Vanilloid receptors on sensory nerves mediate the vasodilator action of anandamide

P M Zygmunt, J Petersson, D A Andersson, H H Chuang, M Sorgard, V Di Marzo, D Julius, E D Hogestatt

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1944 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The endogenous cannabinoid receptor agonist anandamide(1) is a powerful vasodilator of isolated vascular preparations(2-4), but its mechanism of action is unclear. Here we show that the vasodilator response to anandamide in isolated arteries is capsaicin-sensitive and accompanied by release of calcitonin-gene-related peptide (CGRP), The selective CGRP-receptor antagonist 8-37 CGRP (ref. 5), but not the cannabinoid CB1 receptor blocker SR141716A (ref. 7), inhibited the vasodilator effect of anandamide, Other endogenous (2-arachidonylglycerol, palmitylethanolamide) and synthetic (HU 210, WIN 55,212-2, CP 55,940) CB1 and CB2 receptor agonists' could not mimic the action of anandamide. The selective 'vanilloid receptor' antagonist capsazepine(6,7) inhibited anandamide-induced vasodilation and release of CGRP. In patch-clamp experiments on cells expressing the cloned vanilloid receptor (VR1)(8), anandamide induced a capsazepine-sensitive current in whale cells and isolated membrane patches. Our results indicate that anandamide induces vasodilation by activating: vanilloid receptors on perivascular sensory nerves and causing release of CGRP. The vanilloid receptor may thus be another molecular target for endogenous anandamide, besides cannabinoid receptors, in the nervous and cardiovascular systems.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)452-457
Number of pages6
JournalNATURE
Volume400
Issue number6743
Publication statusPublished - 29 Jul 1999

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