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1.
Cui YY  Zhu L  Wang H  Advenier C  Chen HZ  Devillier P 《Life sciences》2008,82(17-18):949-955
Gastro-oesophageal acid reflux may cause airway responses such as cough, bronchoconstriction and inflammation in asthmatic patients. Studies in humans or in animals have suggested that these responses involve cholinergic nerves. The purpose of this study was to investigate the role of the efferent vagal component on airway microvascular leakage induced by instillation of hydrochloric acid (HCl) into the oesophagus of guinea-pigs and the subtype of muscarinic receptors involved. Airway microvascular leakage induced by intra-oesophageal HCl instillation was abolished by bilateral vagotomy or by the nicotinic receptor antagonist, hexamethonium. HCl-induced leakage was inhibited by pretreatment with atropine, a non-specific muscarinic receptor antagonist, and also by pretreatment with either pirenzepine, a muscarinic M(1) receptor antagonist, or 4-DAMP, a muscarinic M(3) receptor antagonist. Pirenzepine was more potent than atropine and 4-DAMP. These antagonists were also studied on airway microvascular leakage or bronchoconstriction induced by intravenous administration of acetylcholine (ACh). Atropine, pirenzepine and 4-DAMP inhibited ACh-induced airway microvascular leakage with similar potencies. In sharp contrast, 4-DAMP and atropine were more potent inhibitors of ACh-induced bronchoconstriction than pirenzepine. Methoctramine, a muscarinic M(2) receptor antagonist, was ineffective in all experimental conditions. These results suggest that airway microvascular leakage caused by HCl intra-oesophageal instillation involves ACh release from vagus nerve terminals and that M(1) and M(3) receptors play a major role in cholinergic-mediated microvascular leakage, whereas M(3) receptors are mainly involved in ACh-induced bronchoconstriction.  相似文献   

2.
The muscarinic receptors of muscularis mucosa have some recognition properties that suggest they resemble receptors of the M1 subtype. The nerves of these tissues also contain muscarinic receptors which inhibit tonic contractions caused by release of a substance-P-like material by field stimulation. These receptors also appear to be M1 in type as they are maximally activated by McNeil A343 as well as by carbachol (pD2, 5.5 and 7.5, respectively). They are also inhibited by pirenzepine, as well as by atropine (negative logarithms of the required dose for 50% inhibition or potentiation, 6.6-6.7 compared with 8.2-8.3). Hexahydrosiladifenidol, an antagonist selective or M2 receptors of guinea pig ileum, had a low (approximately 7.1) pA2 value for antagonism of both agonists in smooth muscle in this tissue. However, it was closer to atropine in potency with respect to potentiating tonic responses to field stimulation or to inhibiting phasic responses to field stimulation than it was to antagonizing smooth muscle contractions. Thus, atropine was about 40 times more potent than pirenzepine and 2-5 times more potent than hexahydrosilafenidol. There were some quantitative differences in the effectiveness of these three antagonists in blocking the phasic (acetylcholine-mediated) response to field stimulation. Atropine was 70-100 times more potent than pirenzepine and 8-25 times more potent than hexahydrosiladifenidol. This greater potency difference for inhibition of phasic contractions compared with potentiation of tonic contractions was discussed. This tissue appears to be one of the first smooth muscles in which both nerves and muscles contain muscarinic receptors with some recognition properties resembling those of the M1 subtype.  相似文献   

3.
R Hammer  A Giachetti 《Life sciences》1982,31(26):2991-2998
The heterogeneity of muscarinic receptors was examined in sympathetic ganglia and atria by “in vitro” binding techniques and functional studies. As tools we have used the classical antagonist atropine, the selective antagonist pirenzepine and the unique muscarinic agonist McN-A-343. In binding studies atropine showed similar affinities to muscarinic sites in ganglionic and atrial membranes with dissociation constants of 1.1 and 3.2 nM, respectively. In contrast, pirenzepine displayed a distinctly different binding profile. In atria it bound to an homogenous population of low affinity sites (diss. const. 620 nM) while in ganglia it revealed the presence of two sites: a major population of high affinity sites (diss. const. 11 nM) and a minor one of lower affinity (diss. const. 280 nM). The functional correlate of the receptor properties in the two tissues was studied in the pithed rat by measuring A) the increase of arterial pressure evoked by McN-A-343 through selective activation of muscarinic receptors in ganglia and B) the bradycardia elicited by acetylcholine release in the heart through vagal stimulation. Mirroring the “in vitro” binding data atropine inhibited both muscarinic responses in the same narrow range of doses (2–30 μg/kg i.v.) whereas pirenzepine showed similar potency to atropine in inhibiting ganglionic stimulation (ED50 4.1 μg/kg i.v.) but was almost two orders of magnitude weaker in blocking vagal bradycardia (ED50 172 μg/kg i.v.). These data suggest that McN-A-343 and pirenzepine act selectively on a common muscarinic receptor subtype, a finding which agrees with the view that muscarinic receptors are heterogenous and that excitatory ganglionic receptors (Ml) are distinguishable from those (M2) present in effector organs like smooth muscle and heart.  相似文献   

