Circulation, Vol 71, 1237-1246, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
KS Callahan, AR Johnson and WB Campbell
The beta-adrenergic antagonist propranolol has been found to inhibit
platelet aggregation. We investigated the possibility that propranolol
exerts this action by stimulating the synthesis or enhancing the
antiaggregatory activity of prostaglandin (PG) I2. The media from cultures
of human endothelial cells inhibited thrombin-induced platelet aggregation,
an effect attributed to PGI2 production by the cells. When endothelial
cells were incubated with dl- or d-propranolol, the media had two to three
times the inhibitory activity of control media. However, this increased
activity was not due to increased synthesis of PGI2 because control and
propranolol-treated cultures synthesized similar amounts of the PGI2
metabolite, 6-keto-PGF1 alpha. Instead, propranolol enhanced the
antiaggregatory activity of PGI2. Propranolol (1 microM) and PGI2 (0.05
nM), when tested separately, inhibited aggregation by 19% and 13%,
respectively, whereas the combination inhibited aggregation by 51%. PGI2
inhibited platelet aggregation and thromboxane (Tx) B2 production but
stimulated cyclic AMP formation. The adenyl cyclase inhibitor
2',5'-dideoxyadenosine (DDA) had no effect of its own on these parameters,
but blocked the actions of PGI2. Propranolol inhibited aggregation and TxB2
synthesis without changing cyclic AMP levels. Unlike PGI2, propranolol's
effects were not altered by DDA. While the combination of propranolol and
PGI2 inhibited aggregation to a greater extent than either agent alone,
this enhanced effect with the combination did not extend to TxB2 or cyclic
AMP production. Propranolol, PGI2, and the combination inhibited TxB2
synthesis to a similar extent, and PGI2 produced a similar increase in
cyclic AMP in the presence and absence of propranolol. These findings
indicate that propranolol and PGI2 inhibit platelet aggregation through
cyclic AMP-independent and dependent mechanisms, respectively. While
propranolol does not alter the synthesis of PGI2, it enhances the
inhibition of aggregation by PGI2, and this may contribute to its
antiplatelet effect.
ARTICLES
Enhancement of the antiaggregatory activity of prostacyclin by propranolol in human platelets
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