Jin Fu Wen
Wonkwang University
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Featured researches published by Jin Fu Wen.
Circulation Research | 2004
Jin Fu Wen; Xun Cui; Jing Yu Jin; Soo Mi Kim; Sung Zoo Kim; Suhn Hee Kim; Ho Sub Lee; Kyung Woo Cho
Abstract— This study tests the hypothesis that particulate (p) guanylyl cyclase (GC) and soluble (s) GC are involved in the distinct roles for the regulation of cGMP-PDE-cAMP signaling and of mechanical and secretory functions in the heart. Experiments were performed in perfused beating rabbit atria. C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP) and SIN-1, an NO donor, or BAY 41-2272 (BAY), a direct activator for sGC, were used to activate pGC and sGC, respectively. CNP and SIN-1 increased cGMP and cAMP efflux in a concentration-dependent manner. Increase in cAMP was a function of cGMP. The changes in cAMP efflux concentration in terms of cGMP were much more prominent in the atria treated with CNP than in the atria treated with SIN-1. Increase in cAMP efflux concentration was blocked by milrinone but not changed by EHNA. BAY increased cGMP but not cAMP in a concentration-dependent manner. CNP and SIN-1 decreased atrial stroke volume and myocytic ANP release. The decreases in terms of cGMP efflux concentration were much more prominent in the atria treated with CNP than in the atria treated with SIN-1 or BAY. Milrinone accentuated GC agonist–induced decreases in atrial stroke volume and ANP release. In the presence of ODQ, SIN-1 or BAY induced effects were not observed. These data suggest that pGC and sGC activations have distinct roles via cGMP-PDE3-cAMP signaling in the cardiac atrium: high and low gain switches, respectively, for the regulation of cAMP levels and contractile and secretory functions.
Experimental Physiology | 2002
Kyung Woo Cho; Sook Jeong Lee; Jin Fu Wen; Suhn Hee Kim; Kyung Hwan Seul; Ho Sub Lee
We have previously shown that extracellular fluid (ECF) is translocated by atrial contraction. Following on from this finding we have proposed a two‐step sequential mechanism for the regulation of stretch‐activated secretion of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP): myocytic release of ANP into the surrounding paracellular space followed by the translocation of ECF with the released ANP into the bloodstream. This latter step is induced by atrial contraction, and is therefore controlled by atrial workload. However, the mechanism that regulates the changes in translocation of the ECF has not been defined. To define the relationship between the atrial workload, ECF translocation, size of the extracellular space (ECS) and ANP secretion, experiments have been performed in isolated perfused beating rabbit atria. Atrial workload, transendocardial translocation of the ECF and the secretion of ANP were quantified. Changes in the size of the atrium and the ECS were determined by a newly developed methodology in the beating atria. Atrial workload determined the translocation of the ECF and released ANP with waning of the translocation at higher myocardial workloads. Atrial workload inversely determined the size of the atrium and the ECS. The latter directly determined the translocation of the ECF in terms of atrial workload. From these data we suggest that the size of the ECS is an intimate modulator of the translocation of the ECF and released ANP, and that the phenomenon of waning of the transendocardial translocation that appeared at higher atrial workloads is closely related to the shrinkage of the ECS.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2012
Song Nan Jin; Jin Fu Wen; Ting Ting Wang; Dae Gill Kang; Ho Sub Lee; Kyung Woo Cho
ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE Radix Paeoniae Rubra (RPR) is an important traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) commonly used in clinic for a long history in China. RPR is the radix of either Paeonia lactiflora Pall. or Paeonia veitchii Lynch. RPR has a wide variety of pharmacological actions such as anti-thrombus, anti-coagulation, and anti-atherosclerotic properties, protecting heart and liver. However, the mechanisms involved are to be defined. AIM OF THE STUDY The aim of the present study was to define the effect of Paeonia lactiflora Pall. extracts on vascular tension and responsible mechanisms in rat thoracic aortic rings. MATERIALS AND METHODS Ethanol extract of Paeonia lactiflora Pall. (EPL) was examined for their vascular relaxant effects in isolated phenylephrine-precontracted rat thoracic aorta. RESULTS EPL induced relaxation of the phenylephrine-precontracted aortic rings in a concentration-dependent manner. Vascular relaxation induced by EPL was significantly inhibited by removal of the endothelium or pretreatment of the rings with N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methylester (L-NAME) or 1H-[1,2,4]-oxadiazolo-[4,3-α]-quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ). Extracellular