Grider_1987_Gastroenterology_93_951

Reference

Title : Identification of muscarinic M2 receptors on single muscle cells of the human and guinea pig intestine - Grider_1987_Gastroenterology_93_951
Author(s) : Grider JR , Bitar KN , Makhlouf GM
Ref : Gastroenterology , 93 :951 , 1987
Abstract :

Muscle cells were isolated from the longitudinal muscle layer of guinea pig and human jejunum and used to identify the muscarinic receptor subtype (M1 or M2) that mediates contraction. Single muscle cells were anchored to the ceiling of a minichamber and their contraction was measured in response to acetylcholine, alone and in combination with three muscarinic antagonists: atropine, 4-diphenylacetoxy-N-methylpiperidine methiodide (4-DAMP), and pirenzepine. Estimates of the inhibitory dissociation constants (Ki) were closely similar in human and guinea pig muscle cells (atropine 2.5-5 X 10(-11) M, 4-DAMP 1.9-2.9 X 10(10) M, and pirenzepine 8.2-9.5 X 10(-8) M). Thus, pirenzepine, a preferential M1 antagonist, was 1900-3280 times less potent than atropine and 279-500 times less potent than 4-DAMP. Comparative measurements on longitudinal muscle strips from guinea pig jejunum confirmed the greater potency of atropine and 4-DAMP relative to pirenzepine. Inactivation of muscarinic receptors on single muscle cells with dibenamine showed that only a small fraction of receptors was responsible for the response to acetylcholine. It was concluded that intestinal muscle cells contain a large reservoir of muscarinic M2 receptors that exhibit considerable spareness and heterogeneity.

PubMedSearch : Grider_1987_Gastroenterology_93_951
PubMedID: 3653644

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Citations formats

Grider JR, Bitar KN, Makhlouf GM (1987)
Identification of muscarinic M2 receptors on single muscle cells of the human and guinea pig intestine
Gastroenterology 93 :951

Grider JR, Bitar KN, Makhlouf GM (1987)
Gastroenterology 93 :951