| Literature DB >> 4086990 |
Abstract
The enantiomers of 3-PPP or haloperidol were injected in various doses to rats 1 hour after the established dopamine receptor ligand N,N-dipropyl-5,6-ADTN. After another 40 minutes the binding of the ligand to the striatum was measured by high performance liquid chromatography, using the level in the cerebellum as "blank". (-)-3-PPP was found to cause a maximum 71% displacement of the ligand from the striatal binding sites. Haloperidol proved to be more potent but not significantly more efficacious in displacing the ligand. However, the combined treatment with (-)-3-PPP and haloperidol caused a stronger displacement of the ligand than (-)-3-PPP alone, suggesting that the binding-site populations available for the two agents are not fully identical. (+)-3-PPP also caused displacement of the ligand but was considerably less potent than its enantiomeric twin. The results are discussed against the background of the different pharmacological profiles of the 3-PPP enantiomers and haloperidol. It is suggested that an inverse relationship may exist between receptor affinity and intrinsic activity and that such a relationship may be inherent in the mechanism underlying receptor stimulation.Entities:
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Year: 1985 PMID: 4086990 DOI: 10.1007/BF01256465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm Impact factor: 3.575