Ca²⁺ depletion or diltiazem significantly attenuated EPL-induced vasorelaxation. Modulators of the store-operated Ca²⁺ entry (SOCE), thapsigargin, 2-aminoethyl diphenylborinate and Gd³⁺, and an inhibitor of Akt, wortmannin, markedly attenuated the EPL-induced vasorelaxation. Further, the EPL-induced vasorelaxation was significantly attenuated by pretreatment with tetraethylammonium, a non-selective K(Ca) channels blocker, or glibenclamide, an ATP-sensitive K⁺ channels inhibitor, respectively. Inhibition of cyclooxygenases with indomethacin, and adrenergic and muscarinic receptors blockade had no effects on the EPL-induced vasorelaxation. CONCLUSIONS The present study suggests that EPL relaxes vascular smooth muscle via endothelium-dependent and Akt- and SOCE-eNOS-cGMP-mediated pathways through activation of both K(Ca) and K(ATP) channels and inhibition of L-type Ca²⁺ channels.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2002
Xun Cui; Jin Fu Wen; Hua Jin; Dan Li; Jing Yu Jin; Suhn Hee Kim; Sung Zoo Kim; Ho Sub Lee; Kyung Woo Cho
cAMP is known to control the release of atrial natriuretic peptide. To define the roles of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase subtypes in the regulation of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) release, experiments were done with perfused beating rabbit atria. Phosphodiesterase 3 subtype-specific inhibitors, milrinone and cilostamide, inhibited myocytic ANP release with a concomitant increase in cAMP efflux. Similarly, trequinsin, another phosphodiesterase 3 inhibitor, decreased ANP release. A phosphodiesterase 4 subtype-specific inhibitor, rolipram, did not significantly change ANP release but increased AMP efflux. Also, 4-[(3-butoxy-4-methoxyphenyl)methyl]-2-imidazolidinone (Ro 20-1724), another phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitor, did not significantly change ANP release. The cAMP efflux was higher in the atrium treated with rolipram than in the atrium treated with milrinone or cilostamide. The data show that the cAMP pool, which is metabolized by phosphodiesterase 3, but not phosphodiesterase 4, is closely related to the basal regulation of atrial ANP release. The results suggest that intracellular cAMP is compartmentalized in the regulation of atrial ANP release, and that the release is controlled by a phosphodiesterase subtype-specific mechanism.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2013
Ting Ting Wang; Guang Hai Zhou; Joung Hyun Kho; Yuan Yuan Sun; Jin Fu Wen; Dae Gill Kang; Ho Sub Lee; Kyung Woo Cho; Song Nan Jin
ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE Euphorbia humifusa Willd. (EH) is an important traditional Chinese medicine that has commonly been used for treating bacillary dysentery and enteritis in many Asian countries for thousands of years. EH has a wide variety of pharmacological actions such as antioxidant, hypotensive, and hypolipidemic effects. However, the mechanisms involved are to be defined. AIM OF THE STUDY The present study was performed to evaluate the cardiovascular effects of EH in rats. MATERIALS AND METHODS Methanol extract of EH (MEH) and ethylacetate fraction of the MEH (EEH) was examined for their vascular relaxant effects in phenylephrine-precontracted aortic rings. Effects of EEH on systolic blood pressure and heart rate were tested in Sprague-Dawley rats. RESULTS MEH and EEH induced vasorelaxation in a concentration-dependent manner. Endothelium-denudation abolished the EEH-induced vasorelaxation. Pretreatment of the endothelium-intact aortic rings with N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methylester (L-NAME) and 1H-[1,2,4]-oxadiazolo-[4,3-α]-quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) significantly inhibited the EEH-induced vasorelaxation. EEH increased cGMP levels of the aortic rings in a concentration-dependent manner and the effect was blocked by L-NAME or ODQ. Extracellular Ca(2+) depletion and treatments with thapsigargin, Gd(3+), and 2-aminoethyl diphenylborinate significantly attenuated the EEH-induced vasorelaxation. Wortmannin markedly attenuated the EEH-induced vasorelaxation. In addition, tetraethylammonium, iberiotoxin, and charybdotoxin, but not apamin, attenuated the EEH-induced vasorelaxation. Glibenclamide, indomethacin, atropine, and propranolol had no effects on the EEH-induced vasorelaxation. Furthermore, EEH decreased systolic blood pressure and heart rate in a concentration-dependent manner in rats. CONCLUSIONS The present study demonstrates that EEH induces endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation via eNOS-NO-cGMP signaling through the modification of intracellular Ca(2+), Ca(2+) entry, and large- and intermediate-conductance KCa channel homeostasis. The data also suggest that the Akt-eNOS pathway is involved in the EEH-induced vasorelaxation. EEH induces hypotension and bradycardia in vivo.
