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Vol. 282, Issue 3, 1425-1434, 1997
)-cis-2,3,3a,4,5,9b-Hexahydro-1-methyl-1H-pyrrolo[3,2-h]isoquinoline,
a Bridged-Nicotine Analog1
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology (M.I.D., W.G., J.R.J., E.L.M., J.A.R., B.R.M.), Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, and Institute for Behavioral Genetics (M.J.M., B.S., A.C.C.), University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado
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Abstract |
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We recently synthesized a bridged-nicotine (BN) analog and its
enantiomers. They failed to compete for
[3H]nicotine binding in rat brain homogenates,
yet they produced nicotine-like effects by decreasing locomotor
activity and producing antinociception in the tail-flick, hot-plate and
PPQ tests in mice. Therefore, additional in vivo and
in vitro studies were undertaken to determine whether these
compounds are indeed acting independently of the nicotinic system.
Although these analogs did not produce nicotine-like responding when
evaluated in rat drug discrimination, the racemate augmented the cue
when administered in conjunction with nicotine. Moreover, the
antinociceptive measured in the different tests and hypothermic effects
of (+)-BN, the more potent enantiomer, were not blocked by the
nicotinic antagonists mecamylamine and dihydro-
-erythroidine. Acute
tolerance developed to (+)-BN-induced antinociception but not to
hypothermia after subcutaneous administration. In addition, no
cross-tolerance was observed between (+)-BN and nicotine in the
different tests. The absence of generalization in the discrimination
test suggests that the BN analogs do not possess nicotine-like
activity. In addition, the failure of mecamylamine and
dihydro-
-erythroidine to antagonize the antinociceptive and
hypothermic effects of (+)-BN, on one hand, and the inability of the
bridge analogs to stimulate 86Rb+ efflux in brain
synaptosomes, on the other hand, provide further evidence that BN
analog agonist effects are not mediated by the alpha-4,
beta-2 receptor subunit combination. It is unlikely that alpha-7 subunits mediate the agonists effects of BN analogs
because their affinity to neuronal
[125I]
-bungarotoxin binding sites is in the
higher micromolar range. Other nicotinic receptor subtypes remain
possible candidates because (±)-BN augments the generalization of
nicotine in drug discrimination and produces some nicotine-like
pharmacological effects. BN analogs could represent a novel class of
nicotinic analgesics because naloxone and atropine failed to alter the
antinociceptive effects of (+)-BN. Alternatively, their actions may be
entirely independent of the nicotinic system.
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Introduction |
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Nicotine has diverse
pharmacological effects on the CNS, many of which are marked by both
stimulant and depressant phases of action. These effects include
alterations in locomotor activity, hypothermia, convulsions,
antinociception and others (for a review, see Martin, 1986
). The
effects of nicotine presumably occur as a result of its interaction
with receptors in the CNS. Recent evidence suggests that these
receptors are structurally and functionally diverse (for a review, see
Patrick and Luetje, 1993
). The electrophysiological and molecular
evidence for the existence of multiple functional types of neuronal
nicotinic acetylcholine receptors emphasizes the need for reliable
probes and ligands with which to study the physiological and functional
characteristics of these receptors.
The relatively low enantioselectivity of nicotine has been
intriguing for many years (Martin, 1986
). On the premise that
conformational restraint of nicotine should enhance enantioselectivity,
we prepared 1,2,3,5,6,10b-hexahydropyrido[2,3g]indolizine, a
rigid nicotine analog that incorporated the N-methyl into a third ring.
This analog was chosen because of suggestions that it had some
biological activity (Catka and Leete, 1978
). Unfortunately, this analog
failed to produce nicotine-like effects (Kachur et al.,
1986
), most likely because the N-methyl was not available for receptor
interaction. Therefore, we recently synthesized
(±)-cis-2,3,3a,4,5,9b-hexahydro-1-methyl-1H-pyrrolo-[3,2-h]isoquinoline, a BN analog depicted in figure 1, which
does not interfere with N-methyl (Glassco et al., 1993
). The
racemate was resolved into its antipodes for pharmacological
evaluation. The racemate and its enantiomers were found to be active in
inducing hypomotility and antinociception in mice. The most potent of
the three, (+)-BN, has an ED50 of 7.13 µmol/kg
for hypomotility and 7.45 µmol/kg for antinociception compared with
4.44 and 4.81 µmol/kg, respectively, for nicotine. However, these
compounds and, in particular, the (+)-enantiomer failed to compete for
[3H]nicotine binding in rat brain homogenates.
In addition, the pharmacological effects of (+)-BN were not blocked by
mecamylamine, a noncompetitive nicotinic antagonist. We concluded that
either the BN analogs are producing their effects by acting at a
nicotinic receptor that is not mecamylamine sensitive or they represent a novel class of nicotinic analgesics. There has been considerable interest in the antinociceptive properties of nicotine for several years as a mean of developing new strategies for pain management (Damaj
et al., 1994b
; Iwamoto and Marion, 1993
; May, 1992
; Perkins et al., 1994b
). These novel BN analogs may provide new
insights into the mechanism of nicotine-induced antinociception, as
well as nicotine/receptor interactions, or they may represent a new class of non-nicotinic antinociceptive agents.
