The effects of SB 216469, an antagonist which discriminates between the α(1A)-adrenoceptor and the human prostatic α1-adrenoceptor

36Citations
Citations of this article
7Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

1 The affinity of the α1-adrenoceptor antagonist SB 216469 (also known as REC 15/2739) has been determined at native and cloned α1-adrenoceptor subtypes by radioligand binding and at functional α1-adrenoceptor subtypes in isolated tissues. 2 In radioligand binding studies with [3H]-prazosin, SB 216469 had a high affinity at the α(1A)-adrenoceptors of the rat cerebral cortex and kidney (9.5-9.8) but a lower affinity at the α(1B)-adrenoceptors of the rat spleen and liver (7.7-8.2). 3 At cloned rat α1-adrenoceptor subtypes transiently expressed in COS-1 cells and also at cloned human α1-adrenoceptor subtypes stably transfected in Rat-1 cells, SB 216469 exhibited a high affinity at the α(1a)-adrenoceptors (9.6-10.4) with a significantly lower affinity at the α(1b)-adrenoceptor (8.0-8.4) and an intermediate affinity at the m-adrenoceptor (8.7-9.2). 4 At functional α1-adrenoceptors, SB 216469 had a similar pharmacological profile, with a high affinity at the α(1A)-adrenoceptors of the rat vas deferens and anococcygeus muscle (pA2 = 9.5-10.0), a low affinity at the α(1B)-adrenoceptors of the rat spleen (6.7) and guinea-pig aorta (8.0), and an intermediate affinity at the α(1D)-adrenoceptors of the rat aorta (8.8). 5 Several recent studies have concluded that the α1-adrenoceptor present in the human prostate has the pharmacological characteristics of the α(1A)-adrenoceptor subtype. However, the affinity of SB 216469 at human prostatic α1-adrenoceptors (pA2 = 8.1) determined in isolated tissue strips, was significantly lower than the values obtained at either the cloned α(1a)-adrenoceptors (human, rat, bovine) or the native α(1A)-adrenoceptors in radioligand binding and functional studies in the rat. 6 Our results with SB 216469, therefore, suggest that the α1-adrenoceptor mediating contractile responses of the human prostate has properties which distinguish it from the cloned α1-adrenoceptor or native α(1A)-adrenoceptor. Since it has previously been shown that the receptor is not the α(1B)- or α(1D)- adrenoceptor, the functional α1-adrenoceptor of the human prostate may represent a novel receptor with properties which differ from any of the α1-adrenoceptors currently defined by pharmacological means.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Chess-Williams, R., Chapple, C. R., Verfurth, F., Noble, A. J., Couldwell, C. J., & Michel, M. C. (1996). The effects of SB 216469, an antagonist which discriminates between the α(1A)-adrenoceptor and the human prostatic α1-adrenoceptor. British Journal of Pharmacology, 119(6), 1093–1100. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.1996.tb16009.x

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free