Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sensory nerves play an important role in airway disease by mediating central reflexes such as cough, and local axon reflexes resulting in the peripheral release of neuropeptides. We have tested whether the benzimidazolone compound, NS1619, an opener of large conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK Ca) channels, inhibits the activity of sensory fibers, and central and local airway reflexes in guinea pig airways. In in vitro single fiber recording experiments, NS1619 applied to identified receptive fields in the trachea inhibited the firing of A(delta)-fibers evoked by hypertonic saline and distilled water, and bradykinin-evoked firing of C-fibers. Electrically evoked nonadrenergic noncholinergic contractions of isolated bronchi mediated by the release of neurokinin A (NKA) from C-fibers, but not those elicited by exogenous NKA, were inhibited by NS1619. These effects of NS1619 were prevented by iberiotoxin, a selective blocker of BK Ca channels. In conscious guinea pigs, cough evoked by aerosolized citric acid was also inhibited by NS1619. These data show that BK Ca channel activation inhibits sensory nerve activity, resulting in a reduction of both afferent and efferent function. BK Ca channel openers may therefore be of potential benefit in reducing neurogenic inflammation and central reflexes seen during inflammatory conditions of the airways, and may represent a new class of antitussive drug.
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PMID:Activation of large conductance potassium channels inhibits the afferent and efferent function of airway sensory nerves in the guinea pig. 902 86

1. The purpose of this study was to investigate the antitussive activity and sites of action of the NK1 and NK2 tachykinin receptor antagonists, CP-99,994, SR 48968, and the racemate of SR 48968, SR 48212A in the cat and guinea-pig. 2. Guinea-pigs were dosed subcutaneously (s.c.) with CP-99,994, SR 48212A or SR 48968 one hour before exposure to aerosols of capsaicin (0.3 mM) to elicit coughing. Coughs were detected with a microphone and counted. 3. Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) cannulae were placed in the lateral cerebral ventricles of anaesthetized guinea-pigs. Approximately one week later, the animals were dosed with CP-99,994 or SR 48212A (i.c.v.) and exposed to aerosols of capsaicin (0.3 mM) to elicit coughing. 4. Cough was produced in anaesthetized cats by mechanical stimulation of the intrathoracic trachea and was monitored from electromyograms of respiratory muscle activity. Cannulae were placed for intravenous (i.v.) or, in separate groups of animals, intravertebral arterial (i.a.) administration of CP-99,994, SR 48212A or SR 48968. Dose-response relationships for i.v. and i.a. administration of each drug were generated to determine a ratio of i.v. ED50 to i.a. ED50, known as the effective dose ratio (EDR). The EDR will be 20 or greater for a centrally active drug and less than 20 for a peripherally active drug. 5. In the guinea-pig, CP-99,994 (0.1-30 mg kg-1, s.c.), SR 48212A (1.0-30 mg kg-1, s.c.), and SR 48968 (0.3-3.0 mg kg-1, s.c.) inhibited capsaicin-induced cough in a dose-dependent manner. Capsaicin-induced cough was also inhibited by i.c.v. administration of CP-99,994 (10 and 100 micrograms) or SR 48212A (100 micrograms). 6. In the cat, both CP-99,994 (0.0001-0.3 mg kg-1, i.a., n = 5; 0.003-3.0 mg kg-1, i.v., n = 5) and SR 48212A (0.003-1.0 mg kg-1, i.a., n = 5; 0.01-3.0 mg kg-1, i.v., n = 5) inhibited mechanically induced cough by either the i.v. or i.a. routes in a dose-dependent manner. SR 48968 (0.001-0.3 mg kg-1, i.a., n = 5; 0.03-1.0 mg kg-1, i.v., n = 5) inhibited cough when administered by the i.a. route in a dose-dependent manner, but had no effect by the i.v. route up to a dose of 1.0 mg kg-1. Intravenous antitussive potencies (ED50, 95% confidence interval (CI) of these compounds were: CP-99,994 (0.082 mg kg-1, 95% CI 0.047-0.126), SR 48212A (2.3 mg kg-1, 95% CI 0.5-20), and SR 48968 (> 1.0 mg kg-1, 95% CI not determined). The intra-arterial potencies of these compounds were: CP-99,994 (1.0 microgram kg-1, 95% CI 0.4-1.8), SR 48212A (25 micrograms kg-1, 95% CI 13-52), and SR 48968 (8.0 micrograms kg-1, 95% CI 1-32). The derived EDRs for each compound were: CP-99,994, 82; SR 48212A, 92; and SR 48968, > 125. 7. We concluded that CP-99,994 and SR 48968 inhibit cough in the guinea-pig and cat by a central site of action. In the cat, the antitussive action of these compounds appears to be solely by a central site.
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PMID:Central antitussive activity of the NK1 and NK2 tachykinin receptor antagonists, CP-99,994 and SR 48968, in the guinea-pig and cat. 915 23

