Inhibition of Endothelin Production by Adrenomedullin in Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells

Abstract
Abstract Adrenomedullin recently has been found to potently stimulate cAMP formation in cultured rat vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). In the present study, we examined the effect of adrenomedullin on the production of a vasoconstrictive and growth-promoting peptide, endothelin-1, after stimulation with a clotting enzyme, thrombin, and a potent mitogen, platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), in cultured rat VSMCs. Thrombin and PDGF stimulated endothelin-1 production in a dose-dependent manner. Rat adrenomedullin significantly inhibited thrombin- and PDGF-stimulated endothelin-1 production in a dose-dependent manner between 10 −7 and 10 −9 mol/L. Inhibition by rat adrenomedullin of thrombin- and PDGF-stimulated endothelin-1 production was paralleled by an increase in the cellular level of cAMP. Human adrenomedullin also inhibited thrombin- and PDGF-stimulated endothelin-1 production and increased cAMP levels. The addition of 8-bromo-cAMP, a cAMP analogue, reduced thrombin- and PDGF-induced endothelin-1 production. Furthermore, forskolin, a potent activator of adenylate cyclase, reduced thrombin- and PDGF-induced endothelin-1 production. In contrast, basal production of endothelin-1 was not altered by rat or human adrenomedullin. These results indicate that adrenomedullin inhibits not basal but thrombin- and PDGF-induced ET-1 production in cultured VSMCs probably through a cAMP-dependent process. Taken together with the finding that adrenomedullin is synthesized in and secreted from vascular endothelial cells, adrenomedullin may modulate vascular tone as a paracrine regulator partially through the inhibition of VSMC endothelin-1 production in some pathophysiological states.