4.7 Article

Anti-hypertensive mechanisms of cyclic depsipeptide inhibitor ligands for Gq/11 class G proteins

Journal

PHARMACOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 141, Issue -, Pages 264-275

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.phrs.2019.01.012

Keywords

G proteins; Cyclic depsipeptides; Blood pressure; L-type calcium channel; G(q/11) inhibitor ligands; Calcium signaling

Funding

  1. Pennsylvania Department of Health (CURE)
  2. Margaret Q. Landenberger Foundation
  3. American Heart Association [16SDG27260276]
  4. NIH - NHLBI [HL139754, NIH - MH106912]
  5. Brody postdoctoral fellowship from the Philadelphia Foundation

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Augmented vasoconstriction is a hallmark of hypertension and is mediated partly by hyper-stimulation of G protein couple receptors (GPCRs) and downstream signaling components. Although GPCR blockade is a key component of current anti-hypertensive strategies, whether hypertension is better managed by directly targeting G proteins has not been thoroughly investigated. Here, we tested whether inhibiting G(q/11) proteins in vivo and ex vivo using natural cyclic depsipeptide, FR900359 (FR) from the ornamental plant, Ardisia crenata, and YM-254890 (YM) from Chromobacterium sp. QS3666, or it's synthetic analog, WU-07047 (WU), was sufficient to reverse hypertension in mice. All three inhibitors blocked G protein-dependent vasoconstriction, but to our surprise YM and WU and not FR inhibited K+-induced Ca(2+ )transients and vasoconstriction of intact vessels. However, each inhibitor blocked whole-cell L-type Ca2+ channel current in vascular smooth muscle cells. Subcutaneous injection of FR or YM (0.3 mg/kg, s.c.) in normotensive and hypertensive mice elicited bradycardia and marked blood pressure decrease, which was more severe and long lasting after the injection of FR relative to YM (FRt1/2 congruent to 12h vs. YMt1/2 congruent to 4 h). In deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertension mice, chronic injection of FR (0.3 mg/kg, s.c., daily for seven days) reversed hypertension (vehicle SBP: 149 +/- 5 vs. FR SBP: 117 +/- 7mmHg), without any effect on heart rate. Our results together support the hypothesis that increased LTCC and G(q/11 )activity is involved in the pathogenesis of hypertension, and that dual targeting of both proteins can reverse hypertension and associated cardiovascular disorders.

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