The interactions of various unlabelled antimuscarinic drugs with the muscarinic receptors in the cerebral cortex, heart and urinary bladder were studied by a receptor binding technique, using (-)[3H]QNB as radioligand. In contrast to the other drugs examined, dicyclomine, benzhexol, oxybutynine and pirenzepine were bound with a significantly higher affinity in the cortex than in the heart and bladder. Furthermore, not only pirenzepine, but also dicyclomine and benzhexol were capable of distinguishing between two populations of muscarinic binding sites in the cortex. The low affinity sites for these drugs in the cortex were characterised by dissociation constants which were similar to those determined in the heart and the bladder, respectively. It was concluded that dicyclomine and benzhexol, like pirenzepine, are selective antagonists at the putative M1-receptor. Oxybutynine exhibited the same affinity profile but the tissue selectivity of this drug was less pronounced.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0014-2999(86)90697-7 | DOI Listing |
Dement Neuropsychol
May 2023
Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Research Center for Evidence-Based Medicine, Iranian EBM Center: A Joanna Briggs Institute Center of Excellence, Tabriz, Iran.
Unlabelled: Anticholinergics (ACs) are among the most prescribed drugs. Investigating the impaired cognitive domains due to individual ACs usage is associated with controversial findings.
Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of individual ACs on different aspects of cognitive function based on clinical trial studies.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther
September 2000
Program of Medical Neurobiology, Indiana University School of Medicine; and The Lilly Research Laboratories, Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis 46285, USA.
The purpose of the present study was to determine the effects of muscarinic cholinergic receptor antagonists and agonists on prepulse inhibition (PPI) of the acoustic startle reflex in rats. The muscarinic receptor antagonist scopolamine (0.03-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pharmacol Exp Ther
July 1995
Department of Pharmacology, Pharmacia Pharmaceuticals, Uppsala, Sweden.
The experiments were done to investigate the presence and subtype of functionally presynaptic muscarinic receptors in cholinergic nerves of the guinea pig urinary bladder. Bladder strips were incubated with 3H-choline and superfused with Tyrode's solution containing eserine. Secreted 3H-acetylcholine was separated from 3H-choline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNaunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol
March 1992
School of Pharmacology, Victorian College of Pharmacy (Monash University), Parkville, Australia.
The ability of several selective muscarine receptor antagonists to inhibit the effect of carbachol on prejunctional muscarine receptors on sympathetic nerve endings in the rabbit isolated ear artery was investigated to characterise the receptor subtype involved. Carbachol did not reduce responses to exogenous noradrenaline and the inhibitory effect of carbachol on responses to nerve stimulation was unaffected by hexamethonium (10 microM) indicating that the effect of the muscarine agonist was exerted prejunctionally and was not modulated by nicotine receptor stimulation. The dissociation constants or apparent dissociation constants obtained using (+/-)-benzhexol (pKB; 6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLife Sci
November 1991
Department of Medicinal Chemistry, School of Pharmacy, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond 23298-0540.
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.
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