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The objective of the present study was to establish a more complete
pharmacological profile of these analogs to determine whether they
share a common mechanism with nicotine. Our aim was to evaluate these
analogs in several in vivo and in vitro models that have been used to describe the actions of nicotine. Analogs were
evaluated for their ability to produce hypothermia and antinociception in mice through the use of different tests (Aceto et al.,
1983
; Martin et al., 1990
, 1993
; Suchocki et al.,
1991
). The agonist effects of the BN analogs were then tested for their
sensitivity to different nicotinic antagonists. Typically, nicotinic
antagonists such as mecamylamine and DH
E have proven to be critical
in identification of nicotinic action. There is evidence that
mecamylamine may be acting intracellularly to block the actions of
nicotine, whereas antagonists such as DH
E may be acting directly at
the nicotinic ion channel (Damaj et al., 1993
; Martin
et al., 1989
). In addition, compounds were evaluated in drug
discrimination, a model of subjective or stimulus effects that has
greater selectivity in identifying nicotine-like activity (Rosecrans,
1989
; Stolerman, 1988
, 1983).
Acute tolerance to the effects of nicotine develops in animals and
humans (Perkins et al., 1994a
) and is believed to play an
important role in the development and maintenance of dependence to this
drug. Tolerance to acute administration of nicotine has been reported
for nicotine-induced antinociception (Damaj et al., 1996b
),
hypomotility (Stolerman et al., 1974
) and convulsions (Miner
and Collins, 1988
). Investigation of the development of acute tolerance
to BN and its cross-tolerance with nicotine would help in identifying
similar mechanisms of action for these drugs; therefore, we studied the
development of acute tolerance to the pharmacological effects of BN
after systemic administration in mice, and cross-tolerance experiments
with nicotine were performed in the different tests.
A biochemical assay that measures nicotinic agonist-stimulated
86Rb+ efflux in
synaptosomes isolated from mouse brain was also used to evaluate
potential nicotinic responses of the bridge analogs. Indeed, several
observations suggest that the
86Rb+ efflux assay measures
a response that corresponds to the receptor labeled with
[3H]nicotine in binding assays (Marks et
al., 1993
, 1994
). The possibility of the involvement of other
nicotinic receptor subtypes was examined by testing the affinity the
compounds for neuronal [125I]
-BGTX binding
sites.
Although these behavioral models, coupled with biochemical tests, offer sufficient opportunity for ascertaining nicotinic effects, other neuronal systems and receptors may be involved in the actions of the bridge analogs. For that reason, we examined their affinity for >24 different brain receptors using a NOVASCREEN Drug Discovery and Development Program.
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Methods |
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Animals
For the binding and ion flux studies, female C57BL/6J/Ibg mice were bred at the Institute for Behavioral Genetics, University of Colorado. Five mice were housed in each cage and permitted free access to food (Wayne Lab Blox) and water. The vivarium in which the mice were housed was maintained on a 12-hr light/dark cycle (lights on 7:00 A.M.). Animals were 60 to 90 days old when used in the experiments. For the in vivo studies, male ICR mice (20-25 g) and male Sprague-Dawley rats (175-225 g), obtained from Harlan Laboratories (Indianapolis, IN), were used throughout the study. They were housed in groups of six and had free access to food and water.
Drugs
(
)-Nicotine was obtained from Aldrich Chemical Co. (Milwaukee,
WI) and converted to the ditartrate salt as previously described (Aceto
et al., 1979
). DH
E hydrobromide and racemic mecamylamine hydrochloride were gifts from Merck, Sharp and Dohme (West Point, PA).
Atropine sulfate was purchased from Research Biochemicals Inc. (Natick,
MA). Naloxone was supplied by the National Institute on Drug Abuse
(Washington, DC). (±)-BN and its enantiomers were prepared according
to the method previously described and characterized as the
dihydrobromide salt (Glassco et al., 1993
). NaCl, KCl, MgSO4, CaCl2, bovine serum
albumin (fraction V), CsCl, (+)-nicotine (di-p-toluoyltartrate salt) and tetrodotoxin were purchased
from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). Sucrose and HEPES were
purchased from Boehringer-Mannheim Biochemicals (Indianapolis, IN).
Budget Solve Scintillation Cocktail was purchased from RPI (Mt.
Prospect, IL). Carrier-free 86RbCl and
[3H]L-nicotine
(N-methyl-[3H]; specific activity, 78.4 Ci/mmol) was purchased from DuPont-New England Nuclear (Boston, MA) and
purified according to the method of (Romm et al., 1990
)
before use. [125I]
-BGTX
([125I]iodotyrosyl; initial specific activity,
240 Ci/mmol) was purchased from Amersham Life Science (Arlington
Heights, IL). Drugs injected to animals were dissolved in physiological
saline (0.9% sodium chloride) and given in a total volume of 0.2 ml/100 g b.wt. in rats and 1 ml/100 g b.wt. in mice. All doses were
expressed as the free base of the drug.
Intrathecal Injections
Intrathecal injections were performed free-hand between the L5
and L6 lumbar space in unanesthetized male mice (Hylden and Wilcox,
1980
). The injection was performed using a 30-gauge needle attached to
a glass microsyringe. The injection volume in all cases was 5 µl. The
accurate placement of the needle was evidenced by a quick movement of
the mouse's tail.
