Pharmacological effects of a specific dopamine D-1 antagonist SCH 23390 in comparison with neuroleptics |
| |
Authors: | A.V. Christensen J. Arnt J. Hyttel J.-J. Larsen O. Svendsen |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, H. Lundbeck & Co. A/S, Ottiliavej 7–9, DK 2500 Valby, Denmark |
| |
Abstract: | Neuroleptics such as thioxanthenes (cis()-flupentixol and cis()-clopenthixol) and phenothiazines (fluphenazine and perphenazine), which block both dopamine (DA) D-1 and D-2 receptors and the butyrophenones (haloperidol and spiroperidol), which block D-2 receptors only, are equipotent both behaviorally and clinically. A new compound SCH 23390 which selectively blocks DA D-1 receptors, resembles many neuroleptics in its pharmacological profile: antistereotypic effects in mice, rats and dogs, cataleptogenic effect and inhibitory effect on amphetamine circling. In contrast SCH 23390 has no effect on apomorphine-induced vomiting in dogs and little effects on 6-OHDA-denervated supersensitive DA receptors, stimulated by the DA agonist 3-PPP. In a series of experiments where methylphenidate-induced stereotyped gnawing in mice was inhibited by neuroleptics, it was shown that concomitant treatment with scopolamine or diazepam attenuated the effect of butyrophenones (D-2 antagonists). The same treatment attenuated the effect of phenothiazines, to a lesser extent, and hardly attenuated the effect of thioxanthenes and SCH 23390 at all. It is concluded that DA D-1 receptors are as important as D-2 receptors for the expression of neuroleptic activity in most animal models believed to be predictive of antipsychotic and extrapyramidal side-effect potential. However, the D-1 antagonist is less sensitive than D-2 antagonists to antimuscarinic compounds and benzodiapines. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|