Honda_2007_J.Agric.Food.Chem_55_2276

Reference

Title : Insect muscarinic acetylcholine receptor: pharmacological and toxicological profiles of antagonists and agonists - Honda_2007_J.Agric.Food.Chem_55_2276
Author(s) : Honda H , Tomizawa M , Casida JE
Ref : Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry , 55 :2276 , 2007
Abstract :

The insect muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) is evaluated as a potential target for insecticide action. The mammalian M2/M4-selective antagonist radioligand [3H]AF-DX 384 (a pirenzepine analogue) binds to Drosophila mAChR at a single high-affinity site identical to that for the nonselective antagonist [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB) and with a pharmacological profile distinct from that of all mammalian mAChR subtypes. Three nonselective antagonists (QNB, scopolamine, and atropine) show the highest affinity (Ki=0.5-2.4 nM) at the Drosophila target, and AF-DX 384 and M3-selective 4-DAMP (dimethyl-4-(diphenylacetoxy)piperidinium iodide) rank next in potency (Ki=5-18 nM). Eleven muscarinic antagonists generally exhibit higher affinity than eight agonists. On injection into houseflies, the antagonists 4-DAMP and (S)-(+)-dimethindene produce suppressed movement, the agonist (methyloxadiazolyl)quinuclidine causes knockdown and tremors, and all of them inhibit [3H]QNB binding ex vivo, indicating possible mAChR-mediated intoxication. The insect mAChR warrants continuing study in lead generation to discover novel insecticides.

PubMedSearch : Honda_2007_J.Agric.Food.Chem_55_2276
PubMedID: 17319687

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Citations formats

Honda H, Tomizawa M, Casida JE (2007)
Insect muscarinic acetylcholine receptor: pharmacological and toxicological profiles of antagonists and agonists
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 55 :2276

Honda H, Tomizawa M, Casida JE (2007)
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 55 :2276