Background and Purpose - σ-Receptor ligands ameliorate ischemic neuronal injury and modulate neuronal responses to N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor stimulation. Because NMDA-evoked synthesis of nitric oxide (NO) may play an important role in excitotoxic-mediated injury, we tested the hypothesis that σ-receptor ligands attenuate basal and NMDA-evoked NO production in the striatum in vivo. Methods - Microdialysis probes were placed bilaterally into the striatum of halothane-anesthetized adult Wistar rats. Rats were divided into 7 treatment groups and perfused with artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) containing 3 μmol/L [14C]L-arginine for 2 to 3 hours followed by NMDA in various combinations with the following drugs: L- nitroarginine (L-NNA); the σ1-receptor ligand 4-phenyl-1-(4-phenylbutyl) piperidine (PPBP); the selective σ1-receptor antagonist 1- (cyclopropylmethyl)-4-(2'-oxoethyl) piperidine hydrobromide (DuP 734); and the noncompetitive NMDA receptor blocker MK-801 in aCSF. Right-left differences between [14C]L-citrulline in the effluent from rats treated with different drug combinations were assumed to reflect differences in NO production. Results - After a 3-hour loading period with [14C]L-arginine, addition of 1 mmol/L NMDA increased [14C]L-citrulline recovery compared with aCSF alone. This NMDA-evoked increase was inhibited by 1 mmol/L of L- NNA and PPBP. Perfusion of 1 mmol/L of the σ1-receptor antagonist DuP 734 with 1 mmol/L PPBP augmented NMDA-evoked [14C]L-citrulline recovery compared with perfusion with PPBP and NMDA. MK-801 attenuated the basal as well as NMDA-evoked [14C]L-citrulline recovery. PPBP did not cause any further attenuation in the basal and NMDA-evoked [14C]L-citrulline recovery in the presence of MK-801. Conclusions - These data indicate that a σ1- receptor ligand attenuates basal as well as NMDA-evoked NO production: Because the attenuated NO production was reversed by DuP 734, PPBP appears to act as an agonist at the σ1-receptor. Attenuated NO production by σ1- receptor agonists provides one possible mechanism for focal ischemic neuroprotection.
CITATION STYLE
Bhardwaj, A., Sawada, M., London, E. D., Koehler, R. C., Traystman, R. J., & Kirsch, J. R. (1998). Potent σ1-receptor ligand 4-phenyl-1-(4-phenylbutyl) piperidine modulates basal and N-methyl-D-aspartate-evoked nitric oxide production in vivo. Stroke, 29(11), 2404–2411. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.STR.29.11.2404
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