Separate sites for the dantrolene-induced inhibition of contracture of the rat diaphragm preparation due to depolarization or to caffeine.
Mots clés
Abstrait
Addition of dantrolene 8.5 x 10(-5) M caused a mono-exponential decay of the depolarization contractures caused by inhibition of the sarcolemmal Na,K-ATPase with propranolol 1 mM or by depolarization of the sarcolemma and T tubular membranes with KCl 100 mM. The half-times of the inhibitory effects were 6 s for the propranolol contracture and 11 s for the KCl contracture. The inhibition of both contractures was complete. Inhibition of the caffeine (10 mM) contracture was bi-exponential with half-times of 45 s and 9.5 min. Inhibition was incomplete; 29.6 +/- 5.0% of the contracture tension could not be inhibited. The inhibition of twitch contractions was similar to that of the caffeine contracture, with half-times of 48 s and 9.1 min, and 20.6 +/- 1.2% of the initial twitch tension could not be inhibited. The contracture tensions induced by release of Ca from the mitochondria with dicumarol, and by actin-myosin binding with the sulfhydryl inhibitor, N-ethyl-maleimide, could not be inhibited by dantrolene. The present results indicate that dantrolene inhibits depolarization signals from the sarcolemma and the T tubular membranes, in addition to inhibition of the coupling between the T tubules and the sarcoplasmic reticulum, and of the release of Ca from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. All these effects of dantrolene may contribute to its therapeutic effect in malignant hyperthermia.