Abstract: | The effects of changes in membrane potential level on the electrical and contractile responses induced by serotonin (10(-6) mol/l) were investigated in muscle strips from rabbit main pulmonary artery using sucrose-gap technique. In spite of the fact that serotonin-induced depolarization did not exceed the threshold level for development of contraction, it was followed by a strong tonic contraction. Nearly a half of this contraction could be relaxed by an electrotonic hyperpolarization of the membrane. A week preliminary depolarization of the muscle cells resulted in an increase while a strong depolarization--in dramatic decrease of serotonin-induced contraction. Nifedipine effectively blocked potassium-induced, but not serotonin induced contraction. We suggest that in addition to voltage-operated and receptor operated Ca channels in vascular smooth muscle cell membrane there is a separate class of nifedipine-insensitive Ca channels operated by both serotonin receptor and membrane potential. |