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"Spare" alpha 1-adrenergic receptors and the potency of agonists in rat vas deferens

KP Minneman and PW Abel

The existence of "spare" alpha 1-adrenergic receptors in rat vas deferens was examined directly using radioligand binding assays and contractility measurements. Alpha 1-adrenergic receptors in homogenates of rat vas deferens were labeled with [125I]BE 2254 (125IBE). Norepinephrine and other full alpha 1-adrenergic receptor agonists were much less potent in inhibiting 125IBE binding than in contracting the vas deferens in vitro. Treatment with 300 nM phenoxybenzamine for 10 min to irreversibly inactivate alpha 1-adrenergic receptors caused a large decrease in the potency of full agonists in causing contraction of this tissue and a 23-48% decrease in the maximal contraction observed. Using those data, equilibrium constants for activation (Kact values) of the receptors by agonists were calculated. These Kact values agreed well with the equilibrium binding constants (KD values) determined from displacement of 125IBE binding. The reduction in alpha 1-adrenergic receptor density following phenoxybenzamine treatment was determined by Scatchard analysis of specific 125IBE binding sites and compared with the expected reduction (q values) calculated from the agonist dose-response curves before and after phenoxybenzamine treatment. Exposure to 300 nM phenoxybenzamine for 10 min resulted in a 39% decrease in specific 125IBE binding sites, which did not agree with the 93% decrease expected from the calculated q values. Treatment of vas deferens with a dose of phenoxybenzamine (10 microM for 15 min) that completely abolished the contractile response to alpha 1- adrenergic agonists caused an 82% decrease in the density of 125IBE binding sites. Tissues exposed to 300 nM phenoxybenzamine in the presence of 100 microM phentolamine or 3 microM prazosin showed no change in the dose-response curves for agonist-induced contraction or in the density of 125IBE binding sites when compared with controls. This suggests that phenoxybenzamine functionally inactivates alpha 1- adrenergic receptors at or near the receptor binding site. These experiments suggest that the potencies of agonists in activating alpha 1-adrenergic receptors in rat vas deferens agree well with their potencies in binding to the receptors. The greater potency of agonists in causing contraction may be due to spare receptors in this tissue. The data also demonstrate that phenoxybenzamine irreversibly inactivates alpha 1-adrenergic receptors in rat vas deferens, but that the decrease in receptor density is much smaller than that predicted from receptor theory.

Volume 25, Issue 1, pp. 56-63, 01/01/1984
Copyright © 1984 by American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics




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Copyright © 1984 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics