AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the unique effects of N-desmethylclozapine, a metabolite of clozapine, on muscarinic receptors, particularly M1, which may explain some of clozapine's effectiveness in treating schizophrenia.
  • N-desmethylclozapine shows stronger binding and activity at M1 receptors than clozapine itself, suggesting it could be a significant contributor to the drug's antipsychotic effects.
  • Additionally, this metabolite enhances NMDA receptor currents in rat hippocampal neurons, indicating it may assist in regulating glutamatergic neurotransmission, which is important in psychotic disorders.

Article Abstract

The molecular and neuronal substrates conferring on clozapine its unique and superior efficacy in the treatment of schizophrenia remain elusive. The interaction of clozapine with many G protein-coupled receptors is well documented but less is known about its biologically active metabolite, N-desmethylclozapine. Recent clinical and preclinical evidences of the antipsychotic activity of the muscarinic agonist xanomeline prompted us to investigate the effects of N-desmethylclozapine on cloned human M1-M5 muscarinic receptors. N-desmethylclozapine preferentially bound to M1 muscarinic receptors with an IC50 of 55 nM and was a more potent partial agonist (EC50, 115 nM and 50% of acetylcholine response) at this receptor than clozapine. Furthermore, pharmacological and site-directed mutagenesis studies suggested that N-desmethylclozapine preferentially activated M1 receptors by interacting with a site that does not fully overlap with the acetylcholine orthosteric site. As hypofunction of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-driven neuronal ensembles has been implicated in psychotic disorders, the neuronal activity of N-desmethylclozapine was electrophysiologically investigated in hippocampal rat brain slices. N-desmethylclozapine was shown to dose-dependently potentiate NMDA receptor currents in CA1 pyramidal cells by 53% at 100 nM, an effect largely mediated by activation of muscarinic receptors. Altogether, our observations provide direct evidence that the brain penetrant metabolite N-desmethylclozapine is a potent, allosteric agonist at human M1 receptors and is able to potentiate hippocampal NMDA receptor currents through M1 receptor activation. These observations raise the possibility that N-desmethylclozapine contributes to clozapine's clinical activity in schizophrenics through modulation of both muscarinic and glutamatergic neurotransmission.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC263872PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1835612100DOI Listing

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