Nischarin Is Not the Functional I-1 Imidazoline Receptor Involved in Blood Pressure Regulation

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR PHARMACOLOGY(2022)

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Abstract
Imidazoline receptor antisera selected/Nischarin was proposed several years ago as the functional entity for the I-1 medullary receptors (I(1)Rs) targeted, together with alpha(2)-adrenoceptors, by the centrally acting antihypertensive drugs, such as clonidine. The objective of this study was to test this assumption using a pyrroline analog of clonidine, LNP599, which, unlike clonidine and related compounds, displays high selectivity toward I(1)Rs. Cardiovascular effects of LNP599 (3 mg/kg intravenous) were evaluated in anesthetized, artificially ventilated nischarin mutant rats expressing a truncated form of nischarin lacking the putative imidazoline binding site. LNP599 induced a rapid and pronounced fall in arterial blood pressure in wild-type animals (-42.7% +/- 11.0% after 15 minutes), associated with a approximate to 30% heart rate reduction. Similar effects were obtained in homozygous and heterozygous nischarin mutant rats. The observation that the hypotensive response to I1R activation is not affected by the absence of the putative imidazoline binding site on nischarin strongly suggests that nischarin cannot be regarded as the functional I1R. Carbohydrate regulation was improved in nischarin mutant rats, further supporting the conclusion that nischarin and I1R are 2 distinct molecular entities.
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Key words
centrally acting antihypertensive drugs, cardiovascular pharmacology, imidazoline 1 receptor, LNP599, nischarin, sympathoinhibition
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