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Stabilization of antagonist binding to cardiac muscarinic acetylcholine receptors by gallamine and other neuromuscular blocking drugs

J Nedoma, S Tucek, AF Danilov and SA Shelkovnikov

The effects of neuromuscular blocking drugs and muscarinic agonists and antagonists on the dissociation of [3H]quinuclidinylbenzilate ([3H]QNB) from muscarinic receptors was studied on rat atrial homogenates. In typical experiments the investigated drug was added to the homogenate equilibrated with [3H]QNB and the amount of undissociated [3H]QNB receptor complexes was measured 40 min later. The antagonists atropine and pirenzepine, agonists carbamoylcholine and methylfurmethide and neuromuscular blockers pancuronium, d-tubocurarine and decamethonium caused a concentration-dependent dissociation of [3H]QNB from the receptors, which may be explained by their competition with [3H]QNB for the same (primary) binding sites. In accordance with this, these drugs did not affect the dissociation of [3H]QNB elicited by an excess of atropine, which indicates that the kinetics of dissociation of the [3H]QNB receptor complex remained unchanged in their presence. Neuromuscular blockers alcuronium, gallamine and to a lesser degree tercuronium differed from the other drugs in that 1) their effect on [3H]QNB dissociation was biphasic, being higher at their low (10(-6) to 10(-5) M) than at their high concentrations (10(-4) to 10(-3) and that 2) at high concentrations they strongly inhibited the dissociation of [3H]QNB receptor complexes elicited by the excess of atropine. Their behavior may be rationalized by assuming that at low concentrations they bind to the primary binding site making rebinding of once dissociated [3H]QNB molecules improbable (competitive mechanism), whereas at high concentrations they also act on a secondary (allosteric) binding site stabilizing the [3H]QNB receptor complexes by slowing their off-kinetics.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Volume 236, Issue 1, pp. 219-223, 01/01/1986
Copyright © 1986 by American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics







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Copyright © 1986 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.