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      Nitrogen substitution modifies the activity of cytisine on neuronal nicotinic receptor subtypes.

      European Journal of Pharmacology
      Alkaloids, agonists, chemical synthesis, pharmacology, Animals, Azocines, Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic, metabolism, pharmacokinetics, Binding, Competitive, Bungarotoxins, Calcium, chemistry, Cell Line, Female, Gene Expression, Iodine Radioisotopes, Molecular Structure, Neurons, drug effects, Nicotinic Agonists, Nicotinic Antagonists, Nitrogen, analysis, Oocytes, Pyridines, Quinolizines, Radioligand Assay, Rats, Receptors, Nicotinic, genetics, Structure-Activity Relationship, Tritium, Xenopus laevis

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          Abstract

          Cytisine very potently binds and activates the alpha 3 beta 4 and alpha 7 nicotinic subtypes, but only partially agonises the alpha 4 beta 2 subtype. Although with a lower affinity than cytisine, new cytisine derivatives with different substituents on the basic nitrogen (CC1-CC8) bind to both the heteromeric and homomeric subtypes, with higher affinity for brain [3H]epibatidine receptors. The cytisine derivatives were tested on the Ca(2+) flux of native or transfected cell lines expressing the rat alpha 7, or human alpha 3 beta 4 or alpha 4 beta 2 subtypes using Ca(2+) dynamics in conjunction with a fluorescent image plate reader. None elicited any response at doses of up to 30-100 microM, but all inhibited agonist-induced responses. Compounds CC5 and CC7 were also electrophysiologically tested on oocyte-expressed rat alpha 4 beta 2, alpha 3 beta 4 and alpha 7 subtypes. CC5 competitively antagonised the alpha 4 beta 2 and alpha 3 beta 4 subtypes with similar potency, whereas CC7 only partially agonised them with maximum responses of respectively 3% and 11% of those of 1 mM acetylcholine. Neither compound induced any current in the oocyte-expressed alpha 7 subtype, and both weakly inhibited acetylcholine-induced currents. Adding chemical groups of a different class or size to the basic nitrogen of cytisine leads to compounds that lose full agonist activity on the alpha 3 beta 4 and alpha 7 subtypes.

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