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2-adrenergic receptors and cAMP is PKA-independent: Evidence for EPAC involvement
1 Pharmacology and Experimental Neuroscience, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska, United States
2 Internal Medicine- Pulmonary, Univ. Nebraska Med. Ctr., Omaha, Nebraska, United States
3 Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mtoews{at}unmc.edu.
Mechanisms by which beta-adrenergic receptor (
AR) agonists inhibit proliferation of human airway smooth muscle (HASM) cells were investigated because of their potential relevance to smooth muscle hyperplasia in asthma. We hypothesized that
AR agonists would inhibit mitogenesis in HASM cells via the
2AR, an increase in cAMP, and PKA activation. HASM cells were treated for 24 h with various agents and then analyzed for [3H]thymidine incorporation as a measure of cell proliferation. EGF stimulated proliferation by approximately 10-fold. The non-selective
AR agonist isoproterenol and the
2AR-selective agonists albuterol and salmeterol inhibited EGF-stimulated proliferation by more than 50%, with half-maximal effects at 4.8 nM, 110 nM, and 6.7 nM, respectively. A
2AR-selective antagonist inhibited the isoproterenol effect with 100-fold greater potency than a
1AR-selective antagonist, confirming
2AR involvement in the inhibition of proliferation. The cAMP-elevating agents PGE2 and forskolin decreased EGF-induced proliferation, suggesting cAMP as the mediator.
2AR agonists and forskolin also inhibited proliferation stimulated by lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), as well as the synergistic proliferation stimulated by LPA+EGF. Importantly, PKA-selective cAMP analogs did not inhibit proliferation at concentrations that maximally activated PKA (10-100 µM), whereas a cAMP analog selective for the exchange protein directly activated by cAMP (EPAC), 8-(4-chlorophenylthio)-2'-O-methyl-cAMP, maximally inhibited proliferation at a concentration that did not activate PKA (10 µM). These data show that
2AR agonists and other cAMP-elevating agents decrease proliferation in HASM cells via a PKA-independent mechanism, and they provide pharmacologic evidence for involvement of EPAC or an EPAC-like cAMP effector protein instead.
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