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Inhibition of adrenomedullary catecholamine release by propranolol isomers and clonidine involving mechanisms unrelated to adrenoceptors
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Citations
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References
1987
Year
1 Transmural electrical stimulation (10 Hz, 40 V, 1 ms for 60s) increased total catecholamine secretion from perfused cat adrenal glands; this response was enhanced by neostigmine and inhibited by mecamylamine, suggesting that release of acetylcholine from splanchnic nerve terminals was stimulating nicotinic receptors and enhancing catecholamine secretion. 2 Isoprenaline, (-)-propranolol and (+)-propranolol (10(-7)-10(-5)M) inhibited the electrically-evoked secretory response by 40-70%; similar reductions were obtained with clonidine and yohimbine. Neither, (+)-propranolol nor (-)-propranolol inhibited K-evoked secretion from cat adrenals; in contrast, nimodipine potently inhibited it (IC50 = 24 nM). 3 Either, racemic propranolol or the (+)- or (-)-isomers (1-10 microM) equally inhibited [3H]-noradrenaline release evoked by nicotine or acetylcholine from cultured bovine adrenal chromaffin cells; clonidine (10 microM) inhibited secretion by 50% and yohimbine or isoprenaline did not affect it. 4 The results indicate that adrenomedullary catecholamine release evoked by splanchnic nerve stimulation is not modulated by alpha- or beta-adrenoceptors and suggest that propranolol may inhibit secretion by blocking ion fluxes through the acetylcholine receptor ionophore. Clonidine may inhibit secretion by this same mechanism, and/or by interfering with some intracellular event in the secretory mechanism.
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