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  2. Effects of flavoxate hydrochloride on voltage-dependent Ba2+ currents in human detrusor myocytes at different experimental temperatures

Effects of flavoxate hydrochloride on voltage-dependent Ba2+ currents in human detrusor myocytes at different experimental temperatures

  • Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 2007 Nov;376(3):195-203. doi: 10.1007/s00210-007-0190-6.
Toshihisa Tomoda 1 Hai-Lei Zhu Kazuomi Iwasa Manami Aishima Atsushi Shibata Narihito Seki Seiji Naito Noriyoshi Teramoto
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University, 3-1-1 Maidashi, Higashi Ward, Fukuoka 812-8582, Japan.
Abstract

The inhibitory effects of flavoxate hydrochloride (piperidinoethyl-3-methylflavone-8-carboxylate; hereafter referred as flavoxate) on voltage-dependent nifedipine-sensitive inward Ba2+ currents (I Ba) in human detrusor myocytes were investigated at different temperatures using conventional whole-cell patch-clamp techniques. When the bath-solution temperature was increased from 22 degrees C to 30 degrees C, I Ba peak amplitude was enhanced by approximately twice at several test potentials. Neither the I Ba threshold nor the membrane potentials for the I Ba maximum peak amplitude was affected by the temperature change. The concentration-response curves of flavoxate at both 30 degrees C (Ki = 5.1 microM) and 37 degrees C (Ki = 4.6 microM) were slightly shifted to the left in comparison with that at 22 degrees C (Ki = 10.3 microM). Similar results were also obtained in the presence of nifedipine (Ki = 14 nM at 22 degrees C vs. Ki = 2.5 nM at 30 degrees C and Ki = 2.1 nM at 37 degrees C). Altering the bath-solution temperature from 22 degrees C to 30 degrees C shifted the steady-state inactivation curve of I Ba at -90 mV to the left. At 30 degrees C, the steady-state inactivation curve of I Ba in the presence of flavoxate was also shifted to the left in comparison with that in the absence of flavoxate. Either 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) or theophylline, a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, caused little effects on I Ba, although cyclic nucleotides (dibutyryl cAMP and 8-Br-cGMP) inhibited I Ba. These results suggest that the inhibitory actions of flavoxate on I Ba in human detrusor myocytes were slightly changed at different experimental temperatures and that flavoxate directly blocked voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ channels, not through the inhibition of phosphodiesterase activity pathway.

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