Binding Assays
NOVA screen.
BN analog affinity for the receptors and sites
adenosine, alpha-1, alpha-2, beta
adrenergic, dopamine1,
dopamine2,
-aminobutyric acidA,
-aminobutyric
acidB, histamine1,
histamine2, serotonin1, serotonin2, serotonin3,
cholinergic muscarinic1, cholinergic
muscarinic2, cholinergic
muscarinic3, phencyclidine (PCP), MK-801, opiates (mu, delta and kappa),
cholecystokinin, substance P, substance K and dihydropyridine (L-type
calcium channels) was tested through the NIMH/NOVASCREEN Drug Discovery
and Development Program (Hanover, MD). Briefly, competitive binding
assays were performed in either 250- or 500-µl volumes containing, by
volume, 80% receptor preparations, 10% radioligand and 10% test
compound/cold ligand (nonspecific binding determinant)/4%
dimethylsulfoxide (vehicle). All compounds were solubilized in
dimethylsulfoxide, which was diluted to a final concentration of 0.4%
in the assay. Assays were terminated by rapid filtration over Whatman
glass-fiber filters followed by rapid washing with cold buffer.
Radioactivity was determined by liquid scintillation or gamma
spectrometry. Data were reduced by a software program proprietary to
NOVASCREEN.
[3H]L-Nicotine
and [125I]
-BGTX binding.
The
inhibition of the binding of
[3H]L-nicotine and
[125I]
-BGTX to mouse brain thalamic
membranes by (
)-nicotine, (+)-nicotine, (
)-BN and (+)-BN was
determined using modifications of the method of Marks et al.
(1986)
. The binding reactions were conducted at 21°C in 100 µl of
buffer (containing 135 mM NaCl, 5 mM CsCl, 1.5 mM KCl, 2 mM
CaCl2, 1 mM MgSO4, 25 mM
HEPES 1/2Na, 20 mM glucose and 0.1%; bovine serum albumin, pH 7.5). In
addition to thalamic membranes (100-200 µg), the samples contained
either [3H]L-nicotine (11.3 nM) or
[125I]
-BGTX (1.0 nM) and (
)-nicotine,
(+)-nicotine, (
)-BN or (+)-BN at concentrations of 0.3 nM to 3 mM.
Total binding was measured in the absence of unlabeled compounds, and
nonspecific binding was determined in samples containing 10 µM
(
)-nicotine (for [3H]L-nicotine)
or 1 mM (
)-nicotine (for [125I]
-BGTX).
Incubation times were 30 min and 6 hr for
[3H]L-nicotine and
[125I]
-BGTX, respectively. The binding
reaction was terminated by dilution with ice-cold wash buffer (140 mM
NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 2 mM CaCl2, 1 mM
MgSO4 and 10 mM HEPES 1/2Na, pH 7.5) and
filtration onto glass-fiber filters that had been soaked in wash buffer
containing 0.5% polyethylenimine (top filter: GB1OOR, Microfiltration
Systems, Dublin, CA; bottom filter: Type A/E, Gelman Sciences, Ann
Arbor, MI) using a cooled Inotech Cell Harvester (Inotech, Lansing, MI) equipped with a 96-place head. The filtered samples were subsequently washed five times with ice-cold wash buffer. Tritium was measured at
55% efficiency with a Packard 1600 Liquid Scintillation counter using
7-ml vials and 1 ml of Budget Solve Cocktail, and
125I was measured at 80% efficiency with a
Packard AutoGamma Counter. The KD and
Bmax values for both ligands were also
determined from saturation curves constructed using eight
concentrations of each ligand. Protein was measured according to the
method of Lowry et al. (1951)
using bovine serum albumin as
the standard. The IC50 values for inhibition of
[3H]L-nicotine and
[125I]
-BGTX were determined using the
equation: Boundi = bound0/[l + (I/IC50)].
Inhibition constants were subsequently estimated using the
Cheng-Prusoff equation.
86Rb+ Efflux
The stimulation of
86Rb+ efflux from crude
mouse thalamic synaptosomes by (
)-nicotine, (+)-nicotine, (
)-BN and
(+)-BN and the inhibition of (
)-nicotine-stimulated efflux by (
)-BN
and (+)-BN were measured according to the method of Marks et
al. (1993)
. Crude synaptosomes were prepared by homogenizing the
mouse thalamus in 0.32 M sucrose and 5 mM HEPES 1/2Na (pH 7.5),
centrifuging the homogenate for 10 min at 1000 × g and
centrifuging the resulting supernatant at 10,000 × g
for 20 min. The resulting pellet was resuspended in 150 µl incubation
buffer per thalamus (incubation buffer contained 140 mM NaCl, 1.5 mM
KCl, 2 mM CaCl2, 1 mM
MgSO4, 20 mM glucose and 25 mM HEPES 1/2Na, pH
7.5). Loading with 86Rb+
was achieved by incubating a 25-µl aliquot of the synaptosomes with
10 µl of incubation buffer containing 4 µCi of isotope for 30 min.
