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1.
MT1 and MT2, polypeptides from green mamba venom, known to bind to muscarinic cholinoceptors, behave like muscarinic agonists in an inhibitory avoidance task in rats. We have further characterised their functional effects using different preparations. MT1 and MT2 behaved like relatively selective muscarinic M1 receptor agonists in rabbit vas deferens, but their effects were not reversed by washing or prevented by muscarinic antagonists, although allosteric modulators altered responses to MT1. Radioligand binding experiments indicated that both toxins irreversibly inhibited [3H]N-methylscopolamine binding to cloned muscarinic M1 and M4 receptors, and reduced binding to M5 subtype with lower affinity, while they reversibly inhibited the binding of [3H]prazosin to rat cerebral cortex and vas deferens, with 20 fold lower affinity. High concentrations of MT1 reversibly blocked responses of vas deferens to noradrenaline. MT1 and MT2 appear to irreversibly activate muscarinic M1 receptors at a site distinct from the classical one, and to have affinity for some -adrenoceptors.  相似文献   

2.
The study reports the functional affinity of an amidino derivative of pirenzepine, guanylpirenzepine, for muscarinic receptors mediating relaxation of rat duodenum, inhibition of rabbit vas deferens twitch contraction (both receptors previously classified as M1), guinea pig negative inotropism (M2) and ileal contraction (M3). Unlike pirenzepine, guanylpirenzepine discriminated between duodenum and vas deferens receptors, with a 30-fold greater affinity for the former subtype. The unique selectivity pattern of guanylpirenzepine (duodenum greater than vas deferens greater than ileum greater than atrium) renders it a promising tool for the classification of muscarinic receptor subtypes.  相似文献   

3.
Transection of the fimbria/fornix, producing a 75% reduction in the activity of the cholinergic marker choline-o-acetyltransferase (CAT EC. 2.3.1.6) in rat hippocampus, did not change the binding characteristics of the non-subtype selective, muscarinic cholinergic receptor antagonist ligand [3H](−)quinuclidinyl benzilate {[3H](−)QNB}. Pirenzepine competition for [3H](−)QNB binding in the hippocampus was best described by a computer derived model assuming two binding sites of high affinity (putative M1 receptors) and low affinity (putative M2 receptors). There was no change in the proportion of high and low affinity pirenzepine binding sites in the hippocampus following cholinergic deafferentation. Thus, these data provide no evidence for a discrete localization of either putative subtype of muscarinic receptor discriminated by pirenzepine restricted to the terminals of CAT containing neurons innervating the rat hippocampus.Chronic scopolamine treatment produced a 48% increase in the Bmax of [3H](−)QNB binding in the hippocampus, but again there was no change in the proportions of the sites discriminated by pirenzepine demonstrating that both putative subtypes were regulated identically. Similarly, carbachol competition for [3H](−)QNB was unaltered following cholinergic deafferentation or chronic scopolamine treatment. Furthermore, similar guanylyl-5′-imidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p] modulation of the proportions of high and low affinity carbachol binding sites was found in the hippocampus following transection of the fimbria/fornix or chronic scopolamine treatment. Thus there is no adaptation of receptor-effector coupling following these treatments that is reflected by changes in receptor recognition site characteristics.Carbachol competition for [3H]pirenzepine binding to putative M1 receptors in the hippocampus was biphasic and was also modulated by Gpp(NH)p. In the brainstem, there was a homogeneous population of putative M2 [3H](−)QNB binding sites having low affinity for pirenzepine. Carbachol competition for these binding sites was also biphasic and modulated by guanine nucleotides. Thus, both putative M1 and M2 muscarinic receptors, as defined by high or low affinity for pirenzepine respectively, may mediate their effects in rat brain via a guanine nucleotide regulatory subunit.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