4.
Contractions of an echinoderm (sp. Sclerodactyla briareus) smooth muscle, the longitudinal muscle of the body wall (LMBW), were evoked by acetylcholine (ACh) and agonists: epibatidine, muscarine and nicotine (in order of force generation: ACh>muscarine=epibatidine>nicotine). ACh-induced contractions were blocked by atropine by 50%, and methoctramine, by 30%. ACh responses were also blocked by 25% by methyllycaconitine (MLA) but not by d-tubocurarine (dTC). Muscarine initiated large contractions that were completely blocked by atropine. To elucidate possible muscarinic ACh receptor (mAChR) subtypes, muscarinic agonists (oxotremorine, pilocarpine) and antagonists (methoctramine, pirenzepine) were tested. Oxotremorine, pilocarpine, and pirenzepine each enhanced resting tonus and potentiated ACh-induced contractions (order of potency: pilocarpine>oxotremorine=pirenzepine). Muscarine, oxotremorine or pirenzepine generated phasic, rhythmic contractions. Nicotine-induced contractions were almost completely blocked by dTC but were not altered by atropine. Large contractions evoked by epibatidine were potentiated by dTC whereas atropine had no effect on them. MLA blocked spontaneous rhythmicity. Cholinesterase inhibitors, neostigmine or physostigmine, caused marked potentiation of ACh-induced contractions and initiated rhythmic slow wave contractions in previously quiescent muscles. The present pharmacological evidence points to the co-existence of excitatory nicotinic ACh receptor (nAChRs) and mAChRs where nAChRs possibly modulate tone, and the mAChRs initiate and enhance rhythmicity.  相似文献   

5.
Isolated mouse islets were used to identify the muscarinic receptor subtype present in pancreatic B-cells. We thus compared the inhibitory potencies of atropine (non-specific), of pirenzepine (specific for M1 receptors) and of compound AF-DX 116 (specific for cardiac M2 receptors) on acetylcholine-induced insulin release, 86Rb+ efflux and 45Ca2+ efflux. The three antagonists inhibited all effects of acetylcholine, but EC50 values were markedly different: atropine = 1.5-5 nM, pirenzepine = 0.6-1.7 microM and AF-DX 116 = 1.7-11 microM. The results did not suggest that the various effects of ACh could result from the activation of different subtypes of receptors. It is concluded that muscarinic receptors of pancreatic B-cells belong to an M2 subtype distinct from the cardiac M2 receptors.  相似文献   

6.
Recent studies have demonstrated that the majority of muscarinic receptors in rabbit peripheral lung homogenates bind pirenzepine with high affinity (putative M1 subtype). In experiments of AF-DX 116 inhibiting [3H](-)quinuclidinyl benzilate or [3H]pirenzepine, we found similar inhibitory constants for AF-DX 116 binding in rat heart and rabbit peripheral lung that were 4-fold smaller (i.e. of higher affinity) than the inhibitory constant for rat cerebral cortex. This result demonstrates heterogeneity of the M1 muscarinic receptor subtype between peripheral lung and cerebral cortex.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of pirenzepine on carbamylcholine (carbachol)-stimulated pepsinogen secretion was compared with that of atropine in the isolated guinea pig gastric glands. Pirenzepine and atropine caused a dose dependent inhibition of carbachol-stimulated pepsinogen secretion. Moreover, pirenzepine as well as atropine produced a rightward shift in the dose response curve of carbachol-stimulated pepsinogen secretion but did not alter the maximum increase in pepsinogen secretion. Results therefore demonstrate that pirenzepine acts as a specific receptor antagonist in the interaction of carbachol with its receptor on gastric chief cells. However, pirenzepine was 50 times less potent than atropine in inhibiting pepsinogen secretion. Half maximal inhibitory concentration of pirenzepine was 2 X 10(-5) M when a maximally effective concentration of carbachol was used, while that of atropine was 4 X 10(-7) M. Results, therefore, suggest that muscarinic receptor on gastric chief cells to which pirenzepine binds may be an intermediate affinity type.  相似文献   

