Abstract

The muscarinic receptors in the guinea pig urinary bladder and the longitudinal muscle of the guinea pig ileum were studied by means of a receptor-binding technique. 1-Quinuclidinyl [phenyl 4-3H]benzilate ((-)3H-QNB) was employed as radio-ligand and the separation of bound from free (-) 3H-QNB was performed by microcentrifugation. Under conditions of equilibrium (-)3H-QNB was specifically bound with high affinity to a limited number of sites, 0.32 and 1.62 pmol/mg protein in the bladder and ileum, respectively. The binding appeared to represent a single population of non-interacting binding sites. The apparent dissociation constants were 2.6 x 10(-10) M in the bladder and 1.2 x 10(-9) M in the ileum, whereas the KD-values, estimated by extrapolation to an infinitely low receptor concentration were 1.1 x 10(-10) M (bladder) and 3.1 x 10(-10) M (ileum). The binding of (-)3H-QNB appears to represent an interaction with muscarinic receptors, as it was effectively inhibited by muscarinic antagonists and agonists, but not by a variety of non-cholinergic drugs.

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