Department of Biopharmacy, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences,
University of Shizuoka, Shizuoka, Japan
 |
Introduction |
The
chain of events from drug administration to a certain pharmacological
endpoint is enormously complicated. It is known that a number of drugs
exert their pharmacological actions via drug-receptor interaction. The
drug-receptor interaction is measurable, and the magnitude of the
interaction depends on the affinity of the drug to the receptors as
well as on the concentration of the drug in the biophase. The biophase
concentration depends not only on the amount of drugs administered but
on many pharmacokinetic factors including absorption, distribution, and
elimination processes. The binding affinity of compounds to various
receptors in the development of novel drugs has been evaluated mainly
by in vitro radioligand binding in tissue membrane preparations and in
intact cells. However, the in vitro receptor-binding characteristics may not necessarily assure pharmacological specificity in vivo because
various pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic factors are not taken into
account. In fact, Beauchamp et al. (1995)
demonstrated that the
affinities of 13 angiotensin II antagonists for angiotensin II subtype
1 receptor determined in vitro with rat adrenal membrane did not
correlate well with in vivo pharmacological potency. Thus, despite the
extensive use of in vitro assays for initial screening of antagonists,
which may have potential therapeutic effects, the apparent in vitro
affinities for a group of potent angiotensin II subtype-1 receptor
antagonists may be not predictive of in vivo potencies. Therefore, the
characterization of drug-receptor interaction under physiological
conditions would provide more practical information for the evaluation
of novel drugs.
Currently, new types of
1 adrenoceptor
antagonists that exhibit high selectivity to
1
adrenoceptors in the prostate are receiving a great deal of attention
in terms of developing effective therapeutic agents for bladder outlet
obstruction with less vascular side effects in patients with benign
prostatic hyperplasia. The
1 adrenoceptor
antagonist, tamsulosin, has been shown to antagonize potently
1 adrenoceptor-mediated responses in the lower
urinary tract and prostate (Honda et al., 1985
; Honda and Nakagawa,
1986
) and improve urinary obstruction in patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia with less incidence of orthostatic hypotension (Chapple, 1996
; Wilde and McTavish, 1996
).
1
Adrenoceptors have been classified into several subtypes (Hieble et
al., 1995
; Michel et al., 1995
). Previous in vitro receptor-binding
studies have shown that tamsulosin is a more selective
antagonist of
1A and
1D adrenoceptor subtypes than
1B subtype (Michel and Insel, 1994
; Testa et
al., 1995
; Michel et al., 1996
; Taguchi et al., 1997
) and that
[3H]tamsulosin may be a suitable radioligand to
label
1 adrenoceptors because it has a higher
binding affinity and lower level of nonspecific binding than
[3H]prazosin and
[3H]bunazosin (Yazawa et al. 1992
; Yamada et
al., 1994b
). However, the in vivo receptor-binding characteristics of
this drug have been clarified minimally, and, to our knowledge, there
have been no reports of an assay procedure for
1 adrenoceptors under physiological conditions, except in a recent report by Yamada et al. (1998)
, who have
shown briefly in vivo binding of [3H]tamsulosin
in rat tissues. Therefore, the present study was performed to measure
simultaneously
1 adrenoceptors in various tissues of rats by [3H]tamsulosin in vivo and
to examine whether this technique could be applied to characterize
their receptor-binding specificities in relation to the
pharmacokinetics of novel
1 adrenoceptor
antagonists to serve as therapeutically useful agents in bladder outlet
obstruction as a result of benign prostatic hyperplasia.
 |
Experimental Procedures |
Materials.
[3H]Tamsulosin
([3H]YM617, 2.08 TBq/mmol) was synthesized by
Amersham Intl. (Buckinghamshire, England), and it was kindly provided by Drs. O. Inagaki and K. Honda (Yamanouchi Pharm. Co. Ltd.,
Ibaraki, Japan). [14C]Iodoantipyrine (2.0 GBq/mmol) was purchased from DuPont NEN (Wilmington, DE). The following
drugs were kindly donated by the companies indicated: prazosin
hydrochloride, Pfizer Pharm. Co. Ltd. (Tokyo, Japan) and tamsulosin
hydrochloride, Yamanouchi Pharm. Co. Ltd. Phentolamine hydrochloride,
yohimbine hydrochloride, and (
)propranolol hydrochloride were
purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). All other drugs and
materials were obtained from commercial sources.
Animals.
Male Sprague-Dawley rats (Japan SLC Inc., Shizuoka,
Japan) weighing approximately 200 g were used. Rats were housed
with a 12-h light/dark cycle and fed laboratory food and water ad libitum.
In Vivo [3H]Tamsulosin Binding.
