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Glucocorticoid modulation of muscarinic and β‐adrenergic receptors in guinea pig lung
Author(s) -
Scherrer D.,
Lach E.,
Landry Y.,
Gies JP
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
fundamental and clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.655
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1472-8206
pISSN - 0767-3981
DOI - 10.1111/j.1472-8206.1997.tb00176.x
Subject(s) - muscarinic acetylcholine receptor , endocrinology , medicine , carbachol , dihydroalprenolol , receptor , chemistry , guinea pig , dissociation constant , glucocorticoid , biology , agonist , partial agonist
Summary— We investigated the effect of the in vivo treatment of guinea pigs with methylprednisolone, 10 mg/kg daily, on lung muscarinic and β‐adrenergic receptors. Receptor densities were assessed by saturation experiments of tritiated N‐methylscopolamine and dihydroalprenolol binding to lung membranes. After 3 h of treatment, methylprednisolone induced a decrease of 19.2% ( P < 0.05) of muscarinic receptors but was without effect on β‐adrenergic receptor density. After 24 h, an increase of 39.7% ( P < 0.01) and 16.9% ( P < 0.05) was observed for muscarinic and β‐adrenergic receptors, respectively. For muscarinic receptors, this increase reached 53.4% ( P < 0.01) within 48 h and stayed at this level until 96 h. The increase of β‐adrenergic receptors was maximal (24.9%) after 72 h and returned to the control value after 96 h. The dissociation constant (K d ) values of both ligands were not affected by the glucocorticoid treatment. Functional studies showed that the 96 h treatment did not affect the contractile response of guinea pig lung parenchymal strips to carbachol since the 50% concentration value (EC 50 ) and the maximal contraction value (E max ) were not significatively different from control values. These data show that glucocorticoids control the expression of both muscarinic and β‐adrenergic receptors in guinea pig lung but with different time courses and to a larger extent for muscarinic receptors. The glucocorticoid treament did not modify the contractile response of lung strips to carbachol, confirming the absence of effect on the affinity of muscarinic receptors and suggesting that the receptor reserve exceed the increase of their density by the steroid.