After the incubation with
86Rb+, the synaptosomes
were harvested by filtration onto a 7-mm Gelman A/E glass-fiber filter
under gentle vacuum (
100 mm Hg). After two washes with 0.5 ml of
incubation buffer, the filter containing the synaptosomes was
transferred to the apparatus and perfused with 1.5 ml/min experimental
buffer (135 mM NaCl, 5 mM CsCl, 1.5 mM KCl, 2 mM
CaCl2, 1 mM MgSO4, 20 mM
glucose, 50 nM tetrodotoxin, 0.1% bovine serum albumin and 25 mM HEPES
1/2Na, pH 7.5). After a 6-min wash period, sample collection was begun.
Fractions were collected every 30 sec for 6 min. Stimulation of
86Rb+ efflux by
(
)-nicotine, (+)-nicotine, (
)-BN and (+)-BN was tested by exposing
the thalamic synaptosomes to known concentrations of the test compounds
for 1 min.
Inhibition of 86Rb+ efflux
was determined by simultaneous exposure of the thalamic synaptosomes to
(
)-nicotine (0.3, 1.0 or 3.0 µM) and a known concentrations of
(
)-BN or (+)-BN.
The EC50 values and maximal efflux rates were
calculated using the Michaelis-Menten equation: V = Vmax * D/(D + KD). The IC50 values were estimated using the equation: Vi = Vo/[l + (I/IC50)], and
apparent KI values were calculated
using the Cheng-Prusoff equation at each (
)-nicotine concentration.
All curve fits were achieved using the nonlinear least-squares
algorithm in Sigma Plot 5.0 (Jandel Scientific, San Rafael, CA).
Behavioral Assays in Mice
Antinociception.
Nicotine-induced antinociception in mice
was measured by use of the tail-flick method (D'Amour and Smith, 1941
;
Dewey et al., 1970
). Groups of six animals were used for
each dose and treatment. A control response (2-4 sec) was determined
for each animal before treatment, and test latencies were assessed at
various times after drug administration. A maximum latency of 10 sec
was imposed if no response occurred within that time. Antinociceptive
response was calculated as %MPE), where %MPE = {[(test
control)/(10
control)] × 100}. Mice were pretreated
subcutaneously with saline, DH
E, mecamylamine, atropine or naloxone
10 min before the BN analogs and tested 5 min later. The doses of
nicotinic antagonists used in this protocol are several times higher
than the AD50 values determined to block
nicotine-induced antinociception in mice (Damaj et al.,
1994a
).
10 min apart were
determined for each mouse. The normal latency (reaction time) was 6 to
10 sec. Antinociceptive response was calculated as %MPE, where
%MPE = [(test
control)/(20
control) × 100].
Six to eight mice per dose were injected subcutaneously with BN analogs
and tested at 5 min later, and dose-response relationships were
determined. For the antagonism studies, mice were pretreated subcutaneously with saline, mecamylamine(1 or 10 mg/kg) or naloxone (1 mg/kg) 10 min before the BN analogs.
For the PPQ test, male ICR mice (20-25 g) were used throughout the
study. The procedure was previously described by Pearl et
al. (1968)Body temperature.
Rectal temperature was determined with a
thermistor probe (inserted 24 mm) and a digital thermometer (Yellow
Springs Instrument Co., Yellow Springs, OH). Readings were taken just
before and 30 min after the subcutaneous injection of nicotine or the
BN analogs. Mice were pretreated with saline, DH
E or mecamylamine (subcutaneous) 10 min before nicotine analogs. The difference in rectal
temperature before and after treatment was calculated for each mouse.
The ambient temperature of the laboratory varied from 21° to 24°C
from day to day. Eight to 12 mice were tested in each treatment group,
and each animal was tested only once.
Nicotine Drug Discrimination
Subjects. Rats were housed individually in a temperature-controlled environment and provided a diet (Agway Rodent Chow) that maintained their body weight at ~85% of their free feeding weight. Water was available ad libitum in the home cages.
Training procedure.
A two-lever, operant drug-discrimination
paradigm VI 15 was used for eight operant chambers (four Lafayette
model 80001 and four BRS/LVE model sec 002). Reward was a Bioserv 45-mg
precision dustless pellet. A microcomputer with Logic 1 interface (MED
Associates, Georgia, VT) and MED-PC software (MED Associates) was used
to control schedule contingencies and record data. Rats were trained to
respond on one lever after a subcutaneous injection of nicotine (0.4 mg/kg) and the other lever after a subcutaneous injection of saline.
Rats were placed in the operant chambers 5 min after the injections.
The specific procedure for training rats to discriminate nicotine has
been previously described (Rosecrans, 1989
). Animals were run 5 days/week on a double-alternation schedule (2 days of nicotine and then
2 days of vehicle). Animals learned to discriminate nicotine from
vehicle after 50 to 100 training sessions.
Criterion testing.
Animals were required to meet a criterion
of 3 successive days of
80% correct-lever responding before testing
was initiated. The criterion testing sessions lasted 2 minutes and were
run under extinction (no reinforcement for correct or incorrect
responding). Test sessions were coupled with training sessions of 13 minutes. During the training portion of the session, the animal was
reinforced for pressing the appropriate lever for that day's
injection. After animals met the criterion, test sessions were
conducted on Monday and Thursday. If an animal pressed
80% on the
correct lever during a check session, they were tested the next day.
