ETHODIN - PHARMACOLOGICAL EVIDENCE OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN SMOOTH-MUSCLE AND MAST-CELLS IN THE MYOMETRIUM

Citation
Mi. Rudolph et al., ETHODIN - PHARMACOLOGICAL EVIDENCE OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN SMOOTH-MUSCLE AND MAST-CELLS IN THE MYOMETRIUM, The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, 282(1), 1997, pp. 256-261
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Pharmacology & Pharmacy
ISSN journal
00223565
Volume
282
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
256 - 261
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3565(1997)282:1<256:E-PEOT>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
Ethodin has been used to induce labor through a mechanism that does no t involve the estrogen-preparatory process being postulated as necessa ry for ensuring the events in a normal labor. The cellular mechanisms involved in that process are unknown. We used an isolated organ bath p reparation for mouse uterine horns and a primary culture of mouse myom etrial smooth muscle cells to analyze the cellular mechanisms involved in the contractile action of this drug in the myometrium. Ethodin at a concentration of 10 mu M and Compound 48/80 (1 mu g/ml) evoked contr actions of uterine horns in an isolated organ bath preparation. Uterin e contractile responses showed a transient increase in contractile ten sion that lasted 2 to 3 min. Tachyphylaxis was observed after four or five successive stimuli, which consisted in additions and washings of the drug at an interval of 10 min. The primary smooth muscle mouse myo metrium cells contained a high proportion of relaxed cells that varied widely in length (5-160 mu m). Cell lengths decreased in response to the application of serotonin (10 mu M) and oxytocin (0.1 mu M) but wer e not affected after the addition of ethodin (10 mu M). However, the c ells contracted after a purified fraction of mast cells that had been degranulated by the action of the drug ethodin, which was added to the culture medium. These results provide some evidence related to the me chanism of myometrial contractile action of ethodin and support the hy pothesis that mast cells may be involved in the regulation of myometri um contractility.