Literature DB >> 9249248

Pharmacological pleiotropism of the human recombinant alpha1A-adrenoceptor: implications for alpha1-adrenoceptor classification.

A P Ford1, D V Daniels, D J Chang, J R Gever, J R Jasper, J D Lesnick, D E Clarke.   

Abstract

1. Three fully-defined alpha1-adrenoceptors (alpha1A, alpha1B and alpha1D) have been established in pharmacological and molecular studies. A fourth alpha1-adrenoceptor, the putative alpha1L-adrenoceptor, has been defined in functional but not molecular studies, and has been proposed to mediate contraction of human lower urinary tract tissues; its relationship to the three fully characterized alpha1-adrenoceptors is not known. 2. In the present study, binding affinities were estimated by displacement of [3H]-prazosin in membrane homogenates of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO-K1) cells stably expressing the human alpha1A-, alpha1B- and alpha1D-adrenoceptors and were compared with affinity estimates obtained functionally in identical cells by measuring inhibition of noradrenaline (NA)-stimulated accumulation of [3H]-inositol phosphates. 3. For the alpha1A-adrenoceptor, binding studies revealed a pharmacological profile typical for the classically defined alpha1A-adrenoceptor, such that prazosin, RS-17053, WB 4101, 5-methylurapidil, Rec 15/2739 and S-niguldipine all displayed subnanomolar affinity. A different profile of affinity estimates was obtained in inositol phosphates accumulation studies: prazosin, WB 4101, 5-methylurapidil, RS-17053 and S-niguldipine showed 10 to 40 fold lower affinity than in membrane binding. However, affinity estimates were not 'frameshifted', as tamsulosin, indoramin and Rec 15/2739 yielded similar, high affinity estimates in binding and functional assays. 4. In contrast, results from human alpha1B- and alpha1D-adrenoceptors expressed in CHO-K1 cells gave antagonist affinity profiles in binding and functional assays that were essentially identical. 5. A concordance of affinity estimates from the functional (inositol phosphates accumulation) studies of the alpha1A-adrenoceptor in CHO-K1 cells was found with estimates published recently from contractile studies in human lower urinary tract tissues (putative alpha1L-adrenoceptor). These data show that upon functional pharmacological analysis, the cloned alpha1A-adrenoceptor displays pharmacological recognition properties consistent with those of the putative alpha1L-adrenoceptor. Why this profile differs from that obtained in membrane binding, and whether it explains the alpha1L-adrenoceptor pharmacology observed in many native tissues, requires further investigation.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9249248      PMCID: PMC1564783          DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701207

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Pharmacol        ISSN: 0007-1188            Impact factor:   8.739


  50 in total

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4.  Functional characterisation of alpha(1)-adrenoceptors in denervated rat vas deferens.

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Authors:  J S Morton; C J Daly; V M Jackson; J C McGrath
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7.  Identification of the alpha1L-adrenoceptor in rat cerebral cortex and possible relationship between alpha1L- and alpha1A-adrenoceptors.

Authors:  S Morishima; F Suzuki; H Yoshiki; A S Md Anisuzzaman; Z S Sathi; T Tanaka; I Muramatsu
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8.  Adrenergic receptors modulate motoneuron excitability, sensory synaptic transmission and muscle spasms after chronic spinal cord injury.

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9.  Neryl butyrate induces contractile effects on isolated preparations of rat aorta.

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Review 10.  Subtypes of functional alpha1-adrenoceptor.

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