In vivo
measurement of specific [3H]tamsulosin binding
in rat tissues was performed as described for the in vivo measurement of calcium channel antagonist receptors in rat tissues (Uchida et al.,
1995
). Rats were anesthetized with diethyl ether, and [3H]tamsulosin at the dose of 1.3 nmol/kg (555 kBq in 150 µl of saline) was injected into the femoral vein. The
animals were allowed to recover; they were then sacrificed by taking
blood from the descending aorta under temporary anesthesia with diethyl
ether 10 min after the injection to minimize the effect of metabolism of the radioligand. In the experiment examining the time course of
[3H]tamsulosin binding, rats were sacrificed at
3, 10, 60, 120, and 240 min. A blood sample was taken from the
descending aorta, and tissues (prostate, vas deferens, aorta,
submaxillary gland, spleen, heart, lung, liver, kidney, and cerebral
cortex) were rapidly removed. After dissection on ice, each tissue was
homogenized in ice-cold 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer to a final tissue
concentration of 10 mg/ml using a Kinematica Polytron homogenizer.
Particulate-bound radioactivity was determined by rapid filtration of 1 to 3 ml of the homogenate over Whatman GF/C filters, which were washed subsequently with 2 ml of ice-cold buffer. The particulate-bound radioactivity was measured by a liquid scintillation counter after the
addition of scintillation fluids (2 liters of toluene, 1 liter of
Triton X-100, 15 g of 2,5-diphenyloxazole, and 0.3 g of
1,4-bis[2-(5-phenyloxazolyl)]benzene). In this case,
particulate-bound radioactivity of
[3H]tamsulosin in each tissue from phentolamine
(3.15, 31.5, 62.9, and 126 µmol/kg i.p., 0.5-h pretreatment)- or
nifedipine (28.9 µmol/kg p.o., 1-h pretreatment)-administered rats
was determined. Based on the data with pharmacological
specificity, particulate-bound radioactivity from vehicle and
phentolamine (62.9 µmol/kg i.p.)-pretreated rats was defined as total
binding and nonspecific binding, respectively, and the difference could
be determined as in vivo specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding. In the preliminary
experiment, it was shown that there was no significant difference in
the amount of in vivo specific [3H]tamsulosin
binding between once- and twice-washout with 2 ml of ice-cold buffer of
Whatman GF/C filters after the filtration of tissue homogenates. Thus,
we considered that nonspecifically bound radioactivity could be almost
removed by once-washout with 2 ml of buffer under the present assay
condition. The data were expressed as femtomole per milligram of
tissue (wet weight).
To construct saturation curves of
1
adrenoceptor binding to estimate the affinity constant
(Kd) and maximal number of binding sites (Bmax) in rat tissues,
[3H]tamsulosin (555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg) and
unlabeled tamsulosin were combined in various ratios with total
concentrations ranging from 1.3 to 41.8 nmol/kg in 150 µl of volume
and injected i.v. into the femoral vein to determine total binding.
Nonspecific binding was determined as described above (using
phentolamine, 62.9 µmol/kg i.p.). A linear regression analysis of
nonspecific binding at each dose was carried out. The resulting
correlation coefficients ranged from 0.97 to 1.00. Specific binding was
determined by subtracting the best-fit nonspecific values from
individual total binding values. Specific binding curves were fitted
using the nonlinear regression analysis program MULTI (Yamaoka et al.,
1981
) to the model (Weizman et al., 1989
) as follows:
Values of Bmax,
Kd(dose), and
Kd(Cf) were expressed as fmol per
milligram of tissue (wet weight), drug injected per body weight
(nmol/kg), and plasma-free concentration (Cf), respectively.
Pharmacological competition studies were done by the coinjection of
unlabeled tamsulosin, prazosin, terazosin, yohimbine, or propranolol
with [3H]tamsulosin. Rats received varying i.v.
doses of tamsulosin (2.7-40.4 nmol/kg), prazosin (7.2-71.6 nmol/kg),
terazosin (6.5-652 nmol/kg), yohimbine (76.7, 256 nmol/kg), and
propranolol (101, 338 nmol/kg) with
[3H]tamsulosin (555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg). The dose
(ID50) of antagonists that inhibited specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding by 50% was determined
by fitting the curve of specific binding (expressed as a percentage of
the control specific binding without treatment of
1 adrenoceptor antagonists) in each tissue
versus the dose of injected antagonist using the nonlinear
least-squares program and the single-site receptor model as follows:
where Bi is the specific
binding of [3H]tamsulosin in the presence of
antagonists, B0 is the curve-fitted
estimate of maximal specific binding of
[3H]tamsulosin in rat tissue, and
[D] is the injected dose of antagonists.
In Vitro [3H]Tamsulosin Binding.
The binding
assay of [3H]tamsulosin in rat tissues was
performed by a similar method as described previously in human
prostates (Yamada et al., 1994b
). The tissues (prostate, submaxillary
gland, spleen, heart, lung, and kidney) were minced with scissors and homogenized by a Kinematica Polytron homogenizer in 20 to 80 volumes of
ice-cold 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.5). The homogenates were centrifuged at 40,000g for 20 min. The pellet was
resuspended in the ice-cold buffer, and the suspension was centrifuged
again at 40,000g for 20 min. The resulting pellet was
resuspended in the buffer for the binding assay. All steps were
performed at 4°C. The tissue homogenates (5-10 mg of wet weight
tissue) were incubated with [3H]tamsulosin
(0.02-1.0 nM) in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.5). Incubation was
carried out for 30 min at 25°C. The reaction was terminated by rapid
filtration (Cell Harvester; Brandel, Gaithersburg, MD) through Whatman
GF/B glass fiber filters, and the filters were rinsed three times with
3 ml of ice-cold buffer. The tissue-bound radioactivity was extracted
from the filters overnight in scintillation fluid (2 liters of toluene,
1 liter of Triton X-100, 15 g of 2,5-diphenyloxazole, and 0.3 g of 1,4-bis[2-(5-phenyloxazolyl)]benzene), and the
radioactivity was determined by a liquid scintillation counter.
