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    Nature. 1994 Apr 28;368(6474):850-3.

    Nitric oxide directly activates calcium-dependent potassium channels in vascular smooth muscle.

    Bolotina VM, Najibi S, Palacino JJ, Pagano PJ, Cohen RA.

    Robert Dawson Evans Department of Clinical Research, Boston University Medical Center, Massachusetts 02118.

    Nitric oxide is the major endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), and it is thought to relax smooth muscle cells by stimulation of guanylate cyclase, accumulation of its product cyclic GMP, and cGMP-dependent modification of several intracellular processes, including activation of potassium channels through cGMP-dependent protein kinase. Here we present evidence that both exogenous nitric oxide and native EDRF can directly activate single Ca(2+)-dependent K+ channels (K+Ca) in cell-free membrane patches without requiring cGMP. Under conditions when guanylate cyclase was inhibited by methylene blue, considerable relaxation of rabbit aorta to nitric oxide persisted which was blocked by charybdotoxin, a specific inhibitor of K+Ca channels. These studies demonstrate a novel direct action of nitric oxide on K+Ca channels.

    PMID: 7512692 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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