首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
According to molecular biological and pharmacological criteria, rat heart membranes normally express only one muscarinic receptor subtype. The selective antagonists pirenzepine and AF-DX 116 bind to this receptor with a single affinity: low and high, respectively. We report here that an endogenous, intracellular factor alters the affinity of selective antagonists for muscarinic receptors in the heart. Thus, when the intracellular fluid is added back to rat heart membranes, both pirenzepine and AF-DX 116 bind to two receptor sites. Approximately 30% of the receptors bind pirenzepine with high affinity and AF-DX 116 with low affinity. Thus, while cardiac muscarinic receptors are coded for by a single mRNA and are therefore genetically homogeneous, the resulting receptor protein might behave like a mixture of receptor subtypes in intact tissues due to the influence of intracellular factors on receptor conformation.  相似文献   

2.
Cardioselective profile of AF-DX 116, a muscarine M2 receptor antagonist   总被引:26,自引:0,他引:26  
AF-DX 116 (see chemical name below) is a competitive antagonist of muscarine receptors in peripheral organs. In contrast to pirenzepine, its behaviour in functional experiments indicates selectivity for the M2 muscarinic subtype. In pithed rats AF-DX 116 inhibits vagally-induced bradycardia, an M2 response, (ED50 32 micrograms/kg i.v.) in preference to the M1-mediated pressor response to McN-A-343 (ED50 211 micrograms/kg i.v.). AF-DX 116 further discriminates among M2 receptors, showing a high affinity for the cardiac muscarine receptors. In isolated preparations, AF-DX 116 has a tenfold higher affinity for the muscarine receptors of the heart (pA2 7.33) than for those in smooth muscles (pA2 6.39-6.44). The same profile appears from animal studies, where the compound is a more potent antagonist of either endogenously or exogenously activated cardiac muscarine responses as compared to vascular, smooth muscle or secretory responses. In general, the ratios of potencies (ED50) observed in cardiac vs. other muscarine mediated functions ranged between 30 and 50. Atropine showed no discrimination, inhibiting all muscarine responses in the same range of doses. In the conscious dog intravenous AF-DX 116 increased basal heart rate, and completely reversed the reflex bradycardia induced by clonidine. Tachycardia was dose-related (ED50 79 micrograms/kg i.v.), and occurred independently of background sympathetic tone. AF-DX 116 clearly distinguishes between M1- and M2-mediated responses; it also emphasizes the long-recognized heterogeneity among the peripheral M2 subtypes. AF-DX 116, for its pronounced cardioselectivity, may have a therapeutic potential in the treatment of sinus bradycardia.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
In vitro competition binding experiments with the selective muscarinic antagonists AF-DX 116 and pirenzepine (PZ) vs 3H-N-methylscopolamine as radioligand revealed a characteristic distribution of muscarinic receptor subtypes in different regions of rat brain. Based on non linear least squares analysis, the binding data were compatible with the presence of three different subtypes: the M1 receptor (high affinity for PZ), the cardiac M2 receptor (high affinity for AF-DX 116) and the glandular M2 receptor (low affinity for PZ and AF-DX 116). The highest proportion of M1 receptors was found in the hippocampus, whilst the cerebellum and the hypothalamus were the regions with the largest fraction of the cardiac M2 and glandular M2 receptors, respectively. In certain brain areas, depending on the relative proportions of the subtypes, flat binding curves were seen for AF-DX 116 and PZ. Based on these data, an approximate distribution pattern of the subtypes in the various brain regions is presented.  相似文献   

5.
Heterogeneity of the muscarinic receptor population in the rat central and peripheral lung was found in competition binding experiments against [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate [( 3H]QNB) using the selective antagonists pirenzepine, AF-DX 116 and hexahydrosiladifenidol (HHSiD). Pirenzepine displaced [3H]QNB with low affinity from preparations of central airways indicating the absence of M1 receptors in the trachea and bronchi. Muscarinic receptors in the central airways are comprised of both M2 and M3 receptors since AF-DX 116, an M2-selective antagonist, bound with high affinity to 70% of the available sites while HHSiD, an M3-selective antagonist bound with high affinity to the remaining binding sites. In the peripheral lung, pirenzepine bound with high affinity to 14% of the receptor population, AF-DX 116 bound with high affinity to 79% of the binding sites while HHSiD bound with high affinity to 18% of the binding sites. The presence of M1 receptors in the peripheral airways but not in the central airways was confirmed using [3H]telenzepine, an M1 receptor ligand. [3H]Telenzepine showed specific saturable binding to 8% of [3H]QNB labeled binding sites in homogenates of rat peripheral lung, while there was no detectable specific binding in homogenates of rat trachea or heart. The results presented here demonstrate that there are three muscarinic receptor subtypes in rat lungs, and that the distribution of the different subtypes varies within the lungs. Throughout the airways, the dominant muscarinic receptor subtype is M2. In the trachea and bronchi the remaining receptors are M3, while in the peripheral lungs, the remaining receptors are both M1 and M3.  相似文献   

6.
The in vitro binding properties of the novel muscarinic antagonist [3H]AF-DX 116 were studied using a rapid filtration technique. Association and dissociation rates of [3H]AF-DX 116 binding were rapid at 25 degrees C (2.74 and 2.70 X 10(7) min-1 M-1 for K+1; 0.87 and 0.93 min-1 for k-1) but 20-40 times slower at 0-4 degrees C (0.13 and 0.096 X 10(7) min-1 M-1 for k+1; 0.031 and 0.022 min-1 for k-1 in cerebral cortical and cardiac membranes, respectively). Kinetic dissociation constants (Kds) were estimated to be 31.8 nM and 30.9 nM at 25 degrees C; 23.1 nM and 0-4 degrees C for the cerebral cortex and heart, respectively. In saturation studies, [3H]AF-DX 116 labeled 29 percent of the total [3H](-)QNB binding sites in the cerebral cortical membranes and 87 percent in the cardiac membranes, with Kd values of 28.9 nM and 17.9 nM, respectively. Muscarinic antagonists inhibited [3H]AF-DX 116 binding in a rank order of potency of atropine greater than dexetimide greater than AF-DX 116 greater than PZ greater than levetimide in both tissues. Except for PZ/[3H]AF-DX 116 and AF-DX 116/[3H]AF-DX 116 in the cerebral cortex, all the antagonist competition curves had Hill coefficients close to one. Carbachol and oxotremorine produced shallow inhibition curves against [3H]AF-DX 116 binding in both tissues. Regional distribution studies with [3H](-)QNB, [3H]PZ and [3H]AF-DX 116 showed that most of the muscarinic receptors in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, nucleus accumbens and corpus striatum are of the M1 subtype while those in the brainstem, cerebellum and other lower brain regions are of the M2 subtype. These results indicate that [3H]AF-DX 116 is a useful probe for the study of heterogeneity of muscarinic cholinergic receptors.  相似文献   

7.
A rat genomic DNA clone was isolated by its homology with a conserved primary sequence among the mammalian and avian beta adrenergic and porcine muscarinic receptors. A gene identified in this clone was highly homologous to the rat M1 muscarinic receptor. Stable expression of this gene was achieved in an established murine fibroblast cell line, B82. The gene product exhibits M1 type muscarinic receptor characteristics, as it has high affinity for PZ but low affinity for AF-DX 116. Carbachol stimulated the hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositols in the transfected cells. Pirenzepine had a more potent inhibitory effect on this response than AF-DX 116 since their functional inhibition constants were 13 nM and 480 nM, respectively, which is consistent with an M1 pharmacological profile. These data suggest that the M1 muscarinic receptor encoded by the gene is coupled to the hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositols after transfecting this gene into the B82 cells.  相似文献   

8.
Characterization of muscarinic receptor subtypes in human tissues   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The affinities of selective, pirenzepine and AF-DX 116, and classical, N-methylscopolamine and atropine, muscarinic cholinergic receptor antagonists were investigated in displacement binding experiments with [3H]Pirenzepine and [3H]N-methylscopolamine in membranes from human autoptic tissues (forebrain, cerebellum, atria, ventricle and submaxillary salivary glands). Affinity estimates of N-methylscopolamine and atropine indicated a non-selective profile. Pirenzepine showed differentiation between the M1 neuronal receptor of the forebrain and the receptors in other tissues while AF-DX 116 clearly discriminated between muscarinic receptors of heart and glands. The results in human tissues confirm the previously described selectivity profiles of pirenzepine and AF-DX 116 in rat tissues. These findings thus reveal the presence also in man of three distinct muscarinic receptor subtypes: the neuronal M1, the cardiac M2 and the glandular M3.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The presynaptic muscarinic autoreceptor of Torpedo marmorata electric organ has been characterised by radioligand binding studies using the subtype-selective antagonists pirenzepine, (+)-telenzepine, methoctramine, and AF-DX 116. The presynaptic receptor had relatively high affinity for the M1 antagonists pirenzepine and (+)-telenzepine (Ki = 35 and 7 nM, respectively) and lower affinities for the M2 antagonists AF-DX 116 and methoctramine (Ki = 311 and 277 nM, respectively). Comparison of these binding data with those from an M2 receptor (rat heart membranes) assayed under identical conditions and with data in the recent literature suggests that the Torpedo muscarinic autoreceptor has a pharmacology most similar to the M1 pharmacological subtype of muscarinic acetylcholine receptor.  相似文献   

11.
The heterogeneity of muscarine receptors was examined in two brain regions (cerebral cortex and cerebellum) and in some parasympathetically innervated peripheral tissues (heart, salivary gland and intraorbital lacrimal gland), by in vitro binding techniques. As a tool, we used a new antimuscarinic compound, AF-DX 116 (see text for structural formula and chemical name). In competition experiments against 3H-N-methylscopolamine (3H-NMS) or 3H-pirenzepine (3H-PZ), AF-DX 116 was found to bind with high affinity to muscarine receptors in the heart and cerebellum (KD's approximately equal to 115 nM), with intermediate affinity to M1 receptors in neuronal tissue (KD = 760 nM) and with low affinity to receptors in exocrine glands (KD's approximately equal to 3200 nM). Its receptor interaction was found to be of the simple, competitive type. Thus, AF-DX 116 shows a novel cardioselective profile. On the basis of the results which demonstrate that the muscarine receptors in the heart and exocrine glands are clearly distinct, it is proposed that these receptors may be subclassified as M2 cardiac type and M2 glandular type muscarine receptors.  相似文献   

12.
Muscarinic receptors coupled to phosphoinositide hydrolysis (PI) are present in guinea pig bladder and colon. Compared to rat cerebral cortex, an extensively studied muscarinic/PI turnover system, all agonists were more potent and efficacious in both bladder and colon. The "M1-selective antagonists", pirenzepine and dicyclomine, were much more potent (Ki = 1-5 nM) and selective (300 to 500-fold) at both rat and guinea pig brain and guinea pig colon receptors, compared to PI-coupled receptors in guinea pig bladder. In contrast, "M2-selective antagonists", AF-DX 116 and HHSiD, were 2-6 fold more potent in bladder than in brain, while HHSiD was very potent in the colon (50 times more potent than in brain). These results suggest a pharmacological heterogeneity of PI-linked muscarinic receptors. If muscarinic receptors with a low affinity for pirenzepine are defined as M2, these results show that the guinea pig bladder contains PI-linked M2 muscarinic receptors, whereas the guinea pig colon contains PI-linked M1 receptors.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The effect of the muscarinic receptor antagonist AF-DX 116 on the inhibitory action of muscarinic agonists and on responses mediated by nicotinic or muscarinic ganglionic transmission was studied in the superior cervical ganglion of the anesthetized cat. The postganglionic compound action potential evoked by cervical sympathetic trunk stimulation was depressed by methacholine or acetylcholine (ACh) injected into the ganglionic arterial supply. The depression was blocked by AF-DX 116. The compound action potentials evoked by preganglionic stimulus trains were also depressed when the intratrain frequency was 2 Hz or greater. This intratrain depression was, however, insensitive to AF-DX 116. The anticholinesterase drug physostigmine markedly enhanced the intratrain depression of the compound action potential. This effect was reversed by AF-DX 116. During nicotinic receptor block with hexamethonium, preganglionic stimulus trains with intratrain frequencies of 5 Hz or greater produced nicitating membrane contractions that could be blocked by the M1 muscarinic receptor antagonist pirenzepine. The amplitude of the contractions increased with frequency and reached a maximum at 20-40 Hz. AF-DX 116 had no effect on these responses. After administration of physostigmine, the amplitude of the nictitating membrane responses decreased with increasing intratrain frequency. AF-DX 116 reversed this effect. The data suggest that, in the superior cervical ganglion, AF-DX 116 sensitive muscarinic receptors which depress synaptic transmission are activated by exogenous agonists but not by the ACh released by the preganglionic axon terminals unless cholinesterase activity is inhibited.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The affinities of muscarinic agonists and antagonists were determined by autoradiography and image analysis in selected areas of the rat brain. IC50 values and Hill coefficients for the inhibition of the binding of 0.2 nM [3H]-QNB to dentate gyrus, superior colliculus, rhomboid thalamus and substantia nigra were measured in coronal sections. Pirenzepine displayed a high affinity for receptors in the dentate gyrus and AF-DX 116, the superior colliculus. Both pirenzepine and AF-DX 116 had high affinities for the substantia nigra and low affinities for the rhomboid thalamus. Gallamine displayed a 50-fold preference for superior colliculus over dentate gyrus receptors. Amitriptyline was less selective, showing a modest preference for substantia nigra receptors and 4-DAMP was essentially nonselective. Carbachol was the most selective agonist with a 4000-fold preference for superior colliculus over dentate gyrus receptors. Other agonists except RS 86 were also selective for superior colliculus receptors in the order carbachol much greater than arecoline greater than bethanechol greater than McN A343 = oxotremorine = pilocarpine.  相似文献   

16.
Muscarinic receptors in brain membranes from honey bees, houseflies, and the American cockroach were identified by their specific binding of the non-selective muscarinic receptor antagonist [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate ([3H]QNB) and the displacement of this binding by agonists as well as subtype-selective antagonists, using filtration assays. The binding parameters, obtained from Scatchard analysis, indicated that insect muscarinic receptors, like those of mammalian brains, had high affinities for [3H]QNB (KD = 0.47 nM in honey bees, 0.17 nM in houseflies and 0.13 nM in the cockroach). However, the receptor concentration was low (108, 64.7, and 108 fmol/mg protein for the three species, respectively). The association and dissociation rates of [3H]QNB binding to honey bee brain membranes, sensitivity of [3H]QNB binding to muscarinic agonists, and high affinity for atropine were also features generally similar to muscarinic receptors of mammalian brains. In order to further characterize the three insect brain muscarinic receptors, the displacement of [3H]QNB binding by subtype-selective antagonists was studied. The rank order of potency of pirenzepine (PZ), the M1 selective antagonist, 11-[2-[dimethylamino)-methyl)1-piperidinyl)acetyl)-5,11- dihydro-6H-pyrido(2,3-b)-(1,4)-benzodiazepin-6 one (AF-DX 116), the M2-selective antagonist, and 4-DAMP (4-diphenylacetoxy-N-methylpiperidine methiodide) the M3-selective antagonist, was also the same as that of mammalian brains, i.e., 4-DAMP greater than PZ greater than AF-DX 116. The three insect brain receptors had 27-50-fold lower affinity for PZ (Ki 484-900 nM) than did the mammalian brain receptor (Ki 16 nM), but similar to that reported for the muscarinic receptor subtype cloned from Drosophila. Also, the affinity of insect receptors for 4-DAMP (Ki 18.9-56.6 nM) was much lower than that of the M3 receptor, which predominates in rat submaxillary gland (Ki of 0.37 nM on [3H]QNB binding). These drug specificities of muscarinic receptors of brains from three insect species suggest that insect brains may be predominantly of a unique subtype that is close to, though significantly different from, the mammalian M3 subtype.  相似文献   

