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Effects of clenbuterol and antidepressant drugs on beta adrenergic receptor/N-protein coupling in the cerebral cortex of the rat

JM O'Donnell and A Frazer

Repeated administration of the centrally acting beta adrenergic agonist clenbuterol to rats reduced the ability of isoproterenol to increase levels of cyclic AMP in slices of cerebral cortex. This lessened response to isoproterenol was not due to a reduction in beta receptor density but appeared to be due to diminished receptor/N-protein coupling. This was determined by measuring the ability of isoproterenol to inhibit the binding of the beta adrenergic antagonist [125I]iodopindolol to membranes prepared from cerebral cortex. Using membranes prepared from vehicle-treated rats, isoproterenol, in the absence of GTP, inhibited the binding of [125I]iodopindolol with an IC50 value of 85 nM and a Hill coefficient of 0.65. GTP (250 microM) increased the IC50 value to 290 nM and the Hill coefficient to 0.98. After repeated administration of 10mg/kg of clenbuterol to rats for 8 days, isoproterenol inhibited the binding of [125I]iodopindolol with an IC50 value of 125 nM and a Hill coefficient of 0.90; GTP increased the IC50 value to 170 nM and the Hill coefficient to 0.98. It was inferred from the results of modeling of the isoproterenol competition curves that the repeated administration of clenbuterol reduced or eliminated the high-affinity component of isoproterenol binding. These effects of clenbuterol were found to depend on dose and duration of treatment and were reversible. Repeated administration of the antidepressant drugs desipramine, imipramine, phenelzine, zimelidine and mianserin twice daily for 21 days, by contrast, did not affect receptor/N-protein coupling.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Volume 234, Issue 1, pp. 30-36, 07/01/1985
Copyright © 1985 by American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics




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Copyright © 1985 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.