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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology 299 (1977), S. 225-238 
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Stereoselective metabolism of noradrenaline ; Neuronal efflux ; Cocaine ; Phenoxybenzamine ; Rat vas deferens
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. The metabolism of 3H-(-)- and 3H-(±)-noradrenaline (NA) was studied in the isolated rat vas deferens either under conditions of uptake or of efflux of the amine. Any differences obtained between 3H-(-)-and 3H-(±)NA as substrate were interpreted as being a reflection of differences between the two isomers of the amine. 2. Uptake experiments (0.13 μM; 7.5 min) showed that neuronal mechanisms of amine disposition prevail over extraneuronal ones. Thus, most of the metabolites of 3H-NA formed during incubation with the amine (including the O-methylated products) were of neuronal origin. The acid deaminated metabolite 3,4-dihydroxymandelic acid (DOMA), tended to be much better retained by the tissue than the neutral deaminated metabolite, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylethyleneglycol (DOPEG). While neuronal uptake exhibited no stereoselectivity, a pronounced stereoselectivity was found for monoamine oxidase (MAO) [(-)NA〉 (+)NA] as well as for the enzymes which are in series with MAO, namely, aldehyde reductase and aldehyde dehydrogenase [(-)DOPEG〉 (+)DOPEG; (-)DOMA 〈(+)DOMA]. 3. After about 2 h of washout, the efflux of radioactivity from the tissue [which was previously incubated for 30 min with 1.2 μM of either 3H-(-)- or 3H-(±)NA] originated from one neuronal compartment with no stereoselectivity of the rate constant for the efflux of total tritium. The rate-limiting step for the neuronal efflux of tritium resided either in the net efflux of amine from the storage vesicles (normal tissues) or in the net efflux across the axonal membrane (tissues with the amine metabolizing enzymes inhibited). The effects of cocaine and phenoxybenzamine on the neuronal efflux of tritiated compounds strongly depended on the intraneuronal distribution of the 3H-amine. The results indicate that cocaine has only one site of action (neuronal uptake), while phenoxybenzamine exerts reserpine-like as well as cocaine-like effects. 4. The neuronal efflux of tritium from normal tissues preloaded with 3H-(-)- or 3H-(±)NA consisted mainly of amine metabolites (90% of the total; most of this was DOPEG). Since after 2 h of washout the tissue contained hardly any metabolites, these metabolites did not represent pre-formed metabolites (formed during the period of preloading) but newly formed metabolites resulting from the catabolism of the neuronally stored amine. This catabolism was brought about through the activity of presynaptic enzymes and was stereoselective in that more DOPEG, less DOMA and less O-methylated metabolites were formed from (-)-than from (+)NA.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1912
    Keywords: Dopamine uptake ; Cocaine ; Rat striatum ; Human putamen ; Parkinsons disease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The binding of radiolabelled cocaine, an inhibitor of dopamine uptake, to the post-mortem human putamen was studied and compared to that in the rat striatum. Saturation analysis of [3H]cocaine binding to the human putamen revealed the presence of a high affinity component of binding with a K d of 0.21 μmol/l and a B max of 1.47 pmol/mg protein. In addition a low affinity component (K d=26.4 μmol/l) was demonstrated, having a B max of 42.2 pmol/mg protein. Also in the rat striatum [3H]cocaine binding was both of high affinity (K d=0.36 μmol/l, B max=5.56 pmol/mg protein) and low affinity (K d=25.9 μmol/l, B max=35.6 pmol/mg protein). A pharmacological characterisation of high affinity [3H]cocaine binding to rat striatal membranes clearly indicates an association with the neuronal dopamine transporter. The IC50 values of 8 selected drugs for inhibition of [3H]cocaine binding in the rat striatum were highly significantly correlated with their potency to inhibit [3H]dopamine uptake into slices of the rat striatum. [3H]Cocaine binding was stereospecifically inhibited by (+)nomifensine and (+)diclofensine which were 50–80-fold more active than their respective (-)isomers. Drugs with dopamine releasing activity were more potent at inhibiting [3H]dopamine uptake than at competing for the high affinity site of [3H]cocaine binding. A highly significant correlation was found between IC50 values for [3H]cocaine binding in the rat striatum and the human putamen. Further evidence in support of an association of [3H]cocaine binding in the rat striatum with the dopamine transporter was obtained from lesion studies. Thus, intranigral 6-hydroxydopamine administration produced a marked (67%) decrease in striatal [3H]cocaine binding. Also in the human putamen high affinity [3H]cocaine binding sites appear localized on dopaminergic nerve terminals as evidenced by a prominent decrease in binding in the putamen obtained from subjects with Parkinsons disease. It is concluded that [3H]cocaine may be a useful ligand to examine the dopamine transporter in the rat striatum and the human putamen. Therefore it offers a new and valuable approach in the study of drug effects and neuropsychiatric diseases.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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