Vascular 5-HT1-like receptors that mediate contraction of the dog isolated saphenous vein and carotid arterial vasoconstriction in anaesthetized dogs are not of the 5-HT1A or 5-HT1D subtype.
1. There is controversy about whether 5-HT1A receptors mediate contraction of isolated cerebral blood vessels. We have therefore compared the vascular actions of the 5-HT1A receptor agonist, 8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propyl-amino)-tetralin (8-OH-DPAT) with those of the 5-HT1-like receptor agonist, sumatriptan, on the dog isolated saphenous vein, which contains a 5-HT1-like receptor similar to those on cerebral blood vessels, and in the carotid circulation of the anaesthetized dog. 2. 5-Hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), sumatriptan and 8-OH-DPAT each caused contraction of dog isolated saphenous vein with a rank order of agonist potency of 5-HT greater than sumatriptan greater than 8-OH-DPAT and EC50 values (95% confidence limits) of 0.06 (0.04-0.08), 0.3 (0.1-0.8) and 3.9 (2.0-7.5) microM respectively. The maximum contractile effect produced by each agonist was similar. 3. The contractile effects of 5-HT, sumatriptan and 8-OH-DPAT in the dog isolated saphenous vein were resistant to antagonism by the 5-HT1A receptor antagonists spiperone, spiroxatrine and pindolol (all 1 microM). The 5-HT1D receptor ligands, metergoline (0.1 microM) rauwolscine (1 microM) and yohimbine (1 microM) had little or no antagonist activity. In contrast, the non-selective 5-HT1-like receptor blocking drug, methiothepin (0.03-0.3 microM) potently antagonized the contractile effects of 5-HT, sumatriptan and 8-OH-DPAT to a similar degree, suggesting that all three agonists act at the same receptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[1]References
- Vascular 5-HT1-like receptors that mediate contraction of the dog isolated saphenous vein and carotid arterial vasoconstriction in anaesthetized dogs are not of the 5-HT1A or 5-HT1D subtype. Perren, M.J., Feniuk, W., Humphrey, P.P. Br. J. Pharmacol. (1991) [Pubmed]
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