The sensory neuropeptide, substance P (SP), is present in human airway nerves, beneath and within the epithelium where the condensed localization of neutral endopeptidase (NEP), the major enzyme degrading SP, is observed. To test the hypothesis whether SP stimulates the cough reflex and NEP modifies the cough reflex, we studied the cough response to various stimuli in awake guinea-pigs. Inhibition of NEP with phosphoramidon caused cough, which was inhibited by systemic capsaicin treatment and by aerosols of a specific NK1 receptor antagonist FK 888. Aerosols of FK 888 also inhibited cough induced by bronchoconstricting agents such as acetylcholine and histamine in non-sensitized animals and by ovalbumin antigen in animals sensitized to ovalbumin. The number of coughs induced by histamine aerosols was inhibited by systemic capsaicin treatment and enhanced by pretreatment with a NEP inhibitor phosphoramidon. Likewise, FK 888 inhibited the augmented cough response to aerosolized capsaicin in female guinea-pigs treated with a long-term medication of an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, cilazapril. In humans, aerosols of SP did not cause cough in normal subjects, whereas it did in patients with common colds. The SP fragment a major metabolite of SP produced by NEP, was less effective compared with SP in these patients, suggesting that damaged epithelium may facilitate the penetration of SP. These findings suggest that SP released from sensory nerves in response to stimuli may mediate cough and NEP may have a role in modulating SP-induced effects.
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PMID:Role of substance P in cough. 923 70

Several potent and selective antagonists for tachykinin receptors are now available and appear as powerful tools to investigate the physiological and pathological roles of tachykinins and to identify the type of receptor involved in their effect. Indeed, a lot of studies have shown that tachykinin NK2 receptor antagonists (SR 48968, MEN 10627) are able to inhibit cough induced by citric acid, capsaicin or allergen challenge in the unanesthetized guinea-pig or mechanical stimulation of the trachea in the cat. The effects of tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists are still debated, whereas an inhibitory effect of SR 142801, a tachykinin NK3 receptor antagonist, has been reported against citric acid-induced cough in the guinea-pig. Experiments with tachykinin receptor antagonists which do not cross the blood brain barrier suggest that the site of action of tachykinin receptor antagonists is most probably peripheral, but a central action, at least in an area not protected by the blood brain barrier, cannot be excluded. Finally, tachykinin NK2 receptor stimulation seems to be involved in sensitisation of cough reflex.
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PMID:Tachykinin receptor antagonists and cough. 923 71

Several recent observations suggest that tachykinins, such as substance P and neurokinin A, might be involved in the pathogenesis of bronchopulmonary alterations. Progress in investigations on the physiological and pathological roles of tachykinins has been greatly facilitated by the availability of a number of highly selective nonpeptide antagonists for tachykinin neurokinin 1, 2 and 3 (NK1, NK2 and NK3) receptors. The use of selective tachykinin NK2 receptor antagonists suggests that tachykinin NK2 receptor stimulation plays an important role in the development of airway hyperresponsiveness in the guinea-pig. Others studies have also indicated that tachykinin NK1-receptors are involved in immediate or delayed neurogenic inflammation including microvascular leakage and the subsequent increase in plasma protein extravasation. A role for the sensory neuropeptide system has also been proposed in cough, as shown by the observation that the antitussive effect of tachykinin NK2 receptor antagonists has clearly been demonstrated in several experimental conditions, but the effect of tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonists is still debated. Taken together, the results obtained with the various selective receptor antagonists provide pharmacological evidence that tachykinins play a role in delayed bronchopulmonary alterations and suggest that tachykinin receptor antagonists may be useful for investigating mechanisms and possibly reducing airway functional alterations in asthmatic patients.
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PMID:The role of tachykinin receptor antagonists in the prevention of bronchial hyperresponsiveness, airway inflammation and cough. 927 36

