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Vol. 293, Issue 2, 559-568, May 2000
Department of Neuroscience (D.R.L., V.S.S.) and Division of
Neuroscience Research in Psychiatry (M.J.C., E.E.E.), University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Several physiological effects induced by activation of
neurokinin3 (NK3) receptors are mediated by the
production of nitric oxide (NO). We investigated the intracellular
coupling of NK3 receptors to NO synthase (NOS) using a
Chinese hamster ovary cell line that was stably transfected with both
the NK3 receptor and type I (neuronal) NOS. NOS activity in
the transfected cell line was assayed directly, by measuring the
formation of L-citrulline, another product of NOS, as well
as indirectly, by measuring the production of cGMP in cultured rat
fetal lung fibroblasts (RFL-6 cells). MePhe7-neurokinin B
(NKB) stimulation of L-[3H]citrulline
production was concentration-dependent and yielded a two-site model for
the concentration-response relationship. The production of
L-citrulline in response to two other tachykinins, substance P or neurokinin A, revealed only a one-site nature of the
response. The production of cGMP in response to MePhe7-NKB
had an EC50 value that corresponded to the high-potency
component of MePhe7-NKB-induced production of
L-[3H]citrulline. Agonist-induced calcium
signaling was also concentration-dependent, and the acute increase in
the production of cGMP by MePhe7-NKB (0.1 nM) was dependent
on the release of calcium from intracellular stores. Results of this
study provide the first direct evidence that NK3 receptors
couple to the generation of NO within the same cell.