This study represents the first investigation demonstrating the contractile response to exogenous acetylcholine (ACh) in the isolated human vas deferens. Pharmacological characterization of cholinergic receptors was achieved using selective antagonists to define receptor subtypes. In the HVD the effect of exogenous ACh is revealed as a dose-dependent sudden increase in the basal tension of the vasa. The ACh receptors of the HVD were competitively antagonized by atropine (ATR) with a high pA2 value (8.78). The main finding of this study is the presence of cholinergic receptors of the pharmacologically defined M2-ACh subtype in the isolated HVD, according to the pA2 values obtained with pirenzepine (PRZ) 7.39, AF-DX 116 (AF) 5.92 and 4-DAMP 5.65, M1-ACh, M2-ACh and M3-ACh selective antagonists, respectively. Prazosin (PZ), a selective α1-adrenergic antagonist, displayed a similar competitive antagonism for the contractile response evoked both by ACh (pA2 = 8.69) and NE (pA2 = 8.58) in the HVD. The antagonism exerted by PZ on the ACh-induced contractile response of the HVD, suggests that ACh probably acts at a presynaptic level stimulating the release of NE from an adrenergic neuron. According to these findings, the receptor involved in this action, located in the proximity of the nerve terminals, seems to be of the M2-ACh subtype.  相似文献   

5.
Muscarinic receptors in the rat cerebral cortex, cardiac atria and vas deferens were identified, quantitated, and characterized relative to phosphatidylinositol (PI) turnover as the functional response to stimulation of specific receptor subtypes. Receptor densities as determined by 3H-QNB binding were ranked: cerebral cortex greater than vas deferens greater than heart. Using displacement of 3H-QNB binding by the selective M1 and M2 muscarinic receptor antagonists pirenzepine and 11[[2-[(diethylamino)methyl]-1-piperidinyl]acetyl]-5,11-dihydro- 6H-pyrido [2,3-b] [1,4] benzodiazepine-6-one (AF-DX 116) respectively, heterogeneous populations were found in the cerebral cortex and vas deferens. The M1 receptor subtype predominated in the former and the M2 predominated in the latter. An homogeneous M2 receptor population was present in the heart. Methacholine-stimulated accumulation of 3H inositol-1-phosphate was greater in the vas deferens than in the cerebral cortex, whereas PI turnover was not enhanced in cardiac atria. Reserpine treatment of rats (0.5 mg kg-1 day-1 for 7 days) increased muscarinic receptor density in the vas deferens coincident with a shift in the low affinity pKi for AF-DX 116 to a value comparable to high affinity binding, and abolished the enhanced PI hydrolysis. In the cerebral cortex, reserpine treatment shifted only the early portion of the methacholine dose-response curve to the right. These results are judged to be supportive of preferential coupling between the M3 muscarinic receptor subtype and PI turnover.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Studies with the atypical muscarinic antagonist pirenzepine provide convincing evidence for the classification of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) into two subtypes, M1 and M2. The present study examines the heterogeneity of the M2 subtype employing the newly developed competitive muscarinic antagonist, AFDX-116. Comparison of the binding affinities of pirenzepine, atropine, and AFDX-116 to mAChRs in microsomes from the rabbit cerebral cortex, heart, and iris smooth muscle shows that iris mAChRs, which are pharmacologically of the M2 subtype, can be distinguished from M2 cardiac receptors based on their affinity for AFDX-116. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the M2 receptor subtype consists of a heterogeneous population of receptors.Abbreviations mAChRs Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptors - CCh Carbachol - NMS N-Methylscopolamine - AFDX-116 11-[[2-[(diethylamino)methyl]-1-piperidinyl]acetyl]-5,11-dihydro-6Hpyrido[2,3-b][1,4]benzodiazepine-6-one  相似文献   

