Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P08908 (
5-HT1A
)
5,574
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Epinastine
is an antihistamine drug with binding affinities at 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) receptors. The current study was performed to investigate whether epinastine could modulate the cholinergic contraction in guinea pig and human airways in vitro. Isolated guinea pig and human airway preparations were suspended in organ baths containing modified Krebs-Henseleit solution. Electrical field stimulation was applied to elicit cholinergic contractions.
Epinastine
produced a concentration-dependent inhibition of the cholinergic contraction in guinea pig airways and pretreatment with methysergide (5-HT1/2/7 antagonist) significantly attenuated these inhibitory effects of epinastine. Pretreatment with tropisetron (5-HT3/4 antagonist), ketanserin (5-HT2 antagonist), SDZ216-525 (
5-HT1A
antagonist) or phentolamine (alpha-adrenergic antagonist) had no effect.
Epinastine
did not displace the concentration-response curve to acetylcholine. These results suggest that epinastine inhibits the cholinergic contraction in guinea pig airways through stimulation of prejunctional 5-hydroxytryptamine receptors, located to postganglionic cholinergic nerves. Inhibitory effects of epinastine on the cholinergic contraction in human airways in vitro were also demonstrated, which suggests that a similar mechanism might be present in human airways. The pharmacological profile of epinastine, which shows binding affinity at the 5-hydroxytryptamine7 receptor but not at the 5-hydroxytryptamine1 receptor subtypes corroborates the hypothesis that the inhibitory prejunctional 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor on cholinergic nerves is of the 5-hydroxytryptamine7 subtype.
...
PMID:Epinastine (WAL 801CL) inhibits the electrical field stimulation-induced cholinergic contraction in guinea pig and human airways in vitro. 1059 92