Specific binding of [3H]tamsulosin was
determined experimentally from the difference between counts in the
absence and presence of 10 µM phentolamine. All assays were conducted
in duplicate. The analysis of binding data was performed as described
previously (Yamada et al., 1980
). Kd
and Bmax values for
[3H]tamsulosin were estimated by Rosenthal
analysis of the saturation data (Rosenthal, 1967
).
Determination of [3H]Tamsulosin in Plasma.
For
determination of plasma levels, [3H]tamsulosin
(555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg) was i.v. injected into the femoral vein of rats, and a small amount (100-800 µl) of blood was taken from the femoral artery through the cannula at 1, 3, 5, 10, 30, 60, and 120 min. The
plasma was separated by centrifugation. Determination of
[3H]tamsulosin concentration in plasma was
performed by a modified version of the HPLC described previously by
Soeishi et al. (1990)
. Four-hundred microliters of acetonitrile was
added to plasma samples (50-400 µl) containing
[14C]iodoantipyrine as an internal
standard. After being stirred, the mixture was centrifuged at
8500g for 5 min. The supernatant was transferred to a test
tube and evaporated to dryness under reduced pressure. The residue was
dissolved in 150 µl of the mobile phase, and 50 µl of the solution
was injected into the HPLC system. The HPLC system consisted of a pump
(880-PU; Jasco, Tokyo, Japan), a stainless steel column (15 cm × 4.0 mm i.d.) packed with Nucleosil 5C18
(Machery-Nagel, Düren, Germany). The mobile phase was 0.2 M
potassium biphosphate, 0.2 M phosphoric acid, acetonitrile (7:7:5, v/v)
at a flow rate of 1.0 ml/min. The column elute was collected in a vial,
and radioactivity was measured by liquid scintillation counter.
In vitro plasma protein binding of
[3H]tamsulosin was determined by the
equilibrium dialysis method using a cellulose membrane (Sanplatec,
Osaka, Japan). Briefly, rat plasma containing
[3H]tamsulosin (0.3-50 nM) was dialyzed with
isotonic phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) at 37°C for 6 h.
Radioactivity of [3H]tamsulosin in dialysate
fluid and plasma was measured as unbound (Cunbound) and total
(Ctotal) [3H]tamsulosin,
respectively. The unbound fraction was calculated as
Cunbound/Ctotal. Cf was
estimated as the product of unbound fraction.
Measurement of Blood Flow Rate with
[14C]Iodoantipyrine.
The blood flow rate in rat
tissues was measured by a modification of the method described by
Sakurada et al. (1978)
. Rats were anesthetized with diethylether, and
the femoral vein and artery were catheterized.
[14C]Iodoantipyrine was infused into the
femoral vein at a constant rate (185 kBq/min) for 30 s. During
this infusion period, eight arterial blood samples were periodically
(at 4-s intervals) obtained from the arterial catheter, and blood
radioactivity was measured. Rats were decapitated immediately after the
30-s infusion with [14C]iodoantipyrine, and
prostate, aorta, spleen, heart, lung, liver, kidney, and cerebral
cortex were dissected. Tissues were weighed, and the radioactivity was measured.
 |
Results |
Identification of In Vivo Specific Binding of
[3H]Tamsulosin in Rat Tissues.
The particulate-bound
radioactivity was measured in rat tissues (prostate, vas deferens,
aorta, cerebral cortex, submaxillary gland, spleen, heart, lung, liver,
and kidney) 10 and 60 min after i.v. injection of
[3H]tamsulosin (555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg).
Pretreatment with phentolamine at doses of 3.15 and 31.5 µmol/kg
(i.p.) reduced dose-dependently (31-74% and 71-94%, respectively)
[3H]tamsulosin binding in particulate fractions
of each tissue except the cerebral cortex and liver, which showed only
a slight decrease; further significant decreases, compared with the
reduction at 31.5 µmol/kg, were not seen by higher doses (62.9, 126 µmol/kg) of phentolamine (Fig. 1). As
shown in Fig. 2, therefore, the
difference in particulate-bound radioactivity of
[3H]tamsulosin in each tissue between vehicle-
and phentolamine (62.9 µmol/kg)-pretreated rats could be defined as
in vivo specific binding of the ligand. The amount of nonspecific
binding of [3H]tamsulosin, which was defined as
binding in phentolamine-pretreated tissues, compared with specific
binding, was much lower in all tissues except the cerebral cortex and
liver. Ten and 60 min after i.v. injection of
[3H]tamsulosin in rats, specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding occurred in all tissues
examined except the cerebral cortex and liver, which showed little
significant amount of specific binding. The amount of specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding differed markedly among
tissues. The rank order of [3H]tamsulosin
binding at 10 min after i.v. injection was kidney > lung,
heart > submaxillary gland, spleen > aorta, vas deferens, and prostate. Administration (p.o.) of nifedipine (28.9 µmol/kg), a
potent vasodilator, had little significant effect on the
particulate-bound radioactivity in rat tissues after i.v. injection of
[3H]tamsulosin (Fig. 2). The rank order of
level of specific [3H]tamsulosin binding at 60 min after i.v. injection tended to be similar to that at 10 min, but
the difference among tissues was smaller (data not shown).

