Abstract

Studies have investigated the pharmacologic mechanism of 2-(4'-isothiocyanatobenzyl) imidazoline (IBI) and analogs for interaction with imidazoline receptors (IRs), alpha-adrenergic receptors (alpha-ARs), and calcium channels in cardiovascular muscle systems. IBI differs from tolazoline by substitution of an electrophilic isothiocyanato (NCS) group. Unlike tolazoline, which is a partial alpha-AR agonist, IBI produced an irreversible, slow-onset, and sustained contraction of rat aorta with an median effective concentration (EC50) value of 5 microM, and a maximal contraction (116%) greater than that of phenylephrine (100%) and tolazoline (59%). The IBI-induced contractions were dependent on calcium channels and independent of alpha-ARs or IRs. Similarly, structure-activity relation studies in rat aortic smooth muscles on a series of synthesized IBI analogs indicated that NCS analogs, but not those without the NCS group, exhibited effects by a non-alpha-AR, non-IR, but a calcium channel-dependent mechanism. Thus the presence of an intact IBI ring in these analogs is not a requirement for these activities. Further, IBI inhibited dihydropyridine (DHP, [3H]PN 200-110 and [3H]Bay K 8644) binding to L-type calcium channels of T-tubule membranes in rabbit skeletal muscle. In contrast to nifedipine, IBI and NCS derivatives (nifedipine-NCS, naphazoline-NCS) only partially (50-88%) displaced specific binding of these radioligands. A single site of noncooperative interaction was observed for nifedipine (nH = 0.97), whereas tolazoline-NCS (IBI, nH = 1.46) and nifedipine-NCS (nH = 1.37) exhibited a positive cooperativity in binding to DHP sites. These receptor-binding data indicate that NCS derivatives bind to L-type calcium channels and interact allosterically with DHP-binding sites. Direct binding of the NCS group to specific nucleophilic protein sites of the calcium channel may be responsible for its activation and the subsequent contractile effects of IBI.

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