This schedule resulted in Wednesday being a training day.
General testing. Test sessions, like check sessions, were 2 minutes long and were run in extinction. However, unlike check sessions, there was no training component.
Dose-response testing. Initial testing was used to assess the dose-responsiveness of nicotine and BN analogs under the VI-15 schedule after subcutaneous injection at different doses. Injections were given 5 min before placement of the animal in the operant chamber. To determine whether BN analogs might alter the discriminative stimulus cue of nicotine, studies were conducted in which the analogs were administered 5 min before nicotine and drug discrimination testing was conducted 5 min after the nicotine injection. The schedule of injections was determined using a Latin-square design.
Statistical Analysis
Data were analyzed statistically by an analysis of variance
followed by the Fisher PLSD multiple-comparison test. The null hypothesis was rejected at the .05 level. ED50
values with 95% CLs were calculated by unweighted least-squares linear
regression for log-doses probits, as described by Tallarida and Murray
(1987)
. The effects of drugs on rectal temperature were calculated from double-reciprocal analysis (1/effect vs. 1/dose) to yield a
theoretical maximum effect, as described by Tallarida and Murray
(1987)
. The ED50 values were determined by
calculating the functional response for each drug dose (based on the
maximum effect being 1.0), converting the data to probit values and
determining the unweighted least-squares linear regression for the
log-dose vs. probit as described by Tallarida and Murray
(1987)
. For the PPQ test, ED50 values with 95%
CLs were determined according to the method of Litchfield and Wilcoxon
(1949)
.
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Results |
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Binding Assays
BN enantiomers at 10 µM had no effect on the binding of
radioligands to mu, delta or kappa
opioid; muscarinic; serotonin1, serotonin2 or serotonin3;
adenosine; adrenergic; dopamine1 and dopamine2;
-aminobutyric acid;
cholecystokinin; substance P; excitatory amino acid; dihydropyridine or
PCP receptors (data not shown).
The inhibition of the binding of
[3H]L-nicotine by (
)-nicotine,
(+)-nicotine, (
)-BN and (+)-BN is shown in figure
2. Although all four compounds inhibited
the binding of [3H]L-nicotine,
these compounds differed markedly in potency. (
)-Nicotine was the
most potent inhibitor, with a KI
value of 3.1 nM, and was ~30-fold more potent than (+)-nicotine
(KI = 99 nM). Both (
)-BN, with a
KI value of 23 µM, and (+)-BN, with
a KI value of 39 µM, were much less
potent inhibitors of
[3H]L-nicotine binding
than either nicotine isomer.
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The inhibition of [125I]
-BGTX binding by
(
)-nicotine, (+)-nicotine, (
)-BN and (+)-BN is illustrated in
figure 3. All four compounds bound in a
competitive fashion. (
)-Nicotine was the most potent of the four
compounds, with a KI value of 0.21 µM. (+)-Nicotine was approximately one fifth as potent as
(
)-nicotine (KI = 1.0 µM). The BN
compounds were relatively more potent inhibitors of
[125I]
-BGTX binding than they were of
[3H]L-nicotine binding.
The inhibitory potency of (
)-BN (KI = 0.98 µM) was nearly identical to that of (+)-nicotine, whereas
(+)-BN was approximately one sixth as potent
(KI = 6.2 µM). Both (
)-BN and
(+)-BN were more potent inhibitors of
[125I]
-BGTX binding than they were of
[3H]L-nicotine binding.
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86Rb+ Efflux
Concentration-effect curves for the stimulation of
86Rb+ efflux from mouse
thalamic synaptosomes are shown in figure
4. Both (
)-nicotine and (+)-nicotine
evoked saturable, concentration-dependent efflux of
86Rb+. However,
(
)-nicotine was ~16 times more potent than (+)-nicotine (EC50 = 0.44 ± 0.05 and 7.4 ± 1.4 µM, respectively); (
)-nicotine also evoked greater efflux than
(+)-nicotine (maximal efflux rates = 2.58 ± 0.07% and
1.96 ± 0.10% tissue content/min, respectively). In contrast,
neither (
) nor (+)-BN stimulated
86Rb+ efflux at
concentrations as high as 100 µM.
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As illustrated in figure 5, both BN
analogs were inhibitors of nicotine-stimulated
86Rb+ efflux. The
progressive shift to the right of the inhibition curves as the
concentration of (
)-nicotine increased indicates that the inhibition
is competitive. The IC50 value for (
)-BN increased from 3.1 ± 1.4 to 8.1 ± 1.1 to 20.9 ± 3.0 µM as the concentration of (
)-nicotine increased from 0.3 to 1.0 to
3.0 µM. Similarly, the IC50 values for
(+)-bridged nicotine increased from 22.9 ± 4.8 to 33.0 ± 5.0 to 83.7 ± 18.5 µM. The inhibition constants
(KI values) were subsequently
calculated to be 2.4 and 11.5 µM for (
)-BN and (+)-BN,
respectively.