Life Sciences | 2008
Dong Yuan Xu; Jin Fu Wen; He Xiu Quan; Guang Hai Zhou; Sun Young Kim; Sung Hun Park; Sung Zoo Kim; Ho Sub Lee; Kyung Woo Cho
Although it has been known that atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) release is regulated through muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChR), the mechanism by which this neurotransmitter regulates atrial ANP release is largely unknown. This study tested the hypothesis that K(+)(ACh) channels mediate the action of mAChR on atrial myocyte ANP release. Experiments were performed in perfused beating rabbit atria. Carbachol (CCh), an agonist of cardiac mAChR, increased atrial myocyte ANP release concomitantly with a decrease in stroke volume and intra-atrial pulse pressure in a concentration-dependent manner. Isoproterenol, a beta-adrenoceptor agonist, decreased ANP release concomitantly with an increase in cAMP and mechanical dynamics. In the presence of isoproterenol, the CCh-induced increase in ANP release and decrease in cAMP efflux levels and mechanical dynamics were able to be repeated. The CCh-induced changes were blocked by selective M(2) mAChR antagonists. Tertiapin, a selective G-protein-gated K(+)(ACh) channel blocker, attenuated the CCh-induced increase in ANP release and decrease in mechanical dynamics in a concentration-dependent manner, but without a significant effect on the CCh-induced decrease in cAMP efflux levels. The CCh-induced changes in ANP release and atrial dynamics were inhibited in the atria from pertussis toxin-pretreated rabbits. These findings demonstrate that G-protein-gated K(+)(ACh) channels regulate atrial myocyte ANP release. The present study also shows that mAChR and adrenoceptors have opposing roles in the regulation of ANP release.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2010
Song Nan Jin; Jin Fu Wen; Hye Yoom Kim; Dae Gill Kang; Ho Sub Lee; Kyung Woo Cho
AIM OF THE STUDY The aim of the present study was to define the effect of Xanthoceras sorbifolia extracts (XS) on vascular tension and responsible mechanisms in rat thoracic aortic rings. MATERIALS AND METHODS Ethanol extract of the leaves of XS (EXS) was examined for their vascular relaxant effects in isolated phenylephrine-precontracted rat thoracic aorta. RESULTS EXS (0.1-100 μg/ml) induced relaxation of the phenylephrine-precontracted aortic rings in a concentration-dependent manner. Endothelium-denudation abolished EXS-induced vasorelaxation. Pretreatment of the endothelium-intact aortic rings with N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methylester (L-NAME) and 1H-[1,2,4]-oxadiazolo-[4,3-α]-quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) inhibited EXS-induced vasorelaxation. Inhibition of Ca(2+) entry via L-type Ca(2+) channels failed to block the EXS-induced vasorelaxation. Extracellular Ca(2+) depletion significantly attenuated EXS-induced vasorelaxation. Modulators of the store-operated Ca(2+) entry (SOCE), thapsigargin, 2-aminoethyl diphenylborinate (2-APB) and Gd(3+), and an inhibitor of Akt, wortmannin, markedly attenuated the EXS-induced vasorelaxation. EXS increased cGMP levels of the aortic rings in a concentration-dependent manner and the effect was blocked by L-NAME, ODQ, thapsigargin, Gd(3+), 2-APB, and wortmannin. Further, EXS-induced vasorelaxation was significantly attenuated by tetraethylammonium, a non-selective K(ca) channels blocker, but not by glibenclamide, an ATP-sensitive K(+) channels inhibitor. Inhibition of cyclooxygenase with indomethacin, and adrenergic and muscarinic receptors blockade had no effects on EXS-induced vasorelaxation. CONCLUSIONS The present study suggests that EXS relaxes vascular smooth muscle via endothelium-dependent NO-cGMP signaling through activation of the Akt- and SOCE-eNOS-sGC pathways, which may, at least in part, be related to the function of K(+) channels.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2011
Hao Zhen Cui; Jin Fu Wen; Hye Ran Choi; Xiang Li; Kyung Woo Cho; Dae Gill Kang; Ho Sub Lee
