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Vol. 288, Issue 3, 1084-1092, March 1999
2 Sympathomimetics in Isolated Receptor Membranes:
Evidence against Prolonged Effects of Salmeterol and Formoterol on
Receptor-Coupled Adenylyl Cyclase1
University of Düsseldorf, Institute for Laser Medicine,
Molecular Drug Research Group, Düsseldorf, Germany
The long-acting
2 sympathomimetics salmeterol and
formoterol have been presumed to exert their prolonged action either by binding to an accessory binding site ("exo-site") near the
2 adrenoceptor or by their high affinity for
2 adrenoceptors and correspondingly slow dissociation.
Whereas most studies with salmeterol had been done in intact tissues,
which have slow diffusion and compartmentation of drugs in lipophilic
phases, that restrict drug access to the receptor biophase, we used
purified receptor membranes from rat lung and disaggregated calf
tracheal myocytes as model systems. Binding experiments were designed
to measure the slow dissociation of agonists by means of delayed
association of (
)-[125I]iodopindolol. Rat lung
membranes were pretreated with high concentrations of agonists
(salmeterol, formoterol, isoprenaline) before dissociation was induced
by 50-fold dilution. Half-times of association of (
)-[125I]iodopindolol remained unchanged compared with
untreated controls, indicating that dissociation of agonists occurred
in less than 2 min. Adenylyl cyclase experiments were designed to
determine the on and off kinetics of
agonists to
2 adrenoceptors by measuring the rate of
receptor-induced cyclic AMP (cAMP) formation. Experiments were
performed in tracheal membranes characterized by high
Vmax values of cAMP formation. Adenylyl
cyclase activation occurred simultaneously with the addition of the
agonist, continued linearly with time for 60 min, and ceased
immediately after the antagonist was added. Similarly, when receptor
membranes were preincubated in a small volume with high salmeterol
concentrations, there was a linear increase in cAMP formation, which
was immediately interrupted by a 100-fold dilution of the reaction
mixture. This militates against the exo-site hypothesis. On the other
hand, dissociation by dilution was much less when membranes were
preincubated with a large volume of salmeterol at the same
concentration, indicating that physicochemical effects, and not
exo-site binding, underlie its prolonged mode of action.
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