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.
CITATION STYLE
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
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