Jordan University of Science and Technology

Non-genomic effects of progesterone on Rho kinase II in rat gastric smooth muscle cells.


Authors:  Othman Al-Shboul; Ayman Mustafa; Farah Al-hashimi

Abstract:  
Various studies have shown that pregnancy is associated with gastrointestinal complaints that might result from disturbance of the normal contractile pattern of smooth muscle. Progesterone is an important steroid hormone, which plays a crucial role in female pregnancy. Progesterone affects muscle cells by genomic mechanisms, through nuclear receptors, and non-genomic mechanisms, through unidentified pathways. Non-genomic actions were defined as those occurring within 10 min of progesterone exposure. The aim of the present study was to investigate the non-genomic effect of progesterone on Rho kinase II activity in gastric smooth muscle. Single smooth muscle cells of the stomach obtained from Sprague Dawley rats were used. Dispersed gastric smooth muscle cells were treated with progesterone or acetylcholine (ACh) separately. Cells designated for progesterone treatment were incubated with 1 ?M progesterone for 10 min. Rho kinase II expression and both basal and ACh-induced Rho kinase II activity were measured via specifically designed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and activity assay kits respectively in both control and progesterone-treated groups. Progesterone inhibited the ACh-induced, but not the basal, Rho kinase II activity in dispersed gastric smooth muscle cells without affecting its expression level. This study suggested that progesterone can rapidly affect the contractile activity of isolated gastric smooth muscle cells in rats via inhibition of the Rho kinase II pathway.