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Discrimination Studies
(±)-BN was administered at doses of 1.2, 2.4 and 4.8 mg/kg and
was found to produce severe rate suppression at all three doses. The
few responses that were made were predominately on the vehicle lever.
Efforts were then made to determine whether the individual enantiomers
would produce nicotine-like responding without rate suppression.
(
)-BN, at doses of 0.4, 0.8, 1.6, 3.2 and 6.4 mg/kg free base, failed
to generalize from the nicotine cue but significantly reduced the
response rate. However, contrary to (+)-BN, the decrease observed after
the (
)-isomer was not dose dependent (fig.
6B). (+)-BN also failed to generate
nicotine-like responding when tested at doses of 0.1, 0.2, 0.4 and 0.8 mg/kg free base. Severe rate suppression was produced in three of the
five rats at 0.4 mg/kg and for all five rats at 0.8 mg/kg (fig. 6B).
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To determine whether these analogs might alter the discriminative
stimulus cue of nicotine, studies were conducted in which the analogs
were administered 5 min before nicotine and drug discrimination testing
was conducted 5 min after the nicotine injection. Because (±)-BN
produced severe rate suppression at all three doses, we chose to study
the lowest dose of 1.2 mg/kg with combination of nicotine. As can be
seen in figure 7A, nicotine produced a
dose-related generalization that was the same both before and after
testing nicotine in the presence of (±)-BN. As stated above,
administration of (±)-BN alone at a dose of 1.2 mg/kg produced severe
rate suppression. When this dose of (±)-BN was injected before
nicotine, the rate suppressive characteristic of (±)-BN did not occur
at the two higher doses of nicotine [response rate of 0.85 ± 0.05 with 0.2 mg/kg nicotine vs. 0.40 ± 0.01 with the
combination of 0.2 mg/kg nicotine and 1.2 mg/kg (±)-BN]. Pretreatment
with (±)-BN produced a significant potentiation of the effects of
nicotine at its lower doses [with 0.2 mg/kg (df = 5, t = 2.943, P < .0321), with 0.1 mg/kg
(df = 3, t = 10.521, P < .0018)
and with 0.05 mg/kg (df = 4, t = 8.47, P < .0011)], as indicated in figure 7A.
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To determine which enantiomer was responsible for this augmentation,
these interaction studies were replicated with the individual enantiomers. When 2.0 mg/kg (
)-BN was given 5 min before
administration of nicotine at doses of 0.05 and 0.1 mg/kg, the rats
responded as if they had been injected with vehicle. However,
administration of the (+)-enantiomer at a low dose (0.2 mg/kg) 5 min
before nicotine (0.025 and 0.1 mg/kg) potentiated the discriminative
stimulus (fig. 7B). Indeed, responses at the nicotine lever increased
from 14 ± 4% to 25 ± 6% in rats pretreated with (+)-BN
and challenged with nicotine at 0.025 mg/kg. The response of higher
dose of nicotine (0.1 mg/kg) was significantly increased in rats
pretreated with (+)-BN (40 ± 10% vs. 60 ± 7%
in saline- and (+)-BN-treated rats, respectively). Higher doses of
(+)-BN were not tested.
Antinociceptive Studies
Dose-response relationships were established for BN isomers in
mice by measuring antinociception at the time of maximal effect (fig.
8) in the hot-plate test. At 5 min after
(+)-BN administration (subcutaneous), ED50 values
(CLs) were determined to be 3.1 (1.6-5.9) mg/kg or 9 µmol/kg.
(
)-BN was less active than the (+)-isomer, with 40% analgesia at a
dose of 40 mg/kg. When mice were pretreated with (+)-BN, abdominal
stretching behaviors were inhibited in a dose-related manner (fig. 8),
yielding ED50 values of 1.5 (0.6-4.0) mg/kg.
Furthermore, a significant enantioselectivity was found in mice after
subcutaneous administration with the (
)-isomer in the PPQ test, with
a dose of 30 mg/kg yielding a 55% analgesia.
|
Antagonism studies.
The subcutaneous administration of (+)-BN
(6 mg/kg) produced >80% antinociception in the tail-flick test, which
was consistent previous reports (Glassco et al., 1993
). This
effect of (+)-BN was not blocked by pretreatment with several
antagonists (fig. 9). Indeed,
mecamylamine, a noncompetitive nicotinic antagonist, at doses of 1 and
5 mg/kg did not affect (+)-BN antinociception. A 3 mg/kg dose of
DH
E, a competitive nicotinic antagonist, also failed to alter the
antinociceptive effects of (+)-BN. We previously showed that the
AD50 values of these antagonists, when used in this protocol to block nicotine-induced antinociception, were 0.045 and
0.45 mg/kg for mecamylamine and DH
E, respectively (Damaj et
al., 1994a
). In addition, naloxone (1 mg/kg) and atropine (10 mg/kg), opiate and muscarinic receptor antagonists, respectively, failed to block or attenuate (+)-BN-induced antinociception in the
tail-flick test. Similarly, mecamylamine (at 1 and 10 mg/kg) and
naloxone (at 1 mg/kg) failed to significantly block the effects of
(+)-BN in the hot-plate and PPQ tests (data not shown). By themselves,
the antagonists did not cause antinociception at the indicated doses
and times in all tests.
|
Antinociception after intrathecal injection.
