In vivo characterization of vasodilating muscarinic-receptor subtypes in humans

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Abstract

The role of muscarinic (M)-receptor subtypes in the regulation of vascular tone has not yet been defined in humans. To analyze the role of M-receptor subtypes in the forearm resistance vasculature of normotensive volunteers (n=20), we infused acetylcholine (ACh) and methacholine (MCh) in the presence of saline and the antagonists atropine (nonselective), pirenzepine (M1 selective), and AF-DX 116 (M2 selective), using automated R-wave-triggered venous occlusion plethysmography. Schild analysis was applied by calculating plasma concentrations of the infused compounds and determining EC50 values. ACh and MCh both caused dose-dependent vasodilatation, with EC50 values of 537 and 52 nmol/L, respectively. The apparent 10-fold higher potency of MCh compared with ACh may be explained by rapid degradation of ACh in plasma. The concentration-response curve of MCh was shifted to the right by atropine, pirenzepine, and AF-DX 116, with apparent pA2 values of 8.03±0.03, 6.71±0.08, and 5.32±0.05, respectively, and slopes not different from unity. The present technique enabled us to perform M-receptor characterization by Schild analysis in humans. The affinity constants and rank order of potency-atropine>pirenzepine>AF-DX 116-suggest that cholinergic vasodilatation in this vascular bed is predominantly mediated by the M3- receptor subtype. The EC50 value of MCh and the pA2 values of pirenzepine and AF-DX 116 are comparable to values reported for in vitro experiments.

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Bruning, T. A., Hendriks, M. G. C., Chang, P. C., Kuypers, E. A. P., & Van Zwieten, P. A. (1994). In vivo characterization of vasodilating muscarinic-receptor subtypes in humans. Circulation Research, 74(5), 912–919. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.74.5.912

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