Ca2+ signals evoked by histamine H1 receptors are attenuated by activation of prostaglandin EP2 and EP4 receptors in human aortic smooth muscle cells

Article date: August 2013

By: Evangelia Pantazaka, Emily J A Taylor, William G Bernard, Colin W Taylor in Volume 169, Issue 7, pages 1624-1634

Background and Purpose

Histamine and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), directly and via their effects on other cells, regulate the behaviour of vascular smooth muscle (VSM), but their effects on human VSM are incompletely resolved.

Experimental Approach

The effects of PGE2 on histamine‐evoked changes in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) and adenylyl cyclase activity were measured in populations of cultured human aortic smooth muscle cells (ASMCs). Selective ligands of histamine and EP receptors were used to identify the receptors that mediate the responses.

Key Results

Histamine, via H1 receptors, stimulates an increase in [Ca2+]i that is entirely mediated by activation of inositol 1,4,5‐trisphosphate receptors. Selective stimulation of EP2 or EP4 receptors attenuates histamine‐evoked Ca2+ signals, but the effects of PGE2 on both Ca2+ signals and AC activity are largely mediated by EP2 receptors.

Conclusions and Implications

Two important inflammatory mediators, histamine via H1 receptors and PGE2 acting largely via EP2 receptors, exert opposing effects on [Ca2+]i in human ASMCs.

DOI: 10.1111/bph.12239

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