Affiliation:
1. Postgraduate School of Studies in Pharmacology University of Bradford, Bradford 7, Yorkshire, UK
2. Chemical Defence Establishment, Porton Down, Salisbury, Wiltshire, UK
Abstract
Abstract
The structure-