Potentiation of norepinephrine-induced activation of cardiac phosphorylase by theophylline and reserpine

1970 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. McNeill

Reserpine and theophylline pretreatment significantly enhanced the norepinephrine-induced activation of rat cardiac phosphorylase a activation as shown by a shift to the left in the norepinephrine dose–response curve. When both treatments were administered together the curve was shifted further to the left. The results indicate that reserpine and theophylline probably enhance the norepinephrine response by different mechanisms.

1983 ◽  
Vol 244 (5) ◽  
pp. R635-R640 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. A. Campfield ◽  
F. J. Smith

Recent studies suggest that alterations in autonomic neural activity may mediate the obese state observed following ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH) lesion. To assess the role of these alterations in the increased glucose responsiveness of the beta-cell observed in this state, we have determined the sensitivity of insulin secretion to norepinephrine or/and acetylcholine in statically incubated pancreatic islets from rats 30-40 days after VMH lesion. In islets from VMH-lesioned rats compared with islets from sham-operated and intact rats, the acetylcholine dose-response curve was shifted down and to the right, indicating a decreased sensitivity, whereas the norepinephrine dose-response curve was translated to the left, indicating an increased sensitivity. The interaction profile, which summarizes combined neurotransmitter exposure on insulin secretion, was shifted in the direction of net inhibition. Thus it was concluded that, following VMH lesion, autonomic neurotransmitter sensitivity of the pancreatic beta-cell was altered. It is suggested that these alterations play a role in the adaptation of the beta-cell to the experimentally induced obese state.


1988 ◽  
Vol 255 (3) ◽  
pp. H577-H586
Author(s):  
J. B. Martins

We studied the timing of the electrophysiological effects of sympathetic supersensitivity with chronically implanted electrodes in the anterior and posterior left ventricular free wall in 10 dogs. We produced denervation of the anterior wall in six dogs by application of phenol surrounding the anterior electrode. Drug infusions that were performed under pentobarbital sodium anesthesia included norepinephrine, isoproterenol, and methoxamine. In four controls there was no difference in response of the two sites. Presynaptic supersensitivity was manifest as early as 2 days and as late as 64 days by a parallel left shift (greater than or equal to 8.3 ms) in the norepinephrine dose to effective refractory period shortening response curve in the anterior compared with posterior left ventricle, P less than 0.01. The isoproterenol dose-response curve was also shifted to the left by 5.6 ms (P less than 0.01) but was manifest only after 10 days and only until 28 days from the denervation procedure. Local repolarization in the denervated areas shortened more than the innervated areas with both drugs. The methoxamine dose-response curve was flat, and the anterior-denervated area was not different than the posterior-innervated area. We conclude that recovery properties in ventricular muscle demonstrate evidence of supersensitivity, which is neurotransmitter and beta- but not alpha-receptor specific.


1967 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 619-625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Jacob Koed ◽  
Christian Hamburger

ABSTRACT Comparison of the dose-response curves for LH of ovine origin (NIH-LH-S8) and of human origin (IRP-HMG-2) using the OAAD test showed a small, though statistically significant difference, the dose-response curve for LH of human origin being a little flatter. Two standard curves for ovine LH obtained with 14 months' interval, were parallel but at different levels of ovarian ascorbic acid. When the mean ascorbic acid depletions were calculated as percentages of the control levels, the two curves for NIH-LH-S8 were identical. The use of standards of human origin in the OAAD test for LH activity of human preparations is recommended.


1961 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 565-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard A. Miller

ABSTRACT Four per cent formaldehyde, insulin, or epinephrine in oil was injected for 5 days into pigeons subjected to varying degrees of hypophysectomy alone or together with large lesions in the median eminence and hypothalamus. Adrenals atrophied after the removal of the pars distalis alone or together with the neurohypophysis in untreated pigeons but showed markedly hypertrophic interrenal tissue (cortex in mammals) after treatment with formaldehyde or insulin. The slope of the dose-response curve was similar in operated and unoperated pigeons. The accumulation of bile in the liver parenchyma, which may occur after removal of the pars distalis, is an endogenous stress which was associated regularly with adrenal hypertrophy. After very large lesions of the median eminence and ventral hypothalamus in addition to total hypophysectomy, adrenals hypertrophied rather than atrophied, and the response to formaldehyde paralleled that in intact and »hypohysectomized« pigeons. Interrenal tissue was stimulated regularly; chromaffin tissue was partially degranulated, sometimes showed hyperplasia with colchicine, but only occasionally appeared hypertrophied. Epinephrine in nearly lethal doses caused only minimal adrenal enlargement. After adrenal denervation followed by hypophysectomy, the adrenals were still stimulated by formaldehyde. It appears that the interrenal tissue of the pigeon responds to a humoral stimulus not of hypophyseal origin in the absence of the hypophyseal-hypothalamic system.


