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First Department of Internal Medicine, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai 980-8574, Japan
We investigated
the acute effects of erythromycin (EM) and its derivatives on ionic
currents in airway glands from feline tracheae. Therapeutic
concentrations of EM or clarithromycin (CAM) attenuated the whole cell
currents evoked by ACh in a competitive manner. The maximally
stimulated inward Cl
currents were reduced to 54 and 83% and the outward
K+ currents to 55 and 84% of
control values by EM and CAM, respectively, whereas the responses
induced by phenylephrine, norepinephrine, caffeine, or ionomycin were
unaffected by EM, CAM, or EM523, a synthetic derivative of EM.
K+ channels in excised outside-out
patches were not influenced by macrolides. Although therapeutic
concentrations of macrolides showed no effect on the baseline currents,
high concentrations of macrolides alone evoked currents mimicking the
ACh response, which were abolished completely by atropine. We concluded
that macrolides act as a partial agonist on cholinergic receptors, resulting in a reduction of
Cl
secretion at
pharmacological doses of the agents, which may exhibit a pronounced
effectiveness on hypertrophied and/or cholinergically sensitized
submucosal glands in pathological airways.
submucosal gland; chloride secretion; patch clamp; erythromycin; partial agonist
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