Dopamine agonist activity of EMD 23,448.
Klíčová slova
Abstraktní
EMD 23,448 was examined in tests of dopaminergic function and was found to be an atypical dopamine (DA) agonist. EMD 23,448 was a weak or inactive DA agonist when examined in tests of normal postsynaptic DA receptor function: production of stereotypy in the rat (ED50 greater than 5.0 mg/kg i.p.); production of emesis in beagles (minimum effective dose = 81 micrograms/kg i.v.); and, enhanced locomotor activity of the mouse (no excitation in doses less than or equal to 50 mg/i.p.). Moreover, EMD 23,448 was relatively weak in competing for [3H]-apomorphine binding to rat striatal membranes (Ki, 205 nM). On the other hand, this indolyl-3-butylamine did activate supersensitive postsynaptic DA receptors. Specifically, it elicited contralateral turning in rats with a unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine lesion of the substantia nigra (ED50 value = 0.9 mg/kg) and did elicit stereotypy in rats given chronic daily haloperidol treatments. EMD 23,448 also exerted pharmacological effects in tests designed to measure activation of dopamine autoreceptors. It inhibited the gamma-butyrolactone-induced increase in striatal dopa levels (ED50 = 1 mg/kg i.p.) and produced a dose-related fall in the locomotor activity of the mouse. The results are discussed and contrasted with data derived for apomorphine and the putatively selective autoreceptor agonist (+/-)-3-PPP.