1. We tested the hypothesis that the pattern and the intensity of autonomic mechanisms causing vasoconstriction in the resting bronchial circulation of awake dogs also exists in awake sheep. It was also postulated that sighing behaviour and the associated bronchovascular dilatation induced by non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic (NANC) mechanisms observed in the dog exist in sheep. 2. Bronchial arterial blood flow to lower airways of both lungs of awake sheep was measured continuously using pulsed Doppler flow probes mounted on the bronchial artery at prior thoracotomy. 3. Cumulative and factorial analysis of responses to randomized combinations of autonomic alpha 1-, alpha 2-, beta 1- and beta 2-adrenoceptors and cholinoceptor autonomic blockade suggests that resting vasoconstrictor activity is less in sheep than in dogs. At normal aortic pressure, the autonomic activity of these receptor groups in the sheep lowers bronchial blood flow and conductance by 30%, whereas in the awake dog, the corresponding autonomic effect is 50%. 4. Tonic autonomic control of bronchial conductance can be partitioned in sheep to show significant and separate alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor vasoconstrictor activity at a ratio of 1.8:1, an effect normally offset by a weaker vasodilator alpha-/beta-adrenoceptor interaction. In contrast to the situation in awake dogs, cholinoceptors do not play a role in awake sheep. 5. Nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibition in sheep using NG-nitro-L-arginine following blockade of alpha- and beta-adrenoceptors and cholinoceptors causes hypertension, but minor changes, if any, in pulmonary pressures or heart rate. Bronchial flow and conductance, however, fall from a higher resting conductance by approximately 50%, suggesting that, normally, resting bronchial flow conductance is dominated by strong tonic NO vasodilator effects that interact with weaker tonic autonomic vasoconstrictor effects. 6. Superimposed (respiratory) behaviours of sighing, sneezing and coughing, which involve negative swings in intrathoracic pressure and the movement of inspired air, evoke large active bronchovascular dilator effects. These appear to be largely NANC in origin and appear to be dependent, in part, on mechanisms associated with NO release. It is postulated that the C-fibre axon reflex using substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide and neurokinin A may be involved. Vocalization and eructation do not evoke bronchovascular effects.
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PMID:Autonomic control of bronchial circulation in awake sheep during rest and behaviour. 940 60

(R)-3-(1-[2-(4-benzoyl-2-(3,4-difluorophenyl)-morpholin-2-yl)- ethyl]-4-phenylpiperidin-4-yl)-1-dimethylurea (SR 144190) is a new non-peptide antagonist of tachykinin NK2 receptors. SR 144190 potently and selectively inhibited neurokinin A binding to NK2 receptors from various species, including humans. In in vitro functional assays, it was a potent, selective and competitive antagonist of NK2 receptors with apparent affinities (pA2 values) between 9.08 and 10.10. In vivo, SR 144190 blocked [Nle10]neurokinin A-(4-10)-induced bronchoconstriction in guinea pigs (ID50 = 21 micrograms kg-1 i.v. and 250 micrograms kg-1 i.d.) and [beta Ala8]neurokinin A-(4-10)-induced urinary bladder contraction in rats (ID50 = 11 micrograms kg-1 i.v. and 190 micrograms kg-1 i.d.). It prevented citric acid-induced cough and airway hyperresponsiveness to acetylcholine in guinea pigs (1 mg kg-1 i.p.) as well as castor oil-induced diarrhoea in rats (0.01-10 micrograms kg-1 s.c. or p.o). Finally, it blocked the turning behaviour induced by intrastriatal injections of [Nle10]neurokinin A-(4-10) in mice (ID50 = 3 micrograms kg-1 i.v. and 16 micrograms kg-1 p.o.).
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PMID:Biochemical and pharmacological activities of SR 144190, a new potent non-peptide tachykinin NK2 receptor antagonist. 941 22

