PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - G W Read AU - E F Kiefer TI - Benzalkonium chloride: selective inhibitor of histamine release induced by compound 48/80 and other polyamines. DP - 1979 Dec 01 TA - Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics PG - 711--715 VI - 211 IP - 3 4099 - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/211/3/711.short 4100 - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/211/3/711.full SO - J Pharmacol Exp Ther1979 Dec 01; 211 AB - Benzalkonium chloride (BAC) is a mixture of quaternary benzyldimethylalkylammonium chlorides which was found to inhibit histamine release induced by polyamines (48/80, ATP, bradykinin, curare, guanethidine, polylysine, polymyxin B, poly-THIQ, protamine, stilbamidine or substance P), but not that caused by antigens, concanavalin A, dextran, lonophores (A23187 or X-537A), enzymes (chymotrypsin or phospholipase C), monoamines (dextromethorphan, meperidine or chlorpromazine) or detergents (decylamine, Triton X-100 or a fire ant venom alkylpiperidine). Inhibition by 1.5 and 3 microgram of BAC per ml caused parallel shifts of the 48/80 dose-response curves to the right with no loss of efficacy, indicating that the antagonism was surmountable. Phospholipase C was partially inhibited by BAC, but Triton X-100 also inhibited phospholipase C (but not 48/80), indicating that the inhibition of phospholipase C by BAC was probably a nonspecific, detergent effect. BAC caused histamine release by itself at concentrations over 5 microgram/ml. Heat inactivation (50 degrees C for 15 min) of the mast cells did not prevent this release, suggesting a lytic mechanism for this action. Structure-activity relations studies on various members of the BAC family for their ability to inhibit 48/80-induced histamine release indicated that benzyldimethyltridecylammonium chloride was the most potent.