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Vol. 281, Issue 3, 1171-1177, 1997
Departments of
Pharmacology (D.B.B., L.J.I., W.J.M.) and
Ophthalmology (D.M.C.), University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha,
Nebraska
The alpha-2 adrenergic receptors are known to be present
in the mammalian eye and to mediate the effects of
alpha-2 agonists used in the treatment of glaucoma.
Little is known, however, regarding the relative densities of the three
alpha-2 subtypes in the various tissues of the eye. We
used receptor binding experiments with the radioligand
[3H]RX821002 to characterize the alpha-2
adrenergic receptors in three tissues of the bovine eye, the ciliary
body, retinal pigment epithelium/choriocapillaris and iris. The
KD values in the three tissues
were similar (0.12-0.14 nM), and the Bmax
values ranged from 100 fmol/mg of protein for the ciliary body and
retinal pigment epithelium/choriocapillaris to 200 fmol/mg of protein for the iris. The pharmacological characteristics of the
alpha-2 receptors in all three tissues of the bovine
eye, as assessed by competition studies, were essentially identical and
were similar to the characteristics of the alpha-2A/D
receptors of the bovine neurosensory retina. The correlation
coefficients between the logarithms of the
Ki values for the three tissues
and the neurosensory retina for nine adrenergic agents were .98 to .99. We conclude that the alpha-2 adrenergic receptors in the ciliary body, iris and retinal pigment epithelium/choriocapillaris of
the bovine eye are mainly alpha-2D.