Previous pharmacological studies have demonstrated that pulmonary endothelial cells and noradrenergic neurones possess the same transporter for inward transport of catecholamines, uptake1. In noradrenergic neurones, it has been shown that uptake1 is also involved in the carrier-mediated outward transport, or efflux, of noradrenaline and dopamine. The aim of the present study was to examine the efflux of noradrenaline and dopamine from perfused lungs of rats to determine whether uptake1, in addition to diffusion, mediates efflux of catecholamines from pulmonary vascular endothelial cells. The effects of reducing the cellular sodium gradient and of substrates and inhibitors of uptake1 on the efflux of 3H-noradrenaline and 3H-dopamine from rat lungs were measured. Isolated perfused lungs of rats (monoamine oxidase and catechol-O-methyltransferase inhibited) were loaded with 3H-(-)-noradrenaline or 3H-dopamine for 10 min followed by perfusion with either (1) a low sodium, amine-free Krebs solution, in which NaCl was replaced by either Tris.HCl or LiCl, for 15 or 10 min, respectively or (2) amine-free Krebs solution for 30 min in the absence or presence of a substrate or inhibitor of uptake1 for the last 15 min. The rate constants for spontaneous efflux of noradrenaline and dopamine from the lungs were 0.0163 min-1 and 0.0466 min-1, respectively. When NaCl was replaced by Tris.HCl during efflux, the rate constants for efflux of noradrenaline and dopamine were increased 2.5-fold and 3-fold, respectively, whereas, when NaCl was replaced by LiCl, the rate constants were increased 8-fold and 4-fold, respectively. The uptake1 substrates, dopamine (1 and 3 mumol/l) and adrenaline (40 mumol/l), both caused a rapid and marked increase in the efflux of noradrenaline, while noradrenaline (4 mumol/l) had a similar effect on the efflux of dopamine. The uptake1 inhibitors, imipramine (3 and 10 mumol/l) and nisoxetine (50 nmol/l), caused small and gradual increases in the efflux of noradrenaline and dopamine from rat lungs. These results demonstrate that efflux of noradrenaline and dopamine from rat lungs is affected by alterations in the normal sodium gradient across the cell and by drugs that interact with the uptake1 transporter. Thus, it can be concluded that the spontaneous efflux of catecholamines from pulmonary vascular endothelial cells is mediated predominantly by uptake1. In addition, efflux of catecholamines from the lungs has a diffusional component, which, combined with inhibition of reuptake, accounts for the small increase in amine efflux by inhibitors of uptake1.
The aim of the study was to determine whether the uptake process for catecholamines in rat lungs is Uptake1, Uptake2 or a distinct process with some properties of both Uptake1 and Uptake2. The initial rate of uptake of noradrenaline was measured in isolated lungs of rats perfused with 2 nmol/l 3H-(-)-noradrenaline for 2 min with monoamine oxidase (MAO) and catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) inhibited, in the absence or presence of drugs that are substrates or inhibitors of Uptake1 or Uptake2 or of alterations in the ionic composition of the Krebs solution. The rank order of the IC50 values for inhibition of uptake of noradrenaline in the lungs by drugs that are substrates or inhibitors of Uptake1 or Uptake2 is compatible with the conclusion that uptake of catecholamines in rat lungs occurs by Uptake1, and not by a process with the properties of Uptake2. Additional evidence was provided by the marked inhibition of uptake in the lungs when the Na+ concentration in the Krebs solution was decreased from 143 to 25 mmol/l and by the lack of inhibition when the K+ concentration was increased from 5.9 mmol/l to either 10.9 or 20.9 mmol/l. Further experiments were included in the study to obtain data additional to histological evidence (Hughes et al. 1969; Nicholas et al. 1974) regarding the site of Uptake1 in rat lungs. Pretreatment of rats with either 6-hydroxydopamine (to destroy noradrenergic neurones) or reserpine (to inhibit synaptic vesicle uptake) had no effect on the deamination or accumulation of noradrenaline in lungs perfused with 3H-noradrenaline (COMT inhibited).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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