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Intermediate Pharmacology (PHAR0009) Notes - Cardiovascular Pharmacology £6.49   Add to cart

Lecture notes

Intermediate Pharmacology (PHAR0009) Notes - Cardiovascular Pharmacology

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Explore Intermediate Pharmacology at UCL with a focus on the Cardiovascular Pharmacology chapter. Navigate the intricacies of anticoagulants, fibrinolytics, lipid-lowering drugs, and more. Please note that these materials are intended for personal use only and should be used in accordance with acad...

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  • December 1, 2023
  • 51
  • 2021/2022
  • Lecture notes
  • Dr talvinder sihra
  • All classes
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sujansathiendran
Cardiovascular Pharmacology – Summary
Smooth Muscle Pharmacology
Smooth Muscle Contraction
 Smooth muscle
o Contains two major proteins – actin + myosin – arranged randomly
o No troponin – found in skeletal and cardiac muscle – actin and myosin are highly organised
 Stimulation of smooth muscle
o Autonomic / enteric nervous system + hormones + autocoids + pacemaker cells + stretch
 Smooth muscle types
o Single unit
 Only some cells are innervated
 Depolarisation leading to contraction spreads through gap junctions
 May contain pacemaker cells – have spontaneous depolarisation – spreads throughout cell
o Multi-unit
 Each cell is individually innervated + little communication between cells
2+
 Ca dependent smooth muscle contraction
o Ca2+ is released from intracellular stores in the
sarcoplasmic reticulum  phasic rise in Ca2+ 
influx of extracellular Ca2+ through Ca2+ channels
on the cell membrane  sustained rise
o Ca2+ binds to Ca2+ binding protein = calmodulin
(CaM)  producing Ca-CaM complex
o Calcium-calmodulin complex binds to and
activates myosin light chain kinase  myosin
light chain kinase phosphorylated myosin light
chains  producing myosin head ATPase
activity  allowing actin-myosin crossbridge
formation to occur  contraction
o Myosin light chains are dephosphorylated by myosin light chain phosphatase  inhibiting
contraction
 Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels
o In smooth muscle -Ca2+ influx through L-type voltage gated Ca 2+ channels
o Mechanisms to open voltage-gated Ca2+ channels
 Gq-GPCRs
 Produce contraction by stimulating depolarisation + opening L-type voltage gated
Ca2+ channels
 P2x purinoceptors
 Ligand gated non-selective cation channels stimulated by ATP
 Allows influx of Ca2+ + Na+  producing depolarisation  opening L-type Ca2+
channels
 Non-selective cation channels
 Stimulated by stretch
 Allows influx of Ca2+ + Na2+  producing depolarisation
o In single unit smooth muscle
 Cells are depolarised by a wave of depolarisation  depolarises other cells through Ca2+
influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels
 Gq-GCPRs – which mediate smooth muscle contraction
o Agonist | receptor
 Noradrenaline / adrenaline | α1-AR
 Acetylcholine | M3
 Histamine | H1

,Cardiovascular Pharmacology – Summary
 5HT | 5-HT2
 Prostaglandins | DP, EP, FP
 Angiotensin II | AT1
 Vasopressin | V1
 Endothelin | ET1
 Substance P / neurokinin A | NK1NK2
o Stimulation of Gq-GPCRs  stimulation of phospholipase-C (PLC)  acts on PIP2  release IP3 into
cytosol + DAG in the membrane
 IP3 – stimulates IP3 receptors on intracellular Ca2+ stores to release Ca2+  contraction
 DAG – activates PKC  phosphorylates + inhibits different K+ channels in smooth muscle 
causes smooth muscle to depolarise  Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels 
contraction
o In some smooth muscle – depletion of intracellular Ca 2+ stores by IP3  causes signal to store-
operated non-selective cation channels (NSCC) in membrane  stimulating opening  allows influx
of Ca2+ + Na+  opening voltage-gated Ca2+ channels  contraction
o Ca2+-activated chloride channel
 Ca2+ can stimulate opening of Ca2+ activated Cl- channels  efflux of Cl- in smooth muscle
due to high intracellular Cl- concentration  depolarisation  opening voltage-gated Ca2+
channels
 Calcium sensitisation
o Mechanism in smooth muscle – results in greater contraction produced by a rise in intracellular Ca 2+
 Contractile state of smooth muscle – depends on activity of myosin light chain kinase +
myosin light chain phosphatase
o Activity of myosin light hain phosphatase is reduced  myosin light chain kinase activity
predominates  greater contraction
o Can be stimulated by Rho kinase
 Gq-GPCRs couple to G12./13 alpha subunit of G-proteins  activation of Rho-GEF  exchanges
GDP or GTP bound to GTPase Rho-A  activates Rho-A  stimulates Rho-K 
phosphorylates and inhibits myosin light chain phosphatase
o Can be stimulated by PKC
 PKC is activated by Gq-GPCR pathway  phosphorylates protein CPI-17  binds to and
inhibits myosin light chain phosphatase
 Gi-GPCRs and smooth muscle contraction
o α2-AR with α1-AR in arterioles
 Directly stimulate contraction on vascular smooth muscle
o M2 receptors with M3 in G.I. tract and bladder
 Have a potentiating effect on M3 mediated contractions
o Giα – reduced cAMP?
o Giβγ – other mechanisms?
 Gq-GPCR agonists – stimulate smooth muscle contraction
o α1-Adrenoceptor agonists
 Adrenaline – used for anaphylactic shock
 Noradrenaline – used for septic shock
 Phenylephrine – nasal decongestant
o Muscarinic agonists
 Pilocarpine – used for glaucoma
 Bethanechol – used for urinary retention
o Oxytocin
o Used to induce labour

