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On page 1 showing 1 ~ 3 papers out of 3 papers

Inhibition of Human Prostate and Bladder Smooth Muscle Contraction, Vasoconstriction of Porcine Renal and Coronary Arteries, and Growth-Related Functions of Prostate Stromal Cells by Presumed Small Molecule Gαq/11 Inhibitor, YM-254890.

  • Alexander Tamalunas‎ et al.
  • Frontiers in physiology‎
  • 2022‎

Introduction: Lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) involve benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and overactive bladder (OAB). Standard-of-care medical treatment includes α1-blockers and antimuscarinics for reduction of prostate and detrusor smooth muscle tone, respectively, and 5α-reductase inhibitors (5-ARI) to prevent prostate growth. Current medications are marked by high discontinuation rates due to unfavourable balance between efficacy and treatment-limiting side effects, ranging from dry mouth for antimuscarinics to cardiovascular dysregulation and a tendency to fall for α1-blockers, which results from hypotension, due to vasorelaxation. Agonist-induced smooth muscle contractions are caused by activation of receptor-coupled G-proteins. However, little is known about receptor- and organ-specific differences in coupling to G-proteins. With YM-254890, a small molecule inhibitor with presumed specificity for Gαq/11 became recently available. Here, we investigated effects of YM-254890 on prostate, bladder and vascular smooth muscle contraction, and on growth-related functions in prostate stromal cells. Methods: Contractions of human prostate and detrusor tissues, porcine renal and coronary arteries were induced in an organ bath. Proliferation (EdU assay), growth (colony formation), apoptosis and cell death (flow cytometry), viability (CCK-8) and actin organization (phalloidin staining) were studied in cultured human prostate stromal cells (WPMY-1). Results: Contractions by α1-adrenergic agonists, U46619, endothelin-1, and neurogenic contractions were nearly completely inhibited by YM-254890 (30 nM) in prostate tissues. Contractions by cholinergic agonists, U46619, endothelin-1, and neurogenic contractions were only partly inhibited in detrusor tissues. Contractions by α1-adrenergic agonists, U46619, endothelin-1, and neurogenic contractions were strongly, but not fully inhibited in renal arteries. Contractions by cholinergic agonists were completely, but by U46619 and endothelin-1 only strongly inhibited, and neurogenic contractions reduced by half in coronary arteries. YM-254890 had no effect on agonist-independent contractions induced by highmolar (80 mM) potassium chloride (KCl). Neurogenic detrusor contractions were fully sensitive to tetrodotoxin. In WPMY-1 cells, YM-254890 caused breakdown of actin polymerization and organization, and obvious, but clearly limited decreases of proliferation rate, colony formation and viability, and slightly increased apoptosis. Conclusion: Intracellular post-receptor signaling pathways are shared by Gαq-coupled contractile receptors in multiple smooth muscle-rich organs, but to different extent. While inhibition of Gαq/11 causes actin breakdown, anti-proliferative effects were detectable but clearly limited. Together this may aid in developing future pharmaceutical targets for LUTS and antihypertensive medication.


Picotamide inhibits a wide spectrum of agonist-induced smooth muscle contractions in porcine renal interlobar and coronary arteries.

  • Bingsheng Li‎ et al.
  • Pharmacology research & perspectives‎
  • 2021‎

Picotamide is a thromboxane A2 (TXA2 ) receptor antagonist and TXA2 synthase inhibitor. In clinical studies, it has been considered as a platelet aggregation inhibitor and improved renal function. In vitro studies suggested inhibition of smooth muscle contraction by picotamide, which is poorly understood. Here, we examined effects of picotamide on contractions of renal interlobar and coronary porcine arteries, induced by different vasoconstrictors. Contractions were induced in an organ bath by agonists or electric field stimulation (EFS). Picotamide inhibited EFS-induced contractions of interlobar arteries around 50% using concentrations of 100 and 300 µM. In interlobar arteries, concentration response curves for contractions induced by three different α1 -adrenoceptor agonists were shifted to the right by picotamide (2-10-fold increases in EC50 ). In coronary arteries, α1 -adrenergic contractions were inhibited without right shift (approx. 50%). Contractions induced by two different cholinergic agonists in coronary arteries were inhibited by picotamide (≥50%) withouth right shift. Inhibition of serotonin-induced contractions by picotamide showed features of a right shift, whereas contractions induced by the TXA2 analog U46619, angiotensin-II, and endothelin-1 were inhibited by picotamide in interlobar and coronary arteries without right shifts and to different degree. Picotamide inhibits a wide spectrum of vasoconstrictor-induced contractions in porcine interlobar and coronary arteries. Inhibition of vasocontraction may contribute to beneficial effects of picotamide in the cardiovascular system and kidney.


Inhibition of agonist-induced smooth muscle contraction by picotamide in the male human lower urinary tract outflow region.

  • Martin Hennenberg‎ et al.
  • European journal of pharmacology‎
  • 2017‎

Male lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) due to bladder outlet obstruction are characterized by abnormal smooth muscle contractions in the lower urinary tract. Alpha1-adrenoceptor antagonists may induce smooth muscle relaxation in the outflow region and represent the current gold standard of medical treatment. However, results may be unsatisfactory or inadequate. Apart from α1-adrenoceptor agonists, smooth muscle contraction in the outflow region may be induced by thromboxane A2 (TXA2), endothelins, or muscarinic receptor agonists. Here, we studied effects of the thromboxane A2 receptor (TP receptor) antagonist picotamide on contraction in the human male bladder trigone and prostate. Carbachol, the α1-adrenoceptor agonist phenylephrine, the thromboxane A2 analog U46619, and electric field stimulation (EFS) induced concentration- or frequency-dependent contractions of trigone tissues in an organ bath. Picotamide (300µM) inhibited carbachol-, phenylephrine-, U46619-, and EFS-induced contractions. Endothelins 1-3 induced concentration-dependent contractions of prostate tissues, which were inhibited by picotamide. Analyses using real time polymerase chain reaction and antibodies suggested expression of thromboxane A2 receptors and synthase in trigone smooth muscle cells. Thromboxane B2 (the stable metabolite of thromboxane A2) was detectable by enzyme immune assay in trigone samples, with most values ranging between 50 and 150pg/mg trigone protein. Picotamide inhibits contractions induced by different stimuli in the human lower urinary tract, including cholinergic, adrenergic, thromboxane A2- and endothelin-induced, and neurogenic contractions in different locations of the outflow region. This distinguishes picotamide from current medical treatments for LUTS, and suggests that picotamide may induce urodynamic effects in vivo.


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