Intrathecal
administration of (+)-BN to mice caused a dose-dependent
antinociception with an ED50 value of 102 (46-185) µg/animal or 0.29 µmol/animal (fig.
10). Nicotine was four times more
potent than (+)-BN after intrathecal injection [11.8 (7-22)
µg/animal or 0.07 µmol/animal[. On the other hand, the effect of
an intrathecal dose of 500 µg of (
)-BN/animal (12% MPE) was not
significantly different from the saline control.
|
Development of tolerance.
To determine whether animals could
develop acute tolerance to the antinociceptive effects of (+)-BN, mice
received a dose of 10 mg/kg (+)-BN and then different groups of animals
were challenged at hourly intervals with subsequent doses of 10 mg/kg
(+)-BN. Animals were tested only once, and the maximum number of
treatments any group received was four subcutaneous injections. Figure
11 shows that tolerance developed to
(+)-BN-induced antinociception after the first dose. Indeed, a
significant decrease of the %MPE was seen after the second injection
of the drug (from 92% to 39%). After the third dose, the effect was
no longer significantly different from the saline control. However, no
acute cross-tolerance developed to (+)-BN-induced antinociception after
subcutaneous administration (table 1) in
mice pretreated with nicotine. Indeed, animals pretreated with nicotine
developed acute tolerance to a subsequent dose of nicotine but not
(+)-BN in the tail-flick test.
|
|
Body Temperature Studies
Effect on body temperature.
The time course of the effect of
(+)-BN on body temperature was similar to that of nicotine, with a
maximum occurring at 15 to 30 min after injection. At 2 hr after
injection, the effect was not significantly different from control
values (fig. 12A). (+)-BN after
systemic subcutaneous administration caused a dose-dependent hypothermia in mice with an ED50 value of 5.88 (3.2-10.7) mg/kg or 16.3 µmol/kg (fig. 12B). (+)-BN-induced
hypothermia was 3 times less potent than the effect of nicotine
[ED50 = 1.00 (0.57-1.63) mg/kg or 6 µmol/kg]. (
)-BN was less potent in producing hypothermia than the
(+)-BN with an ED50 value of 88 (34-228) mg/kg
(fig. 12B).
|
Antagonism studies.
(+)-BN-induced hypothermia after systemic
administration in mice (10 mg/kg) was not blocked by pretreatment with
mecamylamine (1 mg/kg subcutaneous) or DH
E (3 mg/kg subcutaneous).
However, nicotine-induced hypothermia (2 mg/kg subcutaneous) was
blocked by both nicotinic antagonists (fig. 12C).
Development of tolerance.
Using the same protocol described
above for the antinociception studies, tolerance to the hypothermic
effect of (+)-BN after systemic administration (10 mg/kg subcutaneous)
did not develop after repeated administration of (+)-BN (fig.
13).
|
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
It has been known for a long time that nicotine has relatively low
enantioselectivity (15-30-fold regarding behavioral effects in
animals) (Aceto et al., 1979
; Nordberg, 1993
). One of the
most logical explanations for both (+)- and (
)-nicotine exhibiting pharmacological activity is the highly flexible nature of nicotine allows both isomers to assume almost superimposable conformations. Synthesis of rigid analogs, such as BN, should therefore result in a
greater degree of enantioselectivity. As we recently described (Glassco
et al., 1993
), (±)-BN and its enantiomers were found to be
effective in inducing hypomotility and antinociception in mice, two
effects that are shared by nicotine. Although the (+)-enantiomer of BN
was less potent than nicotine with regard to antinociception, it was
more potent than its corresponding (
)-enantiomer in the different
analgesic models used. The latter produced antinociception in the tail
flick test that was almost 10-fold less than that produced by the
(+)-enantiomer. The two enantiomers also differed in that the
(
)-enantiomer failed to produce motor impairment at doses that were
20 times greater than that of the (+)-enantiomer. The fact that one of
the isomers produced pharmacological effects similar to those of
nicotine was not unexpected in that these derivatives are structurally
related to nicotine. However, the observation that these analogs
competed for [3H]nicotine receptor binding only
at very high concentrations was surprising. We had also expected the
enantioselectivity to be considerably higher. Therefore, it became
important to establish the complete pharmacological profile of BN and
establish whether it is producing its effects through either nicotinic
or non-nicotinic mechanisms. Such an investigation is complicated by
molecular and biochemical data that suggest the existence of multiple
nicotinic receptors in the CNS to which specific ligands and probes are of limited availability. The present work, combining behavioral and
biochemical observations, indicates that nicotinic analogs with
intriguing profile are emerging.