Aspiration pneumonia is associated with decreases in both swallowing and cough reflexes and is the most common cause of death in the elderly. Basal ganglia strokes might predispose these patients to develop pneumonia owing to reductions of both reflexes, resulting in frequent aspiration during sleep. An impairment of dopamine metabolism in the basal ganglia is observed in these patients and levodopa administration improves the impaired swallowing reflex. Both swallowing and cough reflexes are mediated by endogenous substance P (SP) released from vagal sensory nerves in the pharynx and upper airways. The addition of a low dose of capsaicin to liquid or food, which stimulates the release of SP, may help prevent aspiration pneumonia. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor decreases SP catabolism resulting in improvements in both reflexes. Oral care and the sitting position after meals may decrease aspiration pneumonia in the elderly.
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PMID:New strategies for aspiration pneumonia. 947 37

Denervation at lung transplantation results in loss of cough reflex and attenuated local defense mechanisms, accounting for increased incidence and severity of infection after lung transplantation. We studied the presence or absence of spontaneous afferent reinnervation in rats at various intervals after orthotopic left pulmonary isografting (n = 52). Normal rats (n = 21) and rats undergoing left hilar stripping (n = 14) served as control subjects. Afferent reinnervation was tested physiologically by reflex bradycardia in response to intravenous infusion of capsaicin (30 microg/kg), an extract of paprika stimulating pulmonary C-fibers. Injection of capsaicin was repeated before and after right pulmonary artery occlusion to divert all pulmonary blood flow to the left lung or isograft. Whereas rats early after surgical denervation lost the reflex after right pulmonary artery occlusion, rats examined 8 months or longer after surgery showed potent reflex bradycardia in response to capsaicin, as did the control rats. Immunohistochemical staining for sensory neuron-specific substances, such as calcitonin gene-related peptide and substance P, were identified only in the right native lung and left pulmonary isografts 2 months or longer after transplantation. Fluorogold was found only in the ipsilateral nodose ganglion after left lung intrapleural injection of the neuron-specific tracer in rats 8 months or longer after denervation. These experiments provide physiological, morphologic, and neurologic evidence suggesting that afferent lung innervation, abolished early after transplantation, is spontaneously reestablished and functioning in the ipsilateral vagus nerve by 8 months after pulmonary isografting in the rat.
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PMID:Afferent reinnervation after lung transplantation in the rat. 958 78

The use of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) has been associated with the occurrence of adverse effects, including cough and angioneurotic edema. Accumulation of kinins has been suggested to play a major role in these adverse effects of ACE inhibitor, although conclusive evidence for such a role is lacking. We investigated whether ACE inhibition increases plasma extravasation in mice (Swiss, C57Bl/6J, and J129Sv/Ev strains) via inhibition of bradykinin metabolism and stimulation of neurogenic inflammatory mechanisms. Intravenous captopril and enalapril increased the extravasation of Evans blue dye in all tissues examined (trachea, stomach, duodenum, and pancreas). This effect was evident 15 minutes after drug administration. The particulate dye Monastral blue identified the sites of captopril-induced leakage in the microvasculature. Pretreatment with the bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist Hoe 140 or with the tachykinin NK1 receptor antagonist SR 140333 inhibited captopril-evoked increase in plasma extravasation. In mice in which the gene encoding the bradykinin B2 receptor was disrupted by gene targeting, neither bradykinin nor captopril increased plasma extravasation. Pretreatment with Hoe 140 did not reduce the hypotensive response induced by captopril. The present findings suggest that ACE inhibition increases kinin levels in tissues and/or plasma. These increased kinin levels increase microvascular leakage in mouse airways and digestive tract via the release of tachykinins from terminals of primary sensory neurons. Exaggerated kinin production and the subsequent stimulation of peptide release from sensory nerves may be involved in adverse effects of ACE inhibitors.
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PMID:Acute ACE inhibition causes plasma extravasation in mice that is mediated by bradykinin and substance P. 962 45


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