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Inhibition of PGI2 signaling by miconazole in vascular smooth muscle cells
Authors:Zhou Wei  Lu Tong  Spector Arthur A  Lee Hon-Chi
Affiliation:Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, United States.
Abstract:Miconazole is widely used clinically as an anti-fungal agent and experimentally as a cytochrome P450 (CYP) inhibitor. In rat coronary arteries that produce PGI(2) as the major arachidonic acid (AA) metabolite, activation of the large-conductance K(+) (BK) channels in coronary arterial smooth muscle cells by AA was inhibited by miconazole but not by the CYP inhibitor SKF525A. Activation of BK currents in coronary smooth muscle cells by carbacyclin or iloprost also was inhibited by miconazole but not by SKF525A, suggesting that miconazole might have properties other than those of CYP inhibition. In addition, carbacyclin-induced dilation of isolated mesenteric arteries was inhibited by treatment with miconazole (51.9+/-4.2% dilation in control, n=7 versus 30.1+/-4.0% with miconazole, n=4, p<0.005) but not SKF525A (52.8+/-3.6%, n=8). In contrast, miconazole did not affect BK channel activation and vasodilation produced by the phosphodiesterase inhibitor RO-201724. In cultured coronary smooth muscle cells, carbacyclin (1microM) stimulated cAMP production by 22-fold (183+/-29pmol/mg at baseline, 4062+/-212pmol/mg with carbacyclin, n=3, p<0.001). The carbacyclin effect was significantly attenuated by treatment with miconazole (1542+/-201pmol/mg, n=3, p<0.001 versus carbacyclin alone), but not by SKF525A (3460+/-406pmol/mg, n=3, p=NS versus carbacyclin alone). These results indicate that in addition to its CYP inhibition properties, miconazole inhibits PGI(2) signaling. Hence, experiments using miconazole as a CYP inhibitor should be interpreted with caution.
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