Alpha- and beta-adrenergic and muscarinic cholinergic binding sites in the bladder and urethra of the rabbit

1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Johns

The affinities of a number of α and β-adrenergic binding sites and muscarinic cholinergic binding sites in rabbit urethra and bladder have been determined, using specific radioligand receptor binding assays. There was a greater density of β-binding sites than α-binding sites in the bladder, while, in the urethra, there was a greater density of α-binding sites than β-binding sites. The number of α-binding sites was fourfold greater in the urethra, whereas there were fewer β-binding sites in the urethra. There were fewer muscarinic binding sites in the urethra than in the bladder. The dissociation constant for [3H]dihydroalprenolol at the β-binding site was 6.4 nM, for [3H]dihydroergocryptine at the α-binding site was 2.11 nM, and for 3H-labelled l-quinuclidinyl benzilate at the muscarinic binding site was 0.22 nM.

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 279-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Leslie ◽  
Y. Shah ◽  
M. Thejomayen ◽  
K. M. Murphy ◽  
H. A. Robertson

The basic pharmacological mechanisms involved in mediating nausea and vomiting are still poorly understood. Several classes of drags have been identified that alleviate the symptoms of nausea and vomiting, either prophylactically or acutely. None of these is completely effective in all cases. They include antihistamines, dopamine antagonists, steroids, cannabinoids, benzodiazepines, serotonin antagonists, and anticholinergics. This paper examines the evidence that links each of these classes of drugs with the distribution of specific neurotransmitter receptor sites on which they may be acting. Studies on the central nervous system distribution of binding sites for one of these classes of drugs, the anticholinergics, are described. Binding sites for the muscarinic cholinergic radioligand [3H]quinuclidinyibenzilate occur in different concentrations throughout the dorsal vagal complex of the rabbit medulla oblongata. The distribution of such sites in this nonvomiting experimental animal is markedly different from that in the cat, an animal that has been used for many physiological and pharmacological studies of emesis. A previous study has suggested that muscarinic binding sites may occur presynaptically on vagal afferent terminals that synapse in the dorsal vagal complex of the cat; this appears not to be the case in the rabbit. Possible implications of these findings for the identification of the site of action of anticholinergic, antiemetic drags are discussed.Key words: neuromodulation, nausea, vomiting, receptors.


2015 ◽  
Vol 71 (8) ◽  
pp. 1582-1592 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele Cianci ◽  
Claudia Folli ◽  
Francesco Zonta ◽  
Paola Florio ◽  
Rodolfo Berni ◽  
...  

Human transthyretin (TTR) represents a notable example of an amyloidogenic protein, and several compounds that are able to stabilize its native state have been proposed as effective drugs in the therapy of TTR amyloidosis. The two thyroxine (T4) binding sites present in the TTR tetramer display negative binding cooperativity. Here, structures of TTR in complex with three natural polyphenols (pterostilbene, quercetin and apigenin) have been determined, in which this asymmetry manifests itself as the presence of a main binding site with clear ligand occupancy and related electron density and a second minor site with a much lower ligand occupancy. The results of an analysis of the structural differences between the two binding sites are consistent with such a binding asymmetry. The different ability of TTR ligands to saturate the two T4 binding sites of the tetrameric protein can be ascribed to the different affinity of ligands for the weaker binding site. In comparison, the high-affinity ligand tafamidis, co-crystallized under the same experimental conditions, was able to fully saturate the two T4 binding sites. This asymmetry is characterized by the presence of small but significant differences in the conformation of the cavity of the two binding sites. Molecular-dynamics simulations suggest the presence of even larger differences in solution. Competition binding assays carried out in solution revealed the presence of a preferential binding site in TTR for the polyphenols pterostilbene and quercetin that was different from the preferential binding site for T4. The TTR binding asymmetry could possibly be exploited for the therapy of TTR amyloidosis by using a cocktail of two drugs, each of which exhibits preferential binding for a distinct binding site, thus favouring saturation of the tetrameric protein and consequently its stabilization.


mBio ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael G. Jobling ◽  
ZhiJie Yang ◽  
Wendy R. Kam ◽  
Wayne I. Lencer ◽  
Randall K. Holmes

ABSTRACT Cholera toxin (CT) from Vibrio cholerae is responsible for the majority of the symptoms of the diarrheal disease cholera. CT is a heterohexameric protein complex with a 240-residue A subunit and a pentameric B subunit of identical 103-residue B polypeptides. The A subunit is proteolytically cleaved within a disulfide-linked loop to generate the A1 and A2 fragments. The B subunit of wild-type (wt) CT binds 5 cell surface ganglioside GM1 (GM1) molecules, and the toxin-GM1 complex traffics from the plasma membrane (PM) retrograde through endosomes and the Golgi apparatus to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). From the ER, the enzymatic A1 fragment retrotranslocates to the cytosol to cause disease. Clustering of GM1 by multivalent toxin binding can structurally remodel cell membranes in ways that may assist toxin uptake and retrograde trafficking. We have recently found, however, that CT may traffic from the PM to the ER by exploiting an endogenous glycosphingolipid pathway (A. A. Wolf et al., Infect. Immun. 76:1476–1484, 2008, and D. J. F. Chinnapen et al., Dev. Cell 23:573–586, 2012), suggesting that multivalent binding to GM1 is dispensable. Here we formally tested this idea by creating homogenous chimeric holotoxins with defined numbers of native GM1 binding sites from zero (nonbinding) to five (wild type). We found that a single GM1 binding site is sufficient for activity of the holotoxin. Therefore, remodeling of cell membranes by mechanisms that involve multivalent binding of toxin to GM1 receptors is not essential for toxicity of CT. IMPORTANCE Through multivalent binding to its lipid receptor, cholera toxin (CT) can remodel cell membranes in ways that may assist host cell invasion. We recently found that CT variants which bind no more than 2 receptor molecules do exhibit toxicity, suggesting that CT may be able to enter cells by coopting an endogenous lipid sorting pathway without clustering receptors. We tested this idea directly by using purified variants of CT with zero to five functional receptor-binding sites (BS). One BS enabled CT to intoxicate cells, supporting the conclusion that CT can enter cells by coopting an endogenous lipid-sorting pathway. Although multivalent receptor binding is not essential, it does increase CT toxicity. These findings suggest that achieving higher receptor binding avidity or affecting membrane dynamics by lipid clustering and membrane remodeling may be driving forces for evolution of AB5 subunit toxins that can bind multivalently to cell membrane lipid receptors.


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