7.
Oxotremorine-induced inhibition of electrically evoked release of 3H-acetylcholine from brain slices preincubated with 3H-choline was used to characterize muscarinic autoreceptors in rabbit hippocampus and caudate nucleus. From the shifts to the right of the concentration-response curves of oxotremorine in the presence of muscarinic receptor antagonists, the following pKB values [95% C.I.] were determined in the hippocampus: tripinamide: 8.7 [8.5, 8.8]; himbacine: 8.4 [8.3, 8.5]; AQ-RA 741: 8.3 [8.2, 8.5]; 4-DAMP: 8.2 [8.0, 8.3]; hexahydrosiladifenidol: 7.4 [7.2, 7.5]; AF-DX 116: 7.3 [7.1, 7.4]; pirenzepine: 6.8 [6.6, 7.0]; and PD102807: 6.3 [6.0, 6.5]. In the caudate nucleus: tripinamide: 9.1 [8.9, 9.2]; 4-DAMP: 8.3 [8.2, 8.5]; himbacine: 8.1 [8.0, 8.2]; AQ-RA 741: 8.1 [8.0, 8.3]; hexahydrosiladifenidol: 7.3 [7.2, 7.4]; AF-DX 116: 7.1 [7.0, 7.2]; pirenzepine: 6.7 [6.6, 6.8]; and PD102807: 6.5 [6.2, 6.8]. These pKB values fit best to literature values for M2 receptors, suggesting that the muscarinic autoreceptor of the rabbit hippocampus and caudate nucleus is the m2 gene product.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract

Guanylpirenzepine, a polar, non-quaternary analog of pirenzepine, exhibited a novel binding behavior in rat brain regions: in competition binding experiments against [3H]pirenzepine labeling the M1 receptor in membranes from cerebral cortex, hippocampus and striatum, the compound, differently from pirenzepine, displayed heterogeneous binding curves. Computer assisted analysis of these curves, evidenced the existence of two populations of binding sites: a large proportion (84–89%) of high affinity receptors (KH = 64–92 nM) and a remainder with very low affinity (KL = 19–28 μM). Like pirenzepine, quanylpirenzepine showed low affinity for the glandular M3 and the cardiac M2 receptors when [3H]N-methylscopolamine was used to label the receptors in membranes from these two tissues; affinity values for guanylpirenzepine were 1336 and 5790 nM respectively, vs 323 and 683 nM for pirenzepine. We conclude that guanylpirenzepine is able to discriminate between m1 and m4 receptor subtypes and may represent a new tool for deeper studies on mascarinic receptors classification.  相似文献   

9.
We recently demonstrated that the non-classical muscarinic receptor antagonist [3H]pirenzepine ([3H]PZ) identifies a high affinity population of muscarinic sites in the rat cerebral cortex. We now report that cortical muscarinic sites to which [3H]PZ binds with high affinity are modulated by ions but not guanine nucleotides. We also have examined equilibrium [3H]PZ binding in homogenates of various rat tissues using a new rapid filtration assay. All regional saturation isotherms yielded a similar high affinity dissociation constant (Kd = 2 ? 8 nM) in 10 mM sodium-potassium phosphate buffer. Receptor density (Bmax in fmol/mg tissue) varied as follows: corpus striatum = 154.5, cerebral cortex = 94.6, hippocampus = 94.3, ileum = 1.3, cerebellum = 1.0, and heart = 0.45. The cerebral cortex and hippocampus possess 61 percent of striatal binding sites, while the ileum, cerebellum and heart contain only 0.84 percent, 0.65 percent and 0.29 percent of striatal sites respectively. The [3H]PZ sites in heart, ileum, and cerebellum represent 3.1 percent, 9.6 percent, and 10.4 percent of the sites obtained by using [3H](?)quinuclidinyl benzilate. Thus, [3H]PZ labels high affinity muscarinic receptor binding sites with a tissue distribution compatible with the concept of distinct M1 and M2 receptor subtypes. Accordingly, regions such as heart, cerebellum, and ileum would be termed M2, though each have an extremely small population of the M1 high affinity [3H]PZ site. [3H]PZ therefore appears to be a useful ligand for M1 receptor identification. Furthermore, the inability to demonstrate a significant effect of guanine nucleotides upon high affinity [3H]PZ binding to putative M1 receptors suggests that M1 sites may be independent of a guanine regulatory protein.  相似文献   

