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Vol. 293, Issue 1, 42-47, April 2000
-Aminobutyric AcidB Receptor
Regulates Cholinergic Twitch Response in the Guinea Pig
Ileum1
Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale, Sezione di Farmacologia e
Tossicologia, Genova, Italy
The pharmacological profile of the
-aminobutyric acid
(GABA)B receptor regulating cholinergic twitch contraction
in the guinea pig ileum myenteric plexus-longitudinal muscle
preparation was investigated. GABA and (
)-baclofen inhibited the
contraction, exhibiting quite close potencies (pD2 for
GABA = 5.70; pD2 for (
)-baclofen = 5.33). The
compound CGP 47656 also reduced the cholinergic twitch concentration
(pD2 = 5.42), but its efficacy was significantly lower
than that of (
)-baclofen or GABA. Added at varying concentrations,
CGP 47656 modified the concentration-response curve of (
)-baclofen as
expected for a partial agonist. Phaclofen, CGP 36742, CGP 35348, and
CGP 52432 behaved as competitive antagonists of (
)-baclofen,
exhibiting the following pA2 values: 3.90, 4.88, 5.02, and
7.82, respectively. The compound CGP 56999 behaved as a potent
noncompetitive GABAB receptor antagonist. In comparing the
pharmacological profile of the ileal receptor with those of the
previously characterized pharmacological subtypes of the
GABAB receptor present in the central nervous system, it
can be seen that the GABAB receptor inhibiting cholinergic
twitch contraction in guinea pig ileum myenteric plexus-longitudinal
muscle mostly resembles the receptor located on somatostatin human
neocortex nerve terminals.