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CC12, A High Affinity Ligand for 3H-Cimetidine Binding, is an Improgan Antagonist

Authors :
Zhixing Shan
James G. Phillips
Lindsay B. Hough
Elwin Janssen
Iwan J. P. de Esch
Mark P. Wentland
Rebecca Stadel
Travis P. Barr
Julia W. Nalwalk
Brian Kern
Medicinal chemistry
Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Source :
Hough, L B, Nalwalk, J W, Phillips, J G, Kern, B, Shan, Z, Wentland, M P, de Esch, I J P, Janssen, E, Barr, T & Stadel, R 2007, ' CC12, a high-affinity ligand for [3H]cimetidine binding, is an improgan antagonist ', Neuropharmacology, vol. 52, no. 5, pp. 1244-1255 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropharm.2007.01.004, Neuropharmacology, 52(5), 1244-1255. Elsevier Limited
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Improgan, a chemical congener of cimetidine, is a highly effective non-opioid analgesic when injected into the CNS. Despite extensive characterization, neither the improgan receptor, nor a pharmacological antagonist of improgan has been previously described. Presently, the specific binding of [(3)H]cimetidine (3HCIM) in brain fractions was used to discover 4(5)-((4-iodobenzyl)thiomethyl)-1H-imidazole, which behaved in vivo as the first improgan antagonist. The synthesis and pharmacological properties of this drug (named CC12) are described herein. In rats, CC12 (50-500nmol, i.c.v.) produced dose-dependent inhibition of improgan (200-400nmol) antinociception on the tail flick and hot plate tests. When given alone to rats, CC12 had no effects on nociceptive latencies, or on other observable behavioral or motor functions. Maximal inhibitory effects of CC12 (500nmol) were fully surmounted with a large i.c.v. dose of improgan (800nmol), demonstrating competitive antagonism. In mice, CC12 (200-400nmol, i.c.v.) behaved as a partial agonist, producing incomplete improgan antagonism, but also limited antinociception when given alone. Radioligand binding, receptor autoradiography, and electrophysiology experiments showed that CC12's antagonist properties are not explained by activity at 25 sites relevant to analgesia, including known receptors for cannabinoids, opioids or histamine. The use of CC12 as an improgan antagonist will facilitate the characterization of improgan analgesia. Furthermore, because CC12 was also found presently to inhibit opioid and cannabinoid antinociception, it is suggested that this drug modifies a biochemical mechanism shared by several classes of analgesics. Elucidation of this mechanism will enhance understanding of the biochemistry of pain relief.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00283908
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hough, L B, Nalwalk, J W, Phillips, J G, Kern, B, Shan, Z, Wentland, M P, de Esch, I J P, Janssen, E, Barr, T & Stadel, R 2007, ' CC12, a high-affinity ligand for [3H]cimetidine binding, is an improgan antagonist ', Neuropharmacology, vol. 52, no. 5, pp. 1244-1255 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropharm.2007.01.004, Neuropharmacology, 52(5), 1244-1255. Elsevier Limited
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....335504f5bac638238ddfbb9dfcbb244d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropharm.2007.01.004