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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of Hydrocortisone Potentiation of Responses to Epinephrine and Norepinephrine in Rabbit Aorta

Stanley Kalsner
- 01 Mar 1969 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 3, pp 383-395
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TLDR
It is concluded that hydrocortisone enhances the responses of vascular smooth muscle to epinephrine and norepinephrine by inhibiting a major enzymatic pathway for the inactivation of these amines.
Abstract
Hydrocortisone potentiated responses of rabbit aortic strips to catecholamines (epinephrine, norepinephrine, nordefrin, isoproterenol) but not to amines lacking the catechol nucleus (phenylephrine, synephrine, methoxamine). Contractions in response to epinephrine were increased much more than those to norepinephrine. Neither the presence of cocaine nor pretreatment of the rabbits with reserpine impaired the potentiating action of hydrocortisone. Experiments with the oil immersion technique (to prevent loss of amine by diffusion from the tissue) demonstrated that hydrocortisone reduced the rate at which aortic strips inactivated epinephrine, apparently by inhibiting catechol-O-methyl transferase (COMT). Known inhibitors of COMT (U-0521, tropolone, pyrogallol) potentiated responses of aortic strips to epinephrine much more than to norepinephrine and also enhanced responses to isoproterenol and nordefrin to the same extent as did hydrocortisone. Known inhibitors of COMT consistently abolished the enhancing effects of hydrocortisone without materially interfering with potentiation produced by cocaine which is mediated through an independent mechanism unrelated to amine inactivation. Hydrocortisone also abolished the enhancing effects of known COMT inhibitors. It is concluded that hydrocortisone enhances the responses of vascular smooth muscle to epinephrine and norepinephrine by inhibiting a major enzymatic pathway for the inactivation of these amines.

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References
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Journal Article

The pharmacology of vascular smooth muscle.

TL;DR: As one of the part of book categories, pharmacology of vascular smooth muscle always becomes the most wanted book.
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The fate of h3-norepinephrine in animals

TL;DR: The importance of binding as a mechanism for the inactivation of circulating catecholamines is emphasized, and it is shown to be quantitatively more important for norepinephrine than for epinephrine.
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The physiological disposition of H3-epinephrine and its metabolite metanephrine.

TL;DR: The disappearance of H 3 -epinephrine from plasma after an intravenous injection has two phases: an initial rapid fall, reflecting diffusion into tissues and O-methylation, followed by a slower decline indicating a gradual release from binding sites and concurrent metabolism.
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