It is well established that nicotine drug discrimination is an
exceptionally reliable method for assessing nicotine behavioral properties (Stolerman, 1990
). The nicotine discrimination has been
shown to be highly specific and mediated by central nicotinic receptors. However, the specific receptor subtype mediating this effects is still unknown. It has been suggested that the
alpha-4, beta-2 receptor may be involved in the
discriminative stimulus of nicotine because an excellent correlation
has been found between potency in nicotine drug discrimination and
[3H]nicotine binding (Damaj et al.,
1996a
; Stolerman et al., 1995
). Only those compounds that
inhibit [3H]nicotine binding sites with high
affinity produce nicotine-like discriminative effects. Furthermore,
MLA, an alpha-7 antagonist, failed to antagonize the
discriminative stimulus of nicotine after systemic and
intracerebroventricular administration in rats (Brioni et
al., 1996
). BN analogs failed to generalize to nicotine at the
doses tested. The (+)-enantiomer appears to be slightly more potent
than nicotine in producing rate suppression and >10 times more potent
than the (
)-enantiomer. Clearly, these compounds are entering the
brain and producing pharmacological effects. However, the failure of
both enantiomers of BN to generalize from the nicotine cue demonstrated
that these agents do not share all of the pharmacological properties of
nicotine. On the other hand, BN analogs produced hypothermia and
antinociception after administration in mice. One logical conclusion is
that the analogs are producing these nicotine-like effects by acting
through mechanisms distinct from those of nicotine. In addition, the
failure of mecamylamine and DH
E to antagonize the antinociceptive
and hypothermic effects of (+)-BN are consistent with this notion. It
is quite evident that constructing this rigid analog resulted in a
unique derivative in that it is capable of producing some nicotine-like
properties that are believed to be mediated through the
alpha-4, beta-2 receptor, yet it does not
interact with this receptor in a fashion comparable to that of
nicotine.
Although one reasonable conclusion could be that the enantiomers of BN are incapable of interacting with the alpha-4, beta-2 receptor, the potentiation of the nicotine cue in the drug discrimination paradigm suggests otherwise. One possible explanation for the enhancement by BN of the nicotine cue is that it acts at the alpha-4, beta-2 receptor but in such a manner that it fails to directly compete for nicotine. However, the inability of the BN analogs to stimulate 86Rb+ efflux in brain synaptosomes provide further evidence that the effects produced by the BN analogs are not mediated by the nicotine receptors that are labeled by [3H]nicotine. Actually, the BN analogs were weak inhibitors of nicotine-stimulated 86Rb+ efflux, an action that is opposite that found in nicotine drug discrimination. It is easier to envision a binding site different from the agonist site to explain the antagonistic activity of BN analogs that do not bind directly to [3H]nicotine sites; however, it is difficult to reconcile potentiating effects in drug discrimination and antagonistic properties in nicotine-stimulated 86Rb+ efflux.
The lack of agonist effects on the alpha-4,
beta-2 receptor subtype, raises the possibility of the
involvement of other nicotinic subunits in the actions of BN. It is
unlikely that alpha-7 subunits mediate the effects of BN
analogs because their affinity to neuronal [125I]
-BGTX binding sites is in the higher
micromolar range. Other nicotinic receptor subtypes remain as possible
candidates. Indeed, BN is may be producing its effects by acting on
nicotinic receptor subtypes that are not mecamylamine sensitive.
These BN analogs may represent a novel class of analgesics. (+)-BN
elicited antinociception in the tail-flick test with an ED50 value of 7.45 and 0.29 µmol/kg after
systemic and intrathecal injections, respectively. Its effect is
enantioselective because (
)-BN produced little analgesia at a dose 5 times higher than the ED50 value for (+)-BN.
Similar results were observed with the hot-plate test and a chemically
induced pain model or PPQ test, with (+)-BN more active in the PPQ test
than in the thermal stimulus tests. The failure of naloxone and
atropine to antagonize the antinociceptive effects of (+)-BN suggests
that the opiate and muscarinic mechanisms are not involved, which
correlates with a lack of affinity of BN analogs to opioid and
muscarinic receptors. Finally, a significant degree of tolerance was
observed to the antinociceptive effects after repeated administration
of (+)-BN, a well known and described phenomenon for nicotine (Ochoa
et al., 1990
; Tripathi et al., 1982
). On the
other hand, failure of (+)-BN and nicotine to develop cross-tolerance
again suggests separate mechanisms. The fact that (+)-BN was incapable
of producing tolerance to its hypothermic effects provides an
additional distinction from nicotine.
The overall results of this study demonstrate the complexity of the interaction between nicotinic ligands with their receptors. In this context, BN may represents a family of new nicotinic ligands interacting in a selective manner with nicotinic receptors and may serve as a unique tool for unraveling the complexities of neuronal nicotinic receptors. On the other hand, these novel analogs could be producing their effects via mechanisms not shared directly by nicotine. These results suggest that the acute effects of BN analogs are not mediated by the alpha-4, beta-2 receptor subunit combination. Although the alpha-4, beta-2 receptor is unlikely to mediate the agonist effects of BN, our findings clearly show that BN is acting through a unique mechanism to modulate some of the effects of nicotine.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication May 27, 1997.
Received for publication November 12, 1996.
1 This work was supported by National Institute on Drug Abuse Research Grant DA-05274. We gratefully acknowledge the NIMH/NOVASCREEN Psychotherapeutic Drug Discovery and Development Program (Contract N01-MH20003) for in vitro receptor binding.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. M. Imad Damaj, Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23298-0613.
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
CNS, central nervous system;
%MPE, maximum
possible effect;
CL, confidence limit;
BN, bridge-nicotine;
DH
E, dihydro-
-erythroidine;
BGTX, bungarotoxin.
| |
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