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Fig. 1.
Effects of pretreatment with varying doses of
phentolamine on [3H]tamsulosin binding in rat tissues
( , liver; , prostate; , aorta; , submaxillary gland; ,
spleen; , heart) 10 min after i.v. injection of the ligand. Rats
received varying doses (3.15-126 µmol/kg i.p.) of phentolamine 30 min before i.v. injection of [3H]tamsulosin.
[3H]Tamsulosin (555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg) was injected into
the femoral vein, and rats were sacrificed at 10 min.
[3H]Tamsulosin binding in particulate fraction of each
tissue was determined, and it was expressed as percentage of control
total binding of [3H]tamsulosin in each tissue from
vehicle-pretreated rats. Each point represents mean ± S.D. of
three rats.
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Fig. 2.
Effects of pretreatment with phentolamine and
nifedipine on [3H]tamsulosin binding in rat tissues. Rats
received vehicle (control), phentolamine (62.9 µmol/kg i.p.) at 30 min and nifedipine (28.9 µmol/kg p.o.) at 60 min before i.v.
injection of [3H]tamsulosin. [3H]Tamsulosin
(555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg) was injected into the femoral vein, and rats
were sacrificed at 10 min; [3H]tamsulosin binding in
particulate fractions of each tissue was then determined. Each column
represents mean ± S.D. of three rats. Asterisks show a
significant difference from control values; ***P < .001.
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Figures 3 and
4 show the time course of plasma total
concentration and in vivo specific binding of
[3H]tamsulosin, respectively, in rat tissues 3 to 240 min after i.v. injection of the ligand. There were notable
differences among tissues in the time course of specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding. Specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding in the spleen, heart,
kidney, and lung was highest at 3 min and declined rapidly with the
disappearance of [3H]tamsulosin from the
plasma. On the other hand, [3H]tamsulosin
binding in the prostate and aorta attained peak levels at 60 (prostate)
and 10 (aorta) min, and binding levels were sustained until 120 min,
with considerable binding maintained at 240 min. The most sustained
[3H]tamsulosin binding occurred in the
submaxillary gland (Fig. 4).

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Fig. 3.
Time course of total concentration of
[3H]tamsulosin in plasma after i.v. injection in rats.
[3H]Tamsulosin (555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg) was injected into
the femoral vein. Blood samples were taken from the femoral artery at 1 to 120 min. Each point represents mean ± S.D. of three rats.
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Fig. 4.
Time course of in vivo specific binding of
[3H]tamsulosin in rat tissues (A: , submaxillary
gland; , spleen; , aorta; , prostate; B: , kidney; ,
lung; , heart) after i.v. injection of the ligand.
[3H]Tamsulosin (555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg) was injected into
the femoral vein, and rats were sacrificed 3 to 240 min later. Specific
binding of [3H]tamsulosin was experimentally defined as
the difference in binding in particulate fractions of each tissue from
vehicle- (total binding) and phentolamine- (62.9 µmol/kg, i.p.)
pretreated (nonspecific binding) rats. Each point represents mean ± S.D. of three to six rats.
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Increasing doses of tamsulosin were then administered to determine
whether saturability of specific [3H]tamsulosin
binding in rat tissues could occur in vivo. Varying doses of unlabeled
tamsulosin were mixed with 555 kBq (1.3 nmol/kg) [3H]tamsulosin and then injected i.v. into
rats. The specific binding in the particulate fraction of each tissue
decreased as the amount of unlabeled tamsulosin coinjected with
[3H]tamsulosin increased. Figure
5 illustrates the representative saturation curve of in vivo specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding with total and
nonspecific binding in the prostate 10 min after i.v. injection. The
[3H]tamsulosin binding data were plotted
against the Cf (unbound) of tamsulosin injected. In this case, free
fraction of [3H]tamsulosin in concentrations of
0.3 to 50 nM was shown to be constant from the plasma protein-binding
experiment, and thus the calculation of Cf of tamsulosin was performed
by using the average value of free fraction (28.9 ± 0.9%,
mean ± S.E.M., n = 4). In vivo specific binding
of [3H]tamsulosin at Cfs of 76 to 3120 pM
(corresponding to i.v. doses of 1.3-41.8 nmol/kg) in particulate
fractions of rat prostate seemed to be saturable, although the
nonspecific binding increased linearly. The data were best fitted by a
one-site model. Based on a concentration of 850 pM (13.5 nmol/kg),
apparent saturation of specific [3H]tamsulosin
binding in the prostate was reached with a maximal number of binding
sites approximating 0.93 fmol/mg tissue and half-maximal saturation at
a concentration of approximately 242 pM (4.4 nmol/kg). Similarly,
estimated values of Kd and
Bmax for [3H]tamsulosin in each tissue are given in
Table 1.
