4.6 Article

The small GTPase Rac1 is required for smooth muscle contraction

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 592, Issue 5, Pages 915-926

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2013.262998

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council
  2. Swedish Heart Lung Foundation
  3. FP7 EU grant (INComb)

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Key points The role of the small G-protein Rac1 was investigated in smooth muscle, using a smooth muscle-specific knockout mouse and pharmacological blockers. Inhibition of the interaction between Rac1 and upstream regulators inhibited the -receptor contractions and potentiated prostaglandin F2 contractions in vascular tissue. The inhibition was mediated via an attenuation of the Ca2+ transient. A global inhibition of Rac1 activity inhibited contractions in response to several agonists in a range of smooth muscle tissues. The results demonstrate a novel Rac1-associated signalling pathway for regulation of smooth muscle contraction. AbstractThe role of the small GTP-binding protein Rac1 in smooth muscle contraction was examined using small molecule inhibitors (EHT1864, NSC23766) and a novel smooth muscle-specific, conditional, Rac1 knockout mouse strain. EHT1864, which affects nucleotide binding and inhibits Rac1 activity, concentration-dependently inhibited the contractile responses induced by several different modes of activation (high-K+, phenylephrine, carbachol and protein kinase C activation by phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate) in several different visceral (urinary bladder, ileum) and vascular (mesenteric artery, saphenous artery, aorta) smooth muscle tissues. This contractile inhibition was associated with inhibition of the Ca2+ transient. Knockout of Rac1 (with a 50% loss of Rac1 protein) lowered active stress in the urinary bladder and the saphenous artery consistent with a role of Rac1 in facilitating smooth muscle contraction. NSC23766, which blocks interaction between Rac1 and some guanine nucleotide exchange factors, specifically inhibited the (1) receptor responses (phenylephrine) in vascular tissues and potentiated prostaglandin F2 and thromboxane (U46619) receptor responses. The latter potentiating effect occurred at lowered intracellular [Ca2+]. These results show that Rac1 activity is required for active contraction in smooth muscle, probably via enabling an adequate Ca2+ transient. At the same time, specific agonists recruit Rac1 signalling via upstream modulators, resulting in either a potentiation of contraction via Ca2+ mobilization ((1) receptor stimulation) or an attenuated contraction via inhibition of Ca2+ sensitization (prostaglandin and thromboxane receptors).

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