Ursolic acid is reported to have beneficial effects on the regulation of cardiovascular homeostasis. However, the effects of ursolic acid on cardiac hormone secretion are yet to be defined. The present study was designed to test the effects of ursolic acid on the secretory and contractile functions of the atria. Experiments were conducted in isolated perfused beating rabbit atria. We measured the changes in atrial dynamics, pulse pressure, stroke volume, cAMP efflux, as well as the secretion of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP). Ursolic acid increased ANP secretion and mechanical dynamics in a concentration-dependent manner. The inhibition of L-type Ca(2+) channels with nifedipine attenuated the ursolic acid-induced increase in ANP secretion but not mechanical dynamics. The inhibition of K(+)(ATP) channels with glibenclamide attenuated the ursolic acid-induced increase in ANP secretion-but not atrial dynamics-in a concentration-dependent manner. The selective Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase inhibitor ouabain blocked the ursolic acid-induced increase in atrial dynamics but not ANP secretion. These findings show that ursolic acid increases ANP secretion via its activation of K(+)(ATP) channels and subsequent inhibition of Ca(2+) entry through L-type Ca(2+) channels in rabbit atria. These data also suggest that ursolic acid increases atrial dynamics via its inhibition of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity.
Life Sciences | 2010
He Xiu Quan; Jing Yu Jin; Jin Fu Wen; Kyung Woo Cho
AIMS Although a beta-adrenoceptor (beta-AR) blockade-induced increase in plasma atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) levels is implicated in the therapeutic significance of beta-AR antagonists, the role of beta-AR in the regulation of ANP release is not clearly defined. The purpose of the present study was to define the role of beta-AR subtypes and the mechanisms responsible for regulation of atrial ANP release. MAIN METHODS Experiments were performed in isolated perfused beating rabbit atria, including measurement of atrial contractile response, cAMP efflux, and atrial myocyte ANP release. KEY FINDINGS beta-AR activation with (-)-isoproterenol decreased ANP release concomitantly with increases in cAMP efflux concentration, atrial dynamics, stroke volume and pulse pressure in a concentration-dependent manner. The ANP response was inversely related to the change in cAMP efflux concentrations. The isoproterenol-induced decrease in ANP release was inhibited by beta(1)-AR blockade with CGP 20712A but not by beta(2)-AR blockade with ICI 118551. The isoproterenol-induced decrease in ANP release was attenuated by the L-type Ca(2+) channel antagonist nifedipine and the cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor KT5720. SIGNIFICANCE These findings suggest that beta(1)-AR activation decreases ANP release via cAMP- and Ca(2+)-dependent mechanisms.
Regulatory Peptides | 2007
Jin Fu Wen; He Xiu Quan; Guang Hai Zhou; Kyung Woo Cho
The role of C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP) in the pathophysiology of atrial function in hyperthyroidism has not been defined. This study was to define the role of CNP-activated particulate (p) guanylyl cyclase (GC)-cGMP-phosphodiesterase (PDE)3 signaling in the regulation of cAMP levels and contractile and secretory functions in the atria from hyperthyroid rabbits. Experiments were performed in perfused beating rabbit atria. CNP was used to activate pGC. In euthyroid atria from sham-treated rabbits, CNP (100 nM) increased cGMP and cAMP efflux by 176.7+/-17.7 and 55.3+/-10.0%, respectively. CNP decreased stroke volume and pulse pressure and ANP release by 51+/-7 and 41+/-2 and 60.4+/-3.2%, respectively. Pretreatment with milrinone blocked the CNP-induced increase of cAMP but without significant changes in decrease of atrial dynamics and ANP release. In hyperthyroid atria, CNP-induced increase of cGMP levels was accentuated, while CNP-induced increase of cAMP was attenuated. The gain of cAMP, i.e., change in cAMP efflux concentration in terms of cGMP was attenuated in the hyperthyroid compared to euthyroid atria. CNP rather increased atrial dynamics in hyperthyroid atria instead of decrease. CNP-induced decrease in atrial ANP release was attenuated. Pretreatment with milrinone blocked the CNP-induced increase of cAMP levels concomitantly with a decrease of atrial dynamics. The present study demonstrates that altered role of CNP-activated pGC-cGMP-PDE3-cAMP signaling is involved in the pathophysiology of hyperthyroid heart.