Kd values were estimated by fitting
specific [3H]tamsulosin binding either at each
dose (Kd(dose)) or at each Cf
(Kd(Cf)). Thus,
Kd(Cf) values in rat tissues ranged
from 38 to 294 pM. The Bmax value for
in vivo [3H]tamsulosin binding at 10 min was
greatest (5.17 ± 0.21 fmol/mg tissue) in the kidney, followed by
the submaxillary gland, heart, lung > spleen > aorta, and
prostate. At 60 min after i.v. injection, both
Kd(Cf) and
Bmax values were as a whole decreased
in each tissue except the prostate and aorta, which showed similar
Bmax values as those at 10 min; they
ranged from 14 to 121 pM (Kd(Cf)) and
from 1.98 to 2.65 fmol/mg tissue
(Bmax).

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Fig. 5.
In vivo total ( ), specific ( ), and nonspecific
( ) binding of [3H]tamsulosin in the particulate
fraction from rat prostate as a function of increasing free
concentration of the ligand. A mixture of [3H]tamsulosin
(555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg) and unlabeled tamsulosin at doses of 1.3 to 41.8 nmol/kg was injected into the femoral vein of vehicle- (total binding)
and phentolamine- (62.9 µmol/kg i.p.) (nonspecific binding)
pretreated rats, and the binding in particulate fraction of prostate
was measured at 10 min. Each point represents mean ± S.D. of
three rats. Solid lines show the computer-generated curves using the
binding parameters listed in Table 1.
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TABLE 1
In vivo maximal number of binding sites (Bmax) and
apparent dissociation constants (Kd) for
[3H]tamsulosin in various rat tissues
Rats received varying doses (1.3-41.8 nmol/kg i.v.) of
[3H]tamsulosin and unlabeled tamsulosin and were sacrificed
at 10 min. Bmax and Kd were
estimated by fitting specific binding of [3H]tamsulosin at
each dose (Kd (dose)) or the Cf
(Kd (Cf)) of [3H]tamsulosin by nonlinear
least-squares regression analysis. Each value represents mean ± S.D. of 20 rats.
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Competition Studies.
A constant amount of
[3H]tamsulosin (1.3 nmol/kg) was coinjected
with increasing amounts of unlabeled tamsulosin, prazosin, terazosin,
yohimbine, and propranolol in rats. Intravenous injection of low doses
of tamsulosin (2.7-40.4 nmol/kg) and prazosin (7.2-71.6 nmol/kg)
inhibited dose-dependently in vivo specific binding of [3H]tamsulosin in particulate fractions of the
prostate, aorta, submaxillary gland, spleen, heart, lung, and kidney of
rats. Figure 6 illustrates the
dose-dependent inhibition curves by tamsulosin and prazosin in the
prostate and spleen. Also, terazosin (6.5-652 nmol/kg) showed a
significant inhibition of [3H]tamsulosin
binding in each tissue (data not shown). The ID50 values for tamsulosin and prazosin differed markedly not only among
both drugs but among tissues (Table 2).
Compared with those for prazosin, ID50 values for
tamsulosin were 12.4, 9.8, and 13.9 times smaller in the prostate,
lung, and kidney, respectively, and 5 to 6 times smaller in the aorta,
submaxillary gland, and heart. On the other hand, the
ID50 value for tamsulosin in the spleen was 1.6 times greater than that for prazosin. To examine tissue selectivity or
1 subtype selectivity of tamsulosin and prazosin, we compared ratios of their ID50 values
in different rat tissues. The ratios of ID50
(spleen) to ID50 (submaxillary gland) of
tamsulosin and prazosin were 1.02 and 0.11, respectively; the ratios of
ID50 (spleen) to ID50
(prostate) were 1.33 and 0.07, respectively; and the ratios of
ID50 (aorta) to ID50
(prostate) were 0.39 and 0.17, respectively.

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Fig. 6.
In vivo inhibition by tamsulosin ( ) and prazosin
( ) of specific [3H]tamsulosin binding in the prostate
(A) and spleen (B) of rats. Tamsulosin (2.7-40.4 nmol/kg) and prazosin
(7.2-71.6 nmol/kg) were injected into the femoral vein with
[3H]tamsulosin (555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg), and rats were
sacrificed at 10 min. Each point represents mean ± S.D. of three
rats.
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TABLE 2
In vivo inhibition of specific [3H]tamsulosin binding in
various rat tissues by tamsulosin and prazosin
Tamsulosin (2.7-40.4 nmol/kg) and prazosin (7.2-71.6 nmol/kg) were
injected with [3H]tamsulosin (1.3 nmol/kg) into the femoral
vein of rats, and the rats were then sacrificed at 10 min. ID50
was estimated by fitting specific binding of [3H]tamsulosin
at each dose of both drugs by nonlinear least-squares regression
analysis. Each value represents mean ± S.D. of 20 rats.
