The actions of the novel anti-aggressive drug eltoprazine on central neurones in the anaesthetised rat.

Autor: Evans SM; Department of Physiology, University of Wales, College of Cardiff, U.K., Girdlestone D, Lopez A, Olivier B, Roberts MH
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Neuropharmacology [Neuropharmacology] 1990 Oct; Vol. 29 (10), pp. 895-900.
DOI: 10.1016/0028-3908(90)90139-i
Abstrakt: 5-Hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) and the novel anti-aggressive drug eltoprazine (1-(2,3-dihydro-1,4-benzodioxin-5-yl) piperazine hydrochloride) were applied by microiontophoresis to spinal motorneurones and also to neurones in the brainstem which gave two distinctly different responses to 5-HT. In vitro microiontophoretic release studies showed that the electrophoretic mobility of eltoprazine and 5-HT were similar and that similar amounts of each drug would be applied by similar iontophoretic currents. Cells in the brainstem have been shown previously to be excited by 5-HT, acting at a 5-HT2 receptor. Eltoprazine only occasionally and weakly mimicked the excitatory effect of 5-HT on these cells. Although a potent antagonism of the 5-HT excitation by eltoprazine was observed, this was a non-selective effect, as responses to glutamate and D,L-homocysteic acid were also reduced. Cells in the lateral brainstem are depressed by 5-HT, acting on a receptor which has previously been shown to be of the 5-HT1-like group. At this receptor, 8-OH-DPAT (8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)-tetralin) and 5-carboxamidotryptamine, are potent agonists. Eltoprazine was a more potent depressant agonist than 5-HT on these brainstem neurones. The antagonist metergoline did not antagonise responses to either 5-HT or eltoprazine. It is suggested however that both drugs act at the same receptor to depress these cells because desensitizing the receptor by repeated, frequent applications of 5-HT abolished responses to 5-HT and eltoprazine, without altering responses to GABA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Databáze: MEDLINE