,Cardiovascular Pharmacology – Summary
Smooth Muscle Relaxation
 Smooth muscle relaxation types – caused by reduced Ca 2+  repolarisation of smooth muscle  relaxation
o Passive relaxation
 Slow – occurs following contraction
 Relaxes smooth muscle following removal of contractile stimulus
o Active relaxation
 Faster – stimulated by a rise in cyclic nucleotides
 Gs-GPCRs – cause rise in cAMP
 Nitric oxide – cause rise in cGMP
 Passive smooth muscle relaxation
o Sarcolemma Ca2+ ATPase pumps Ca2+ into intracellular stores + plasmalemma Ca 2+ ATPase pumps Ca2+
out of cell  reducing intracellular Ca2+ concentration
o Rise in Ca2+
 Stimulates Na+/Ca2+ exchanger
 Removes 1 Ca2+ out of cell in exchange for 3 Na+
 Stimulates opening of Bk channel
 Causes hyperpolarisation of cell  closing voltage gated Ca2+ channel
o Depolarisation stimulates opening of voltage gated K + channels (Kv channels)  hyperpolarising cell
 closing voltage gated Ca2+ channels
 Active smooth muscle relaxation stimulated by rise in cAMP (G s-GPCRs)
o Stimulation of Gs-GPCRs  stimulates adenylate cyclase activity  converting ATP into cAMP 
cAMP stimulates PKA  PKA phosphorylates and stimulates the opening of K ATP channels + BKCa
channels  hyperpolarising smooth muscle cell  closing voltage gated Ca2+ channels reducing
Ca2+ influx  relaxation
 PKA also inhibits myosin light chain kinase activity  inhibiting contraction
o Signal for relaxation is terminated by metabolism of cAMP by PDE (phosphodiesterase enzymes) 
into AMP
 Active smooth muscle relaxation stimulated by rise in cGMP (nitric oxide)
o Endothelium dependent vasorelaxation
 Acetylcholine stimulates release of endothelium derived relaxing factor (EDRF) from
endothelium  causing relaxation of smooth muscle
o Stimulation of eNOS in endothelial cells – production of nitric oxide
 Release of nitric oxide from endothelial cells by endothelial dependent vasodilators – which
stimulate endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS)
 Acetylcholine stimulates muscarinic M3 Gq-GPCR receptor on endothelial cells  stimulates
phospholipase C  stimulating release of IP3  IP3 causes release of intracellular Ca2+ from
intracellular stores  causing phasic rise in intracellular Ca2+
 Depletion of stores  sends signal to plasma membrane  store operated Ca2+ channels
open  influx of Ca2+  sustained rise in intracellular Ca2+
 Ca2+ binds to calmodulin Ca-CaM complex binds to and stimulates nitric oxide synthase
(NOS)  catalyses conversion of L-arginine + oxygen into L-citrulline + nitric oxide 
released from cell
o Mechanism of smooth muscle relaxation by nitric oxide
 Nitric oxide diffuses out of endothelial cell into vascular smooth muscle cell  binds to and
stimulates enzyme soluble guanylate cyclase  catalyses conversion of GTP to cGMP 
cGMP binds to and stimulates protein kinase G (PKG)  phosphorylates and stimulates
myosin light hain phosphatase  dephosphorylates myosin light chains  relaxation
 cGMP – broken down by phosphodiesterase  terminating signal
 PKG functions
o Phosphorylates and inhibits phospholipase C  inhibiting contraction
stimulated by Gq-GPCRs  preventing rise in Ca2+

, Cardiovascular Pharmacology – Summary
o Phosphorylates and stimulates sarcoplasmic endoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+
pump  increasing Ca2+ uptake into intracellular stores
o Phosphorylates and stimulates plasmolemma Ca 2+-ATPase pump 
increasing removal of Ca2+ from cell
o Stimulates opening of BKCa channels  causes cell hyperpolarisation 
inhibits Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels
o Directly inhibits L-type Ca2+ channels  preventing Ca2+ influx
 Mediators which stimulate endothelium dependent vasodilation
o Endothelial mediators
 Act in an autocrine way
 ATP
 Acetylcholine
o Inflammatory mediators
 From basophils or mast cells – responsible for increased blood flow at sites of inflammation
 Histamine
 Bradykinin
 Substance P
o Platelet mediators
 Thrombin
 5-HT
 ADP
o Hormones, growth factors
 VEGF
 Insulin
 Endothelium dependent vasodilators
o Agonist | endothelial receptor
 Acetylcholine | M3
 Histamine | H1
 ADP/ATP | P2Y
 Bradykinin | BK2
 Substance P | NK1
 GCRP | CGRP1
o Shear stress of endothelial cells – caused by flow of blood = also stimulates nitric oxide release
 Endothelial derived relaxing factors
o Nitric oxide
 Small + lipid soluble
o Prostacyclin
 Produced by arachidonic acid  released from endothelial cells  stimulates IP prostacyclin
receptors on smooth muscle Gs-GPCRs)  rise in cAMP  relaxation
o EDHF – endothelium derived hyperpolarising factor
 Produced hyperpolarisation of smooth muscle
 More important in resistance arterioles – involves gap junctions + other factors
 Particulate guanylate cyclase receptors
o Single transmembrane enzyme linked receptors – natriuretic peptide receptors
o Natriuretic peptides Stimulate NPR-A and NPR-G receptors (particulate guanylate cyclase receptors)
 causes guanylate cyclase activity  converts GTP into cGMP  stimulates PKG  relaxation
 Smooth muscle relaxing drugs
o β2-adrenoceptor agonists
o Prostacyclin analogues
o Receptor antagonists
o Calcium channel blockers

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