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In contrast to the marked inhibition by prazosin, i.v. injection of
relatively high doses of yohimbine (76.7, 256 nmol/kg) and propranolol
(101, 338 nmol/kg) had little inhibitory effect on in vivo specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding in rat tissues including
the prostate (Fig. 7).

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Fig. 7.
Effects of prazosin, yohimbine, and propranolol on
specific [3H]tamsulosin binding in rat tissues. Prazosin
(7.2, 71.6 nmol/kg), yohimbine (76.7, 256 nmol/kg), and propranolol
(101, 338 nmol/kg) were injected into the femoral vein with
[3H]tamsulosin (555 kBq, 1.3 nmol/kg), and rats were
sacrificed at 10 min. Each column represents mean ± S.D. of three
rats. Asterisks show a significant difference from control values:
*P < .05; **P < .01; and
***P < .001.
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In Vitro [3H]Tamsulosin Binding.
Kd values for in vitro specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding in homogenates of
prostate, submaxillary gland, spleen, heart, lung, and kidney of rats
were 52.7 ± 8.5, 59.8 ± 6.0, 170 ± 19, 107 ±
13, 59.7 ± 8.9, and 67.9 ± 7.9 pM, respectively, and
Bmax values were 1.37 ± 0.17, 6.08 ± 0.24, 2.78 ± 0.61, 3.52 ± 0.53, 3.50 ± 0.05, and 5.54 ± 0.76 fmol/mg tissue (mean ± S.D.,
n = 3), respectively. The
Kd value in the spleen was 1.6 to 3.2 times greater than the Kd values in
other tissues. Bmax values were
greatest in the submaxillary gland and kidney, followed by the heart,
lung > spleen > prostate. As shown in Fig.
8, Bmax
values for [3H]tamsulosin in rat tissues from
in vivo binding experiments (Table 1) correlated significantly with
those from in vitro binding experiments. Although there was a
similarity in Kd values for this
ligand in the spleen, lung, and kidney between in vivo (Table 1) and in
vitro, in vivo Kd
(Kd(Cf)) values in the prostate and
submaxillary gland were about 4 times greater than in vitro
Kd values, and
Kd
(Kd(Cf)) in the heart was 2.8 times
smaller.

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Fig. 8.
Correlation between in vivo and in vitro in maximal
number of binding sites (Bmax) for
[3H]tamsulosin in rat tissues. In vivo
Bmax values for [3H]tamsulosin
in rat tissues (prostate, spleen, lung, heart, submaxillary gland, and
kidney) were obtained from Table 1, and in vitro
Bmax values were described in the text. In
vivo Bmax values for
[3H]tamsulosin are mean ± S.D. of 20 rats (Table
1), and those of in vitro Bmax are mean ± S.D. of three rats. The correlation coefficient (r)
for this relationship was 0.90 (significant at P < .05).
|
|
Tissue Blood Flow.
The local blood flow rates in the prostate,
aorta, cerebral cortex, spleen, heart, lung, liver, and kidney of rats
were 0.13 ± 0.03, 1.29 ± 0.54, 1.06 ± 0.04, 0.13 ± 0.09, 8.47 ± 4.17, 4.53 ± 1.12, 0.44 ± 0.25, and
1.92 ± 0.98 ml/min/g tissue (mean ± S.D., n = 3), respectively, thus varying markedly among tissues. The values in
the prostate, spleen, heart, liver, and kidney of rats were reasonably
close to previously reported blood flow levels in these tissues in rats
(Gerlowski and Jain, 1983
; Davies and Morris, 1993
). The blood flow
rate was highest in the heart, followed by the lung > kidney > aorta > cerebral cortex > liver > prostate and spleen.
 |
Discussion |
The present study was undertaken to simultaneously measure
1 adrenoceptors in rat tissues by
[3H]tamsulosin in vivo. The particulate-bound
radioactivity was measured in homogenates of rat tissues 10 min after
i.v. injection of [3H]tamsulosin. Pretreatment
with phentolamine at the dose of 31.5 µmol/kg reduced markedly
(71-94%) [3H]tamsulosin binding in
particulate fractions of each tissue except the cerebral cortex and
liver, and further decreases were not seen by two or four times higher
doses of phentolamine. Thus, the difference in particulate-bound
radioactivity of [3H]tamsulosin in each tissue
between vehicle- and phentolamine (62.9 µmol/kg i.p.)-pretreated rats
was defined as in vivo specific binding of the ligand. Although in vivo
specific [3H]tamsulosin binding in rat tissues
was unaffected by relatively high doses of yohimbine and propranolol,
it was dose-dependently inhibited by the coinjection of low doses of
unlabeled tamsulosin, prazosin, and terazosin with the radioligand. As
a matter of fact, in vivo specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding in the prostate and
aorta was effectively inhibited by i.v. injections of tamsulosin
(2.7-40.4 nmol/kg) and prazosin (7.2-71.6 nmol/kg). Recently, Martin
et al. (1997)
have evaluated the effects of several
1 adrenoceptor antagonists on urethral and
arterial pressures in conscious male rats under normal adrenergic tone,
and they have shown significant decreases in both urethral and arterial
pressures 5 to 15 min after i.v. injections of tamsulosin (24.6 and
74.0 nmol/kg) and prazosin (7.2 and 24.0 nmol/kg). In our preliminary
experiment, tamsulosin at i.v. dose ranges that exhibited specific
binding in the rat prostate inhibited dose-dependently the
phenylephrine-induced increases in urethral pressure in anesthetized
rats (S. Y. et al., unpublished observation). Based on the close
correlation in i.v. dose ranges between in vivo
1 adrenoceptor-binding activities of
tamsulosin and prazosin in rat tissues and their functional activities,
it seems likely that specific binding of
[3H]tamsulosin in rat tissues after i.v.
injection reflects in vivo selective labeling of the pharmacologically
relevant
1 adrenoceptors.
