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  • 1970-1974  (3)
  • Block of COMT-U-0521  (1)
  • Inhibition of Uptake  (1)
  • Neuronal Uptake  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 275 (1972), S. 69-82 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Cocaine ; Nictitating Membrane ; Uptake Theory ; Inhibition of Uptake ; Supersensitivity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Pairs of smooth muscles isolated from the nictitating membrane of reserpine-pretreated cats were incubated four times with 1.2 ml of Krebs' solution containing 10 ng/ml of 3H-(±)-noradrenaline for 7.5 min each (in the presence of ascorbic acid and EDTA to prevent autoxidation and of U-0521 to block COMT). The appearance of deaminated 3H-catechols in the bath was measured and regarded as a measure of neuronal uptake. 2. Cocaine caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of the rate of deamination; the ID50 was 5.62 μM. 3. Cocaine caused a concentration-dependent increase in responses of the isolated muscles to 0.059 μM (−)-noradrenaline with a maximum increase of about 115 times normal. 4. The results were applied to the model proposed by Maxwell et al. (1966). The agreement between the expected and observed relationship between rate of uptake and degree of supersensitivity was satisfactory. Apparently, the effect of cocaine on the nictitating membrane is predominatly or entirely prejunctional. 5. The results indicate that the true K m for noradrenaline and the true K i for cocaine are considerably smaller than the apparent Km and Ki values obtained with conventional methods.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 275 (1972), S. 45-68 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Stereoselectivity of Uptake ; Noradrenaline ; Neuronal Uptake ; Neuronal Deamination ; Nictitating Membrane
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Pairs of smooth muscles isolated from the nictitating membrane of the cat were incubated with 1.2 ml of Krebs' solution containing 10 ng/ml of 3H-(±)-noradrenaline for 7.5 min (in the presence of U-0521 to inhibit COMT). Removal of the amine from the bath as well as the appearance of deaminated 3H-catechols in the bath were measured. 2. Pretreatment with reserpine did not affect the rate of removal, while increasing the rate of deamination. The ability of the muscles to retain exogenous amine for one hour was reduced to 12% of normal. 3. A certain fraction of the total production of deaminated 3H-catechols escaped into the medium. For any given duration of incubation this fraction was independent of the concentration of noradrenaline in the medium. On repeated incubation the fraction remained constant. Therefore, reliable estimates of the rate of deamination were obtained with repeated incubations of the same muscle. 4. Sympathetic denervation and/or cocaine revealed that 60% of removal (of which 10% are due to dilution) and 25% of deamination are extraneuronal. 5. For incubations of 7.5 min measured rates of deamination represent initial rates, measured rates of removal do not. 6. Unlabelled (−)- and (+)-noradrenaline were equipotent (ID50=about 1 μM) in inhibiting the deamination of 10 ng/ml of 3H-(±)-noradrenaline. This inhibitory effect must be exerted on neuronal deamination, since extraneuronal deamination (in denervated muscles) was not affected by the addition of unlabelled isomers. 7. It is proposed that, under these experimental conditions, neuronal unptake is the rate limiting step for neuronal deamination, and that neuronal uptake in the cat's nictitating membrane lacks stereoselectivity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 271 (1971), S. 59-92 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Supersensitivity to Catecholamines ; Block of COMT-U-0521 ; V-0521 ; Isolated Nictitating Membrane
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The sensitivity of various isolated organs to catecholamines was tested before and after block of catechol-O-methyl transferase (COMT) by U-0521 (3′,4′-dihydroxy-2-methyl propiophenone; 18 μg/ml for 20 min). Isolated Nictitating Membrane of the Cat. The sensitivity to catecholamines was increased by inhibition of COMT whenever the experimental conditions resulted in a high potency of the amine, i.e., when the ED50 of the amine (in the absence of U-0521) was below about 10−6 M. Thus, block of COMT potentiated the effects of (−)-noradrenaline and (−)-adrenaline after denervation (or in the presence of cocaine) but not on muscles with an intact adrenergic innervation; it also increased the sensitivity to theβ-effects but not to theα-effects of isoprenaline. No potentiation was observed for dopamine which has a low potency even after denervation. The relation between potency of the catecholamine and the degree of the sensitizing effect of U-0521 was not due to saturation of COMT or of access to the enzyme. Measurements in denervated muscles of the production of O-methylated metabolites from (±)-noradrenaline-H3 (added to the bath for 20 min in concentrations of about 10−7 to 10−4 M), and of the extraneuronal accumulation of noradrenaline-H3 did not reveal any saturation of either the enzyme or the extraneuronal accumulation of the amine. When block of COMT resulted in supersensitivity to a catecholamine, the time required to reach steady-state responses was usually increased. This is consistent with the view that block of the enzyme impaired a site of loss. Block of COMT failed to produce any substantial potentiation of the effects of the indirectly acting amines, tyramine and mephentermine. O-methylation of the released transmitter seems to occur after the amine has reached the receptors of the effector cells. Isolated Strips of Cat and Bat Spleen. Results were quantitatively similar, since block of COMT potentiated the effects of (−)-noradrenaline and (−)-adrenaline in the presence but not (or only very little) in the absence of cocaine. However, the degree of supersensitivity after block of COMT (in the presence of cocaine) was smaller than in the nictitating membrane. In the cat spleen, cocaine causes a small but significant degree of supersensitivity to isoprenaline but not to methoxamine. Isolated Sat Aorta, Block of COMT did not increase the effect of cocaine. It is suggested that differences in the morphology of the adrenergic innervation contribute to the observed organ differences.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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