8.
J E Fox  T J McDonald 《Life sciences》1984,35(16):1667-1673
Close intraarterial injections of synthetic porcine gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) or bombesin stimulated contractions in the stomach and inhibited ongoing contractile activity in the small intestine of anaesthetized dogs. Contractile activity of the circular muscle was recorded by serosal strain gauges and phasic activity when desired was elicited by local field stimulation or intraarterial motilin injections. In the stomach (corpus and antrum) following tetrodotoxin blockade of field-stimulated contractions, the contractile response to either peptide was not present, suggesting that stimulation of receptors on nerves initiated contractions in the stomach. Similarly, in the small intestine, the inhibitory response was eliminated by tetrodotoxin suggesting a neural receptor. Pre-treatment with reserpine did not alter the inhibitory response, either in the presence or absence of atropine, therefore, adrenergic inhibitory mechanisms did not appear to be involved. The concentration of bombesin producing 50% inhibition of field stimulation (ED50) was increased following treatment with the putative M1 muscarinic antagonist, pirenzipine suggesting activation of M1 cholinergic inhibitory receptors by bombesin. After blockade by atropine of field-stimulated contractions and the contractile response to intraarterial acetylcholine, the ED50 for bombesin inhibition of motilin contractions was increased. After muscarinic blockade, the residual inhibitory response of GRP/bombesin may involve activation of a neural non-cholinergic non-adrenergic inhibitory mechanism. These results suggest that GRP and bombesin act to alter motility in the dog in vivo by affecting neural activity.  相似文献   

9.
K Hogan  F Markos 《Nitric oxide》2007,16(1):110-117
We investigated whether vagal cardiac cholinergic facilitation by nitric oxide (NO) is mediated by cardiac muscarinic receptor subtypes in the vagally innervated rat right atrium in vitro. Experiments were carried out in the presence of atenolol (4 microM). The right vagus was stimulated at 4, 8, 16, 32 Hz; pulse duration 1 ms at 20 V for 20s; vagal postganglionic activation was achieved using nicotine (0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 1mM) and the effect on cardiac interval (ms) assessed. Pirenzepine (1 microM), a M1 antagonist, attenuated vagally induced increase in cardiac interval. L-Arginine (0.34 mM) superfused with pirenzepine failed to reverse this attenuation, however, L-arginine applied alone reversed the reduction vagal cardiac slowing. Similarly, sodium nitroprusside (10 microM) applied alone, and not together with pirenzepine, was able to reverse the attenuation of vagal effects caused by pirenzepine. Synthetic MT7 (1 nM) toxin, a selective M1 antagonist confirmed these results. M3 antagonism using para-fluorohexahydrosiladifenidol (p-F-HHSiD) (300 nM) and M4 antagonism with PD 102807 (200 nM) did not affect the vagally induced increase in cardiac interval. Nicotine induced increase in cardiac interval was not altered by pirenzepine. These results show that antagonism of M1 receptors on cardiac vagal preganglionic fibres reduces vagal efficacy which can be recovered by either a nitric oxide synthase substrate or a NO donor.  相似文献   

10.
Neuroendocrine and cardiac responses were studied in healthy volunteers with the classical muscarinic antagonist, atropine and the new antimuscarinic agent, pirenzepine. The secretion of prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone (GH) was increased after metoclopramide. Typically, an antidopaminergic drug such as metoclopramide decreases rather than increases GH concentrations in serum. Pretreatment with both atropine and pirenzepine abolished the increase of GH secretion, which suggests an important role of cholinergic mechanisms in the regulation of GH secretion. The increase of PRL secretion was not inhibited by the two muscarinic antagonists. With the doses used, antimuscarinic activities in serum were comparable after atropine and pirenzepine treatments for the most part of the study. Heart rate was, however, significantly increased during atropine and higher than during saline or pirenzepine treatments throughout the study period. When compared to placebo, pirenzepine lowered heart rate slightly but significantly. The exact mechanism of this effect is unclear. We conclude that in contrast to the identical neuroendocrine effects, the cardiac responses clearly differ during atropine and pirenzepine treatments which confirms the ability of pirenzepine to distinguish muscarinic receptor sites in the central nervous system from those of the heart.  相似文献   