1963 ◽  
Vol 42 (2_Suppl) ◽  
pp. S17-S30
Author(s):  
Fred A. Kind ◽  
Ralph I. Dorfman

ABSTRACT Thirty-seven steroids have been studied as orally effective inhibitors of ovulation in the mated oestrus rabbit. Norethisterone served as the reference standard and a dose response curve was established between the 0.31 and 1.25 mg dose levels. Nine highly active anti-ovulatory compounds are described listed in a decreasing order of potency with norethisterone having the arbitrary value of one: 6-chloro-Δ6-dehydro-17α-acetoxyprogesterone (35), 6α-methyl-Δ1-dehydro-17α-acetoxyprogesterone (≥ 10), 6-fluoro-Δ6-dehydro-17α-acetoxyprogesterone(9), 6-methyl-Δ6-dehydro-17α-acetoxyprogesterone (5), Δ6-dehydro-17α-acetoxyprogesterone (≥ 3), 6α-methyl-17α-acetoxyprogesterone (2.6), 6-chloro-Δ1,6-bisdehydro-17α-acetoxyprogesterone (≥ 2), 2-hydroxymethyl-17α-methyl-17β-hydroxyandrostan-3-one (≥ 2), and 6α-fluoro-16α-methyl-17α-acetoxyprogesterone (≥ 1.25). The anti-ovulatory activity of a compound was not related necessarily to the progestational activity of a compound nor to the anti-gonadotrophic activity as measured in parabiotic rats. 6-Chloro-Δ60dehydro-17-acetoxyprogesterone was as effective by gavage as previously shown by subcutaneous injection. 2-Hydroxymethyl-17α-methyl-17β-hydroxyandrostan-3-one was at least 2.5 times more active by gavage than by injection. While 17α-acetoxyprogesterone was a very weak anti-ovulatory steroid, modifications of the structure by addition of methyl or halogen at the 6α position with or without unsaturation greatly increased the activity. 6-Chloro-Δ6-dehydro-27α-acetoxyprogesterone was the most active compound in this series showing a relative potency of 3500 times that of the parent compound 17α-acetoxyprogesterone.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 174480692199262
Author(s):  
Ken Iwata ◽  
Yukio Takamatsu ◽  
Nagafumi Doi ◽  
Kazutaka Ikeda

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) has been applied for chronic pain for decades. The amounts of opioids to treat pain are sometimes reduced after a series of ECT. The effect of ECT on morphine-induced analgesia and its mechanism underlying the reduction of morphine requirement has yet to be clarified. Therefore, we administered electroconvulsive shocks (ECS) to mice and investigated the antinociceptive effect of morphine in a hot plate test. We examined the expression level of µ-opioid receptor in the thalami of mice 25 h after administration of ECS compared to the thalami of mice without ECS administration using western blotting. ECS disturbed the development of a decrease in the percentage of maximal possible effect (%MPE), which was observed 24 h after a morphine injection, when ECS was applied 25, 23, 21, and 12 h before the second administration of morphine. We also examined the effect of ECS on the dose-response curve of %MPE to morphine-antinociception. Twenty-five hours after ECS, the dose-response curve was shifted to the left, and the EC50 of morphine given to ECS-pretreated mice decreased by 30.1% compared to the mice that were not pretreated with ECS. We also found that the expression level of µ-opioid receptors was significantly increased after ECS administration. These results confirm previous clinical reports showing that ECT decreased the required dose of opioids in neuropathic pain patients and suggest the hypothesis that this effect of ECT works through the thalamus.


1981 ◽  
Vol 27 (11) ◽  
pp. 1838-1844 ◽  
Author(s):  
G A Hudson ◽  
R F Ritchie ◽  
J E Haddow

Abstract Antiserum performance in a nephelometric system can be characterized by parameters derived from measuring reaction rates. The characterization process is derived from a series of dose-response curves (elicited nephelometric response vs antigen concentration) generated from various dilutions of the antiserum being tested. Antiserum titer can then be calculated by plotting the antigen concentration found at one-half the maximum nephelometric response (Hmax) of each dose-response curve (C50) vs the corresponding antiserum dilution. Antiserum avidity can be calculated by plotting Hmax against its corresponding antiserum concentration. After general expressions are determined for C50 and Hmax vs antiserum concentration, a single dose-response curve suffices for characterizing antisera with respect to titer and avidity. Direct evidence is provided for the validity of C50 and Hmax as measures of titer and avidity by correlating these parameters with antiserum binding strength and with the number of antibodies eluted from immobilized antigen. This method can be applied to evaluate and compare different antiserum lots having the same specificity, to identify reagent inadequacies by comparing antisera of different specificity, and to predict the optimal antiserum dilution to use in performing an assay.


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