17.
Stimulation of muscarinic receptors increases phosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis in 132-1N1 human astrocytoma cells. To evaluate the subtype of receptors which mediate PI hydrolysis in 132-1N1 cells, the effects of: a) the nonselective M1 agonist, carbachol; b) the selective M1 agonist, 4-hydroxy-2-butynyl-trimethylammonium chloride-m-chlorocarbinilate (McN-343); c) the nonselective antagonists, atropine and scopolamine; d) the relatively selective M1 antagonist, pirenzepine; e) the relatively selective M2 antagonists, AF-DX 116 (11-2-diethylaminomethyl-1-piperidinylacetyl-5, 11-dihydro-6H-pyrido-2,3-b-1,4-benzodiazepine-6-one) and methoctramine and f) the relatively selective M3 antagonist, hexahydrosila-difenidol (HHSiD) on PI hydrolysis in 132-1N1 cells were studied. The cell pools of inositol-phospholipids were prelabelled by incubating 132-1N1 cells in a low inositol containing medium (CMRL-1066) supplemented with [3H]inositol (2 microCi/ml) for 20-24 hours at 37 degrees C. The cells were washed and resuspended in a physiological salt solution, and PI hydrolysis was measured by accumulation of [3H]inositol-1-phosphate (IP) in the presence of 10 mM LiCl. Carbachol produced time and concentration dependent PI hydrolysis (EC50, 37 microM). McN-A343 did not cause significant hydrolysis of PI in 132-1N1 cells indicating that the receptor was not of M1 type. All the above muscarinic antagonists caused a concentration dependent decrease in the level of IP in response to carbachol (100 microM). The rank order of their affinities (pA2 values) was: atropine (8.8) > HHSiD (7.6) > pirenzepine (6.8) > methoctramine (6.0) > AF-DX 116 (5.8). This rank order supports the concept that M3 (other names, M2 beta, glandular M2) receptors are linked to PI hydrolysis in 132-1N1 cells. HHSiD, which is selective for M3 receptors of the smooth muscle has higher affinity for muscarinic receptors in 132-1N1 cells than AF-DX 116 which is selective for M2 receptors in cardiac tissue. If the receptor in 132-1N1 cells had been M2, part of the rank order for affinities would have been methoctramine > AF-DX 116 > HHSiD > pirenzepine. From all of these observations, the muscarinic receptor for PI hydrolysis in 132-1N1 cells is tentatively characterized as of M3 type.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The M2-cholinoceptor subtype selective antagonist AF-DX 116 was compared with atropine with respect to effects on heart rate and salivary flow in healthy volunteers. These effects were related with in vitro occupancy of M-cholinoceptor subtypes in radioreceptor assays of plasma samples. Radioreceptor assays comprised M1-cholinoceptors in bovine cerebral cortex and M2-cholinoceptors in pig heart and rat salivary gland membranes. 3H-pirenzepine served as a label in the cerebral cortex 3H-N-methyl-scopolamine in the heart and gland preparations. Oral administration of 240 mg AF-DX 116 led to a time dependent increase in heart rate with a maximum effect comparable to atropine 40 micrograms/kg i.v. The effects of both drugs on heart rate were matched by a greater than 80% occupancy of heart M2-cholinoceptors in the radioreceptor assay of plasma samples. In contrast to the complete inhibition of salivary flow after atropine, AF-DX 116 induced an increase of salivation. The effects on salivary flow coincided with a greater than 80% occupancy of glandular M2-cholinoceptors after atropine but no detectable occupancy after AF-DX 116. Occupancy of the M1-subtype amounted to 61.7% after AF-DX 116 and a blockade of inhibitory, presynaptic M1-autoreceptors at missing postsynaptic blockade of glandular M2-cholinoceptors might explain the hypersalivation induced by AF-DX 116.  相似文献   

20.
The subtype of muscarinic receptor which mediates cAMP attenuation is not established. Therefore, several selective muscarinic antagonists were used to characterize the subtype of muscarinic receptor coupled to the inhibition of hormone-stimulated cAMP accumulation using NG108-15 neuroblastoma x glioma hybrid cells. These cells were prelabeled with [2-3H]-adenine, washed, and resuspended in a culture medium containing the phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (0.5 mM). The labeled cells were preincubated with the different antagonists 12-15 min. before they were challenged with agonists. The formation of [3H]-cAMP was activated by PGE1 (1 microM) or forskolin (1 microM). In all cases, [3H]-cAMP formed was separated and measured. Carbachol (100 microM) and McN-A343 (10 mM) were used as standard muscarinic agonists. These studies gave the following results: a) McN-A343 (10 mM), an M1 receptor agonist, was only a partial agonist causing 40% inhibition of cAMP accumulation indicating that this effect was not mediated by an M1 receptor; b) The M1-selective antagonist, pirenzepine, exhibited low affinity (pA2 6.2) further suggesting that an M1 receptor was not coupled to the attenuation of cAMP accumulation; c) Two selective M2 antagonists (AF-DX 116 and methoctramine) and M3 antagonist (HHSiD) were used to further characterize these muscarinic receptors. The order of all antagonists based on their affinities (pA2 values) could be arranged in the following order: atropine (9.0) > methoctramine (7.6) > HHSiD (6.9) > AF-DX 116 (6.6) > pirenzepine (6.2). HHSiD exhibits the same degree of affinity to M2 receptors of other tissues as it does to those of NG cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号