[H-3] IDAZOXAN AND SOME OTHER ALPHA-2-ADRENERGIC DRUGS ALSO BIND WITH HIGH-AFFINITY TO A NONADRENERGIC SITE

  • 1 March 1989
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 35 (3), 324-330
Abstract
We compared the pharmacological properties of the .alpha.2-adrenergic radioligand [3H]idazoxan with those of [3H]rauwolscine in rat and [3H]yohimbine in human renal cortical membranes. The density of "specific" [3H]idazoxan binding sites (defined by 100 .mu.M tolazoline) was twice as high as that of [3H]rauwolscine in rat kidney and four times as high as that of [3H]yohimbine in human kidney. A variety of structurally different drugs fully competed for specific [3H]rauwolscine and [3H]yohimbine binding, with affinities appropriate for the interaction with .alpha.2-adrenergic receptors. Specific [3H]idazoxan binding, however, was only partially competed for by the catecholamines epinephrine and norepinephrine in both tissues. Thus, [3H]idazoxan labels both .alpha.2-adrenergic receptors and a nonadrenergic site. Clonidine, B-HT 920, moxonidine, phentolamine, prazosin, yohimbine, dopamine, and serotonin also could not compete for this site. However, UK 14,304, guanabenz, indanidine, tolazoline, oxymetazoline, and SK&F 104,078 competed for the additional [3H]idazoxan sites with affinities similar to those at .alpha.2-adrenergic receptors. [3H] Idazoxan binding substantially in excess of [3H]rauwolscine or [3H]yohimbine binding was also found in human platelets, myometrium, and erythroleukemia (HEL) cells but not in three cell lines lacking .alpha.2-receptors (MDCK, BC3H1, and Jurkat cells). Although we have been unsuccessful thus far in defining the precise nature of the additional [3H]idazoxan binding sites, we hypothesize that these sites may be closely affiliated with .alpha.2- adrenergic receptors but clearly distinct from the catecholamine binding site of the receptor. The results indicate that care must be taken in the use of [3H]idazoxan or drugs that are recognized at its nonadrenergic site when studying .alpha.2-adrenergic effects and receptor subtypes.

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