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Molecular Pharmacology, Vol 11, 690-693, Copyright © 1975 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
1 Department of Pharmacology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ, and School of Pharmacy,
Liverpool Polytechnic, Liverpool L3 3AF, United Kingdom
On guinea pig ileum R-(-)-3-acetoxyquinuclidine is less than one-tenth as active as the S-(+) enantiomer, but the methiodide of the R compound is about 40 times as active as its S enantiomer. Inversion of stereospecificity occurs because methylation reduces the activity of the stronger (S) base about 1000-fold whereas it reduces the activity of the weaker (R) base only about 2-fold. The affinity of the S base is reduced about 100-fold, and this marked effect of methylation may be associated with the rigidity of the quinuclidine ring and indicate a particularly close fit between S-(+)-3-acetoxyquinuclidine and the "muscarinic" receptor. On the frog rectus there is no detectable stereospecificity and activity is not reduced by methylation, but the compounds are not very active.
Submitted on January 15, 1975