Abstract

Anxiolytic benzodiazepines, due to their clinical effectiveness, are one of the most prescribed drugs worldwide, despite being associated with sedative effects and impaired psychomotor and cognitive performance. Not every GABAA receptor functions in the same manner. Those containing α1 subunits are associated with sleep regulation and have a greater effect on the sedative-hypnotic benzodiazepines, whereas those containing α2 and/or α3 subunits are associated with anxiety phenomena and have a greater effect on the anxiolytic benzodiazepines. Therefore, characterization of the selectivity profile of anxiolytic drugs could translate into a significant clinical impact. The present study pharmacodynamically evaluated chlornordiazepam, the main active metabolite of mexazolam, upon GABAA receptors containing α2 and/or α3, anxiety-related, and those containing an α1 subunit, associated with sleep modulation. As shown by whole-cell patch-clamp data, chlornordiazepam potentiated GABA-evoked current amplitude in α2 and α3 containing receptors without changing the current amplitude in α1 containing receptors. However, current decay time increased, particularly in GABAA receptors containing α1 subunits. In contrast, other anxiolytic benzodiazepines such as alprazolam, bromazepam, and zolpidem, all increased currents associated with GABAA receptors containing the α1 subunit. This novel evidence demonstrates that mexazolam (through its main metabolite chlornordiazepam) has a "pharmacodynamic fingerprint" that correlates better with an anxiolytic profile and fewer sedative effects, when compared to alprazolam, bromazepam and zolpidem, explaining clinical trial outcomes with these drugs. This also highlights the relevance of the pharmacological selectivity over GABAA receptor subtypes in the selection of benzodiazepines, in addition to their clinical performance and pharmacokinetic characteristics.

Full Text
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