10.
The affinity of the enantiomers of phenglutarimide at three muscarinic receptor subtypes was examined in vitro using field-stimulated rabbit vas deferens (M1 receptors) and guinea pig atria (M2 alpha receptors) and ileum (M2 beta receptors). Extremely high stereoselectivity was observed and higher affinities (up to 6000-fold) were found for the (+)-S-enantiomer. The stereoselectivity ratios were different at the three subtypes, and the stereochemical demands made by the muscarinic receptors were most stringent at M1 receptors. (+)-(S)-Phenglutarimide was found to be a potent M1-selective antagonist (pA2 at M1 = 8.53). Its receptor selectivity profile is qualitatively similar to that of pirenzepine. (-)-(R)-Phenglutarimide showed no comparable discriminatory properties.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of cocaine (10 μM) on the kinetics of contractile response to noradrenaline (NA) was studied in the rat epididymal and prostatic vas deferens. Cocaine caused an acute increase in vas deferens adrenergic sensitivity primarily due to blockage of NA neuronal capture. The presynaptic action prevailed in the epididymal half: the EC 50 value decreased 32-fold with a slight increase of the maximum adrenergic response more evident in the prostatic half. In the presence of cocaine, the prostatic contraction to NA was mediated not by a single pool of α1-adrenoceptors like in epididymal vas deferens but by two. Its high affinity pool had the same affinity as α1-adrenoceptors of the epididymal half, the affinity value of the low one was 36-fold less, and the total maximal response of both pools increased 4.5-fold. The differences in cocaine effect on the rat epididymal and prostatic vas deferens contractions to NA appear to be caused by the different sources of Ca2+ involved in these responses.  相似文献   

12.
Muscarinic receptors exist in multiple subtypes, denoted as M1, M2 M3 and M4, encoded by four distinct but related genes. A fifth gene product, m5, has also been predicted although this sequence awaits a pharmacological equivalent. Many tissues express more than one muscarinic receptor subtype, which may couple to different intracellular effectors and thus have different physiological roles. One way to characterize the role of each receptor is to selectively inactivate one receptor population, thus pharmacologically ‘isolating’ the muscarinic receptor subtype of interest. Selective receptor inactivation can be achieved using either a selective, irreversible antagonist, or protection using a selective, reversible antagonist against a non-selective irreversible antagonist. Therefore, combination of these two approaches may provide optimal selective inactivation. Several muscarinic alkylating agents have been identified, including phenoxybenzamine, EEDQ (N-Ethoxycarbonyl-1-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline) and propylbenzilylcholine mustard. These irreversible antagonists do not, in general, discriminate between muscarinic receptor subtypes and are frequently used to estimate the affinity and relative efficacy of muscarinic agonists. Consequently, use of these irreversible antagonists provides estimations of the ‘receptor reserve’ associated with a response mediated by muscarinic receptor activation. In contrast, 4-DAMP mustard (4-diphenylacetoxy-N-(2-chloroethyl)piperidine) selectively inactivates M3 receptors, but will not discriminate between M1 M 2 or M4 receptors. In the absence of highly selective alkylating agents, receptor protection by reversible antagonists may be used. Thus, reversible antagonists, such as pirenzepine, methoctramine or para-fluorohexahydrosiladifenidol, at appropriate fractional receptor occupancies, may protect M1 M2 or M3 receptors against alkylation by phenoxybenzamine. Selective alkylation of M3 receptors by 4-DAMP mustard is enhanced with concurrent M2 protection. This approach has been applied to defining the role of these muscarinic receptor subtypes in the control of ileal smooth muscle tone. These data suggest that, in ileum, M2 receptors may act to inhibit β-adrenoceptor activation, thereby offsetting relaxation, while M3 receptors directly mediate contraction.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of the organophosphorus anticholinesterase paraoxon on the binding of radioactive ligands to the M3 subtype of the muscarinic receptor and receptor-coupled synthesis of second messengers in intact rat submaxillary gland (SMG) cells were investigated. The binding of [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate ([3H]QNB) was most sensitive to atropine and the M3-specific antagonist 4-DAMP followed by pirenzepine and least sensitive to the cardioselective M2 antagonist AFDX116. This, and the binding characteristics of [3H]4-DAMP, confirmed that the muscarinic receptors in this preparation are of the M3 subtype. Activation of these muscarinic receptors by carbamylcholine (CBC) produced both stimulation of phosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis and inhibition of cAMP synthesis, suggesting that this receptor subtype couples to both effector systems. Paraoxon (100 μM) reduced Bmax of [3H]4-DAMP binding from 27 ± 4 to 13 ± 3 fmol/mg protein with nonsignificant change in affinity, suggesting noncompetitive inhibition of binding by paraoxon. Like the agonist CBC, paraoxon inhibited the forskolininduced cAMP formation in SMG cells with an EC50 of 200 nM, but paraoxon was > 500 fold more potent than CBC. However, while the inhibition by CBC was counteracted by 2 μM atropine, that by paraoxon was unaffected by up to 100 μM atropine. It suggested that this effect of paraoxon was not via binding to the muscarinic receptor. Paraoxon did not affect β-adrenoreceptor function in the preparation, since it did not affect the 10 μM isoproterenol-induced cAMP synthesis, which was inhibited totally by 10 μM propranolol and partially by CBC. Paraoxon had a small but significant effect on CBC-stimulated PI metabolism in the SMG cells. It is suggested that paraoxon binds to two different sites in these SMG cells. One is an allosteric site on the M3 muscarinic receptor which affects ligand binding and may modulate receptor function. The other site may be on the Gi proteinadenylyl cyclase system, and produces CBC-like action, that is, inhibition of the forskolin-stimulated [3H]cAMP synthesis, and is unaffected by atropine inhibition of the muscarinic receptor. This adds to the complexity of paraoxon actions on muscarinic receptors and their effector systems.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of an opiate alkaloid and an opioid-like peptide was studied on the electrically evoked twitching of the vas deferens of 3 common laboratory rodents. Normorphine and the synthetic opioid peptide D-Alanine2 methionine enkephalinamide (D-Ala2) produced dose dependent inhibitions of the twitching response in the mouse vas deferens. In the rat vas, while β-endorphin (β-EP) caused an inhibitory effect in three strains of rats to a similar degree, morphine produced a dose related enhancement of the twitching. In the guinea pig, both morphine and β-EP caused an increased in the muscular twitch. The results are interpreted in terms of an heterogenous mixture of opiate receptors present in the vas deferens from these rodents. The mouse appears to contain mainly δ receptors while the rat has mostly ε receptors characterized by their specificity and sensitivity to the action of β-EP. The guinea pig vas deferens has apparently lost the sensitivity to the inhibitory influence of the opioids, suggesting the absence of μ or δ opiate receptors in this tissue.  相似文献   

15.
Similarities and differences in the effect of cocaine on [alpha]-adrenergic and muscarinic receptors were shown in three experimental models. The postsynaptic stimulating effect of cocaine, mediated by [alpha]-adrenergic receptors was revealed in uninnervated chick amnion and innervated rat vas deferens. In vas deferens cocaine caused an increase of the amount of active [alpha]-adrenergic receptors, the appearance of an additional receptor pool, and change in the dimerization level. Cocaine acted as an antagonist on muscarinic receptors of the chick amnion. The inhibition by cocaine of muscarinic receptors in the rat brain cortex membranes led to a decrease in the number of receptors and their partial monomerization. Thus, cocaine influences both the [alpha]-adrenergic and the muscarinic response at the receptor level. Experiments on various objects have shown that cocaine activates the [alpha]-adrenergic response and inhibits the muscarinic one.  相似文献   

16.
The five muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (M1–M5) are differentially expressed in the brain. M2 and M4 are coupled to inhibition of stimulated adenylyl cyclase, while M1, M3 and M5 are mainly coupled to the phosphoinositide pathway. We studied the muscarinic receptor regulation of adenylyl cyclase activity in the rat hippocampus, compared to the striatum and amygdala. Basal and forskolin-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity was higher in the striatum but the muscarinic inhibition was much lower. Highly selective muscarinic toxins MT1 and MT2—affinity order M1 ≥ M4 >> others—and MT3—highly selective M4 antagonist—did not show significant effects on basal or forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP production but, like scopolamine, counteracted oxotremorine inhibition. Since MTs have negligible affinity for M2, M4 would be the main subtype responsible for muscarinic inhibition of forskolin-stimulated enzyme. Dopamine stimulated a small fraction of the enzyme (3.1% in striatum, 1.3% in the hippocampus). Since MT3 fully blocked muscarinic inhibition of dopamine-stimulated enzyme, M4 receptor would be responsible for this regulation. Diana Jerusalinsky and Edgar Kornisiuk contributed equally to this paper.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract

In the rat vas deferens, a vast number of experiments have shown that the α-adrenoceptors present are of two types: α1 and α2. This series of experiments with the isolated rat vas deferens was designed to probe by pharmacological means, the nature of the responses elicited by neurogenic transmural stimulation and also those responses evoked by exogenous NE and DA. The methodology required the production of chemical denervation, neurotransmitter depletion, and the use of specific adrenoceptor blockers. The results obtained with the blocking agents, yohimbine or prazosin versus NE and DA, were pA2 values that were virtually interchangeable. The effects of chemical alteration with 6-OH-DA or reserpine point to a certain similarity and interdependence of the mechanism of action for the two neurotransmitters. Therefore, it is suggested that these two transmitters act at the same receptor site or share a common receptive microenvironment in the rat vas deferens.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

The binding characteristics of [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate ([3H]QNB) to isolated crude membranes of cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells were investigated. [3H]QNB bound to endothelial cell membranes with high affinity (kD = 0.056 nM) and limited capacity (132 fmol/mg DNA). The binding specificity, order of affinity and inhibition constants (Ki) were determined by displacement of bound [3H]QNB with unlabeled ligands. The order of affinity was QNB > atropine > 4-diphenylacetoxy-N-methyl-piperidine methiodide (4-DAMP) > p-fluoro-hexahydro-sila-difenidol (p-F-HHSiD) (M3 antagonist) > pirenzepine (M1 antagonist) > AFDX-116 (M2 antagonist) > (4-hydroxy-2-butynyl) trimethylammonium chloride m-chlorocarbanilate (McN-A-343, M1 agonist). These observations suggest that muscarinic receptors of endothelial cells in culture are likely to be of M3 and M1 subtype. Northern blot analysis of receptor subtypes using cDNA probes did not provide conclusive results due to the low level expression of these receptors in cultured cells. Solubilization of protein bound [3H]QNB with 1% digitonin and 0.02% cholate followed by analysis on sucrose density gradients demonstrated the presence of a specifically bound [3H]QNB-protein complex sedimenting at the 6.2S region of the gradient. These data demonstrate the presence of muscarinic acetylcholine receptor protein in cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells.  相似文献   

19.
Novel analogues of cis-N,N,N-trimethyl-(6-methyl-1,4-dioxan-2-yl)methanaminium iodide (2a) were synthesized by inserting methyl groups alternatively or simultaneously in positions 5 and 6 of the 1,4-dioxane nucleus in all combinations. Their biological profile was assessed by receptor binding assays at human muscarinic M1–M5 receptors stably expressed in CHO cells and by functional studies performed on classical isolated organ preparations, namely, rabbit electrically stimulated vas deferens, and guinea pig electrically stimulated left atrium, ileum, and lung strips. The results showed that the simultaneous presence of one methyl group in both positions 5 and 6 with a trans stereochemical relationship with each other (diastereomers 4 and 5) or the geminal dimethylation in position 6 (compound 8) favour the selective activation of M3 receptors. Compounds 4, 5, and 8 might be valuable tools in the characterization of the M3 receptor, as well as provide useful information for the design and development of novel selective M3 antagonists.  相似文献   

20.
Treating membranes from rat heart with phospholipase C (phosphatidylcholine choline-phosphohydrolase) fromClostridium perfringens increased the affinity of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (M2) for the agonists carbachol and oxotremorine. The affinity for antagonists was not affected. Phospholipase C activity, i.e., the cleavage of polar heads of membrane phospholipids, led to the disappearance of the guanine nucleotide-dependent rightward shift of the isotherm for agonist binding. The treatment of tracheal smooth muscle with phospholipase C led to a decrease in the maximum contractile effect of muscarinic (M2) stimulation with no modification of the agonist EC50, i.e., to the uncoupling of the stimulation-contraction process. These results demonstrate that when phospholipid polar heads are hydrolysed by phospholipase C, M2 receptors are uncoupled from G proteins, which enhances their affinity for agonists but prevents information transfer.  相似文献   

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