There is a possibility that i.p. administration of a high dose of
phentolamine for the measurement of nonspecific binding of
[3H]tamsulosin should cause vasodilation and
thus affect the distribution of [3H]tamsulosin
and other drugs given thereafter. Also, the low dose of tamsulosin,
prazosin, and terazosin would have minimal effects on blood pressure in
rats, but the high doses in saturation and competition studies could
have cardiovascular effects that might alter the distribution of agents
to various tissues. Thus, we examined the effect of nifedipine, a
potent vasodilator, on in vivo [3H]tamsulosin
binding. Pretreatment with nifedipine at p.o. dose of 28.9 µmol/kg,
which caused a marked and sustained hypotension in rats (Yamanaka et
al., 1991
), had little significant effect on the particulate-bound
radioactivity in each tissue of rats after i.v. injection of
[3H]tamsulosin. Thus, it is unlikely that a
hypotension due to the blockade of
1
adrenoceptors has a significant effect on the tissue distribution of
[3H]tamsulosin and other drugs given
thereafter, and also on the subsequent
1
adrenoceptor binding.
In vivo specific binding of [3H]tamsulosin 10 and 60 min after i.v. injection was widely distributed in various
tissues, and the degree of nonspecific binding, compared with the
specific binding, was markedly lower in tissues except the cerebral
cortex and liver. Such low nonspecific binding of
[3H]tamsulosin was in accord with in vitro
binding data of this ligand obtained in rat and human tissues (Yazawa
et al., 1992
; Yamada et al., 1994b
). Taken together, these data suggest
that [3H]tamsulosin is a suitable ligand for in
vivo labeling of
1 adrenoceptors in rat
tissues. Rat liver, unlike other tissues, exhibited a high level of
nonspecific binding of [3H]tamsulosin. Soeishi
et al. (1996)
reported that tamsulosin after p.o. administration was
rapidly metabolized in liver but hardly metabolized in other organs or
plasma of rats. Thus, the reason why in vivo specific
[3H]tamsulosin binding was little seen in the
liver is possibly related to the extensive metabolism of the ligand in
the tissue.
The binding parameters (Kd and
Bmax) for in vivo
[3H]tamsulosin binding were estimated by
injecting i.v. varying doses of unlabeled tamsulosin with
[3H]tamsulosin into rats.
Bmax values for in vivo
[3H]tamsulosin binding in the prostate,
submaxillary gland, spleen, lung, heart, and kidney of rats were
comparable with those from in vitro binding experiments (Fig. 8).
Although there was a similarity between in vitro and in vivo in
Kd values for
[3H]tamsulosin in the spleen, lung, and kidney,
in vivo Kd
(Kd(Cf)) values in the prostate and
submaxillary gland were about 4 times greater, and the value in the
heart was 2.8 times smaller, than each in vitro
Kd value. The reason for this
discrepancy in these tissues is not clear at the present time. It is
assumed that the Cf of tamsulosin for the estimation of in vivo
Kd
(Kd(Cf)) values might differ
significantly from the extracellular concentration in the vicinity of
receptors in these tissues. In this connection, it may be of a interest
to note that among rat tissues examined, the blood flow rate was
highest in the heart and lowest in the prostate.
1 Adrenoceptors participate in the regulation
of physiological responses in numerous tissues. Clinically,
1 adrenoceptors are an important target for
therapeutic manipulation as well as a possible site of pathologic
etiology (Yamada et al., 1984
, 1987
). For these reasons, in vivo
1 adrenoceptor-binding parameters for
[3H]tamsulosin in rat tissues may be of
potential use for characterizing not only pharmacological specificity
of
1 adrenoceptor antagonists but affinity and
density of
1 adrenoceptors under pathologic conditions such as cardiovascular diseases and lower urinary dysfunction.
A relatively high degree of in vivo specific binding of
[3H]tamsulosin was observed in the heart, lung,
and kidney of rats compared with other tissues including the prostate.
