The inhibition of release of endothelium-derived relaxant factor by manoalide, a potent inhibitor of phospholipase A2.

1987 
1 The inhibitory action of manoalide on vascular relaxation was characterized. Manoalide was a potent inhibitor of endothelium-dependent relaxations in the isolated aorta of the rabbit. Responses to acetylcholine (ACh), A23187 and substance P were reduced by manoalide in a dose-dependent manner whilst those to nitroglycerin were unaffected. 2 Repeated washing of manoalide-treated tissues did not restore the relaxant response to ACh, indicating an irreversible action of manoalide. Scanning electron microscopic studies revealed that the endothelium remained intact on manoalide-treated tissues. 3 Rabbit aortae from which the endothelium had been removed relaxed in response to perfusion with ACh when delivered via an upstream endothelium-bearing tissue, indicating release of an endothelium-derived relaxant factor (EDRF). Incubation of the tissue without endothelium with manoalide (100 nm; 30 min) or inclusion of manoalide in the superfusate at a point just distal to the endothelium bearing tissue did not reduce the relaxant potency of EDRF. 4 Contractile responses of the guinea-pig isolated ileum to ACh were not affected by manoalide and, furthermore, binding of [3H]-quinuclidinyl benzilate to striatal membranes was not reduced by manoalide except at very high concentrations. 5 Manoalide therefore appears to inhibit vascular relaxation with a selectivity directed towards that mediated by EDRF. A direct antagonism of neither cholinoceptors nor EDRF receptors occurs and it is suggested that manoalide acts at a site within the endothelium to inhibit the synthesis and/or release of EDRF. Based upon these and previous data the possibility that EDRF is lipid-like or controlled by an arachidonic acid metabolite must continue to be considered.
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