were investigated in guinea pigs. The contractile responses of smooth muscle strips were recorded by an isometric force transducer. Membrane and action potentials were detected by an intracellular microelectrode technique. The whole-cell patch clamp recording technique was used to record the changes in large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BKca) and L-type Ca2+ currents in colonic smooth muscle cells. At high concentrations (30, 100, and 300 ¥ìM), TM inhibited the amplitude of spontaneous contractions. At low concentrations (1 and 10 ¥ìM), TM attenuated the frequency and tone of smooth muscle strips, whereas TM had no influence on the amplitude of spontaneous contractions. TM depolarized the membrane potentials, but decreased the amplitude and frequency of action potentials at high concentrations. TM inhibited BKca and L-type Ca2+ currents in a dose-dependent manner. In the presence of the BKca channel opener, NS1619, TM also inhibited BKca currents. Bayk8644, a L-type Ca2+ channel opener, increased L-type Ca2+ currents. This augmentation was also attenuated by TM. These results suggest that TM attenuates intestinal motility through inhibition of L-type Ca2+ currents, and depolarizes membrane potentials by reducing BKca currents. Thus, TM may be a multiple-ion channel regulator in the gastrointestinal tract.
KEYWORD
Trimebutine maleate, Colon, Smooth muscle, Large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel, L-type Ca2+ channel
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