Specific [3H]tamsulosin binding in the kidney,
lung, heart, and spleen was greatest 3 min after i.v. injection, and it
declined rapidly with the disappearance of
[3H]tamsulosin from the plasma. On the other
hand, in vivo [3H]tamsulosin binding in the
prostate and aorta peaked at 60 and 10 min, respectively, with a
considerable level of specific binding in both tissues persisting up to
240 min postinjection. The most sustained binding of
[3H]tamsulosin occurred in the submaxillary
gland. These data are consistent with our ex vivo observation that p.o.
administration of tamsulosin in rats, despite a rapid decline in the
plasma concentration, brought about more selective and sustained
occupancy of
1 adrenoceptors in the prostate
and submaxillary gland than in the spleen and heart (Ohkura et al.,
1998
). Accordingly, the constant level of specific binding as a
function of time for [3H]tamsulosin in the
prostate and submaxillary gland of rats may be related to the
relatively slow dissociation rate of this ligand from the receptor
sites, possibly due to a high affinity for the receptors. However, it
must be noted that pharmacokinetic factors such as blood flow rate and
volume of distribution in each organ may be responsible for the
observed difference among tissues in the amount and time course of in
vivo specific [3H]tamsulosin binding. Tissue
blood flow may be a critical determinant for in vivo binding of drugs
to receptors. In fact, the level of blood flow rate measured by
[14C]iodoantipyrine was greater in the heart,
lung, and kidney than in other tissues.
It is known that
1A subtype exists
predominantly in the submaxillary gland, vas deferens, and prostate of
rats (Han et al., 1987
; Michel et al., 1989
; Testa et al., 1993
; Yazawa
and Honda, 1993
; Lepor et al., 1994
; Shibata et al., 1995
; Ford et al.,
1996
), whereas
1B subtype is predominant in
the spleen and liver (Han et al., 1987
; Han and Minneman, 1991
; Michel
et al., 1993
; Shibata et al., 1995
). Based on estimated
ID50 values for in vivo
[3H]tamsulosin binding, the inhibitory effect
of tamsulosin in the prostate, lung, and kidney was 10 to 14 times
greater than that of prazosin, and it was 5 to 6 times greater in the
aorta, submaxillary gland, and heart. However, in the spleen,
tamsulosin was 1.6 times less potent than prazosin. In the present
experiment, it is likely that in vivo specific binding of
[3H]tamsulosin in rat tissues exhibited already
tissue selectivity because the drug binds to both
1A and
1D subtypes
with higher affinity than to
1B subtype
(Michel and Insel, 1994
; Testa et al., 1995
; Michel et al., 1996
;
Yamada et al., 1998
; Ohkura et al. 1998
). Prazosin is known generally
as a nonselective antagonist of
1 subtypes
both in vitro and in vivo (Hanft and Gross, 1989
; Aboud et al., 1993
;
Martin et al., 1997
). To evaluate in vivo tissue selectivity or
1 subtype selectivity of tamsulosin,
therefore, it may be useful to compare the ratio of
ID50 value for the drug with that for prazosin
among different tissues. Ratios of ID50 (spleen)
to ID50 (submaxillary gland) of tamsulosin and
prazosin were 1.02 and 0.11, respectively, and the ratios of
ID50 (spleen) to ID50
(prostate) were 1.33 and 0.07, respectively. Thus, tamsulosin was 9 and
19 times, respectively, greater than prazosin in selectivity of
1 adrenoceptors in the submaxillary gland and
prostate versus the spleen. Consequently, these data may provide the
first direct in vivo evidence that tamsulosin binds to
1A subtype with higher affinity than to
1B subtype.
Ratios of ID50 (aorta) to
ID50 (prostate) of tamsulosin and prazosin in
inhibiting specific [3H]tamsulosin binding were
0.39 and 0.17, respectively. The value of the ratio of
ID50 (aorta) to ID50
(prostate) for tamsulosin divided by the ratio for prazosin was 2, and
it may represent the relative selectivity of
1
adrenoceptors in the prostate versus the aorta. In other words,
tamsulosin may exhibit a 2-fold higher selectivity for
1 adrenoceptors than does prazosin in the
prostate as compared with the aorta. This difference was smaller than
the in vitro difference (12 times) in
1
adrenoceptor-binding affinity between the human prostate and aorta
(Yamada et al., 1994a
). Although there is no clear explanation for this
difference at present, previous studies have shown that
1 agonist-induced contractile responses of the
rat aorta and human peripheral artery are mediated primarily via
1D and
1B subtypes,
respectively (Aboud et al., 1993
; Hatano et al., 1994
; Kenny et al.,
1995
), and that tamsulosin exhibits considerably high affinity for
1D subtype (Testa et al., 1995
; Michel et al.,
1996
; Noble et al., 1997
; Taguchi et al., 1997
). Accordingly, it is
plausible that tamsulosin has a certain degree of affinity to
1 adrenoceptors in the rat aorta. In
conclusion, this study suggests that
[3H]tamsulosin is a useful ligand not only for
the characterization of
1 adrenoceptors in
various tissues under physiological conditions but for in vivo
evaluation of novel
1 adrenoceptor antagonists as potentially useful therapeutic agents in benign prostatic
hyperplasia in terms of tissue selectivity and
1 adrenoceptor subtype selectivity.
We thank Drs. O. Inagaki, M. Asano, and K. Honda (Yamanouchi
Pharm. Co. Ltd., Ibaraki, Japan) for kindly providing
[3H]tamsulosin and comments on the manuscript
and M. Matsushita and Z. Oda for excellent technical assistance.
Accepted for publication February 1, 1999.
Received for publication September 24, 1998.