11.
The M1-selective muscarinic antagonists aprophen, caramiphen, carbetapentane, 2-DAEX, dicyclomine, hexahydrosiladifenidol, iodocaramiphen, nitrocaramiphen, oxybutynin and trihexyphenidyl potently inhibited binding to sigma sites in brain. Both basic ester and non-ester structural type compounds which exhibit affinity for the muscarinic receptor also demonstrated affinity for the sigma site, while the classical antimuscarinic agents atropine and QNB, and the tricyclic pirenzepine, were ineffective in binding to this site. We also observed a significant correlation between the Ki values for sigma compounds to inhibit [3H]pirenzepine binding and their IC50 values to inhibit carbachol-stimulated phosphoinositide turnover. These observations may aid in elucidating the relationship of sigma binding to inhibition of phosphoinositide turnover stimulated by cholinergic agonists.  相似文献   

12.
A family of five subtypes of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChR) has been identified based on their molecular structures and second signal transduction pathways. In the present study, we examined the antagonist binding profiles of 9 muscarinic antagonists (atropine, 4-DAMP, pirenzepine, oxybutynin, tiquizium, timepidium, propiverine, darifenacin and zamifenacin) for human muscarinic acetylcholine receptor subtypes (m1, m2, m3, m4 and m5) produced by using a baculovirus infection system in Sf9 insect cells, and rat tissue membrane preparations (heart and submandibular gland). In a scopolamine methyl chloride [N-methyl-3H]- ([3H]NMS) binding assay, pirenzepine and timepidium displayed the highest affinities for the m1 and m2 subtypes, respectively, and both zamifenacin and darifenacin had the highest affinities for the m3 subtype, although the selectivities among the five subtypes were less than 10-fold. Propiverine showed a slightly higher affinity for the m5 subtype, whereas none of the drugs used in this study was uniquely selective for the m4 subtype. The binding affinities of muscarinic antagonists for rat heart and submandibular gland strong correlated with those for human cloned m2 and m3 subtypes, respectively. These data suggest that [3H]NMS binding studies using rat heart and submandibular gland might be useful methods which predict the affinities of test drugs for human muscarinic M2 and M3 receptor subtypes.  相似文献   

13.
Our previous data indicate that M3 muscarinic receptors mediate carbachol induced bladder contractions. The data presented here were obtained by selective alkylation of M3 receptors with 4-DAMP mustard and suggest that the M2 receptor subtype may be involved in inhibition of beta-adrenergic receptor induced relaxation, therefore, allowing recontraction. Alkylation resulted in 85% of M3 receptors and 65% of M2 receptors unable to bind radioligand as demonstrated by subtype selective immunoprecipitation. Rat bladder strips subjected to our alkylation procedure contracted submaximally, and direct carbachol contractions were inhibited by antagonists with affinities consistent with M3 receptor mediated contraction. In contrast, the affinities of antagonists for inhibition of carbachol induced recontractions following isoproterenol stimulated relaxation in the presence of 90 mM KCl, indicated a contractile function for the M2 receptor that was not observed in control strips. In conclusion, these studies demonstrate a possible role for the M2 subtype in bladder smooth muscle contraction.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Abstract: : Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor expression and function in cultured rat neostriatal neurons were examined. All experiments were performed on intact neurons grown in vitro for 12-14 days. The muscarinic antagonist N-[3H]methylscopolamine ([3H]NMS) binds to a single site in cultures with a KD of 89 pM and a Bmax of 187 fmol/mg of protein, or 32,000 sites/neuron. Competition studies using [3H]NMS were performed to determine what receptor sur > types were present. Nonlinear analysis of competition curves was best described with a single binding site for atropine, pirenzepine, and AF-DX 116 {11-[[2-[(diethylamino)-methyl]-1-piperidinyl]acetyl]-5,11-dihydro-6H-pyrido[2,3-b][1,4]benzodiazepine-6-one}, with Ki values of 0.6, 62, and 758 nM, respectively. These results indicate that the muscarinic receptors present in neostriatal cultures are of the M1subtype, having high affinity for pirenzepine and low affinity for AF-DX 116. In contrast with antagonists, carbachol displaced [3H]NMS from two sites with Ki values of 6.5 and 147 μM, with the higher-affinity form predominant (83% of sites). The M1 receptor subtype was linked to phosphoinositide turnover. Carbachol stimulated the formation of phosphoinositides with an EC50 of 37 μM and was antagonized by atropine. At equimolar doses, pirenzepine was more potent than AF-DX 116 at antagonizing the response.  相似文献   

16.
The muscarinic antagonists pirenzepine and telenzepine were derivatized as alkylamino derivatives at a site on the molecules corresponding to a region of bulk tolerance in receptor binding. The distal primary amino groups were coupled to the cross-linking reagent meta-phenylene diisothiocyanate, resulting in two isothiocyanate derivatives that were found to inhibit muscarinic receptors irreversibly and in a dose-dependent fashion. Preincubation of rat forebrain membranes with an isothiocyanate derivative followed by radioligand binding using [3H]N-methylscopolamine diminished the Bmax value, but did not affect the Kd value. The receptor binding site was not restored upon repeated washing, indicating that irreversible inhibition had occurred. IC50 values for the irreversible inhibition at rat forebrain muscarinic receptors were 0.15 nM and 0.19 nM, for derivatives of pirenzepine and telenzepine, respectively. The isothiocyanate derivative of pirenzepine was non-selective as an irreversible muscarinic inhibitor, and the corresponding derivative prepared from telenzepine was 5-fold selective for forebrain (mainly m1) vs. heart (m2) muscarinic receptors.  相似文献   

17.
Effects of pirenzepine, known as a muscarinic receptor antagonist, on the contraction of dog gallbladder elicited by cholecystokinin (CCK) were examined in comparison with atropine and hexamethonium ones. Intraluminal gallbladder pressure in an in situ anaesthetized dog model was chosen for studying gallbladder motility. The intravenous administration of pirenzepine (0.75 mg/kg b.wt.), atropine (3 mg/kg b.wt.) or hexamethonium (5 mg/kg b.wt.) elicited a marked decrease in the increase of intraluminal gallbladder pressure induced by intravenous bolus injections of CCK (0.25-2 Ivy dog unit/kg b.wt.) and by continuous infusion of CCK (0.025-0.4 Ivy dog unit/kg b.wt./min). It was concluded that CCK induced gallbladder contractions were influenced by both nicotinic and muscarinic receptors.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The effect of McN-A-343 and oxotremorine on acetylcholine (ACh) release and choline (Ch) transport was studied in corticocerebral synaptosomes of the guinea pig. The synaptosomes were preloaded with [3H]Ch after treatment with the irreversible cholinesterase inhibitor, diisopropyl fluorophosphate, and then tested for their ability to release isotope-labeled ACh and Ch in the presence and absence of these agents. The kinetics of release were determined at the resting state (basal release) and in the presence of 50 mM K+. Under either condition, McN-A-343 enhanced the release of isotope-labeled ACh, whereas oxotremorine inhibited the K(+)-evoked release but had no effect on the basal release. The enhancing effect of McN-A-343 on basal ACh release was fully blocked by the selective M1 muscarinic antagonist, pirenzepine (100 nM). In contrast to its enhancing effect on ACh release, McN-A-343 potently inhibited Ch efflux as well as Ch influx. These effects were not blocked by atropine, a nonselective muscarinic antagonist. Oxotremorine had no effect on Ch transport. Binding studies showed that McN-A-343 was 3.6-fold more potent in displacing radiolabeled quinuclidinyl benzilate from cerebral cortex muscarinic receptors (mostly M1 subtype) than from cerebellar receptors (mostly M2 subtype), whereas oxotremorine was 2.6-fold more potent in the cerebellum. The displacements of radio-labeled pirenzepine and cis-dioxolane confirmed the M1 subtype preference of McN-A-343 and the M2 subtype preference of oxotremorine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The effects of central and peripheral administration of muscarinic agonists and antagonists on small intestinal motility were examined in conscious rats chronically fitted with electrodes implanted in the duodeno-jejunal wall and a cannula in a cerebral lateral ventricle. Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) administration of either atropine or pirenzepine at doses from 1 to 10 micrograms, 15 min before a 3 and 6 g lab chow meal significantly reduced the duration of the postprandial disruption of the migrating myoelectric complexes (MMC). The reduction was significantly greater for atropine, a mixed M1 and M2 muscarinic receptor antagonist, than for pirenzepine, an antagonist with a high affinity for M1 receptors. At a higher dose (10 micrograms) intra peritoneal (i.p.) administration of atropine or pirenzepine did not modify the postprandial disruption of MMC. Oxotremorine (10 ng) a M2 agonist, but not McNeil A343 (5 micrograms), a selective M1 agonist, given i.c.v. in fasted rats disrupted for 1.5 h the MMC pattern. At the same doses given i.p. oxotremorine and McNeil A343 disrupted the MMC for 15 and 45 min respectively. We conclude that the postprandial changes in the small intestinal motility involve muscarinic receptors, mainly of M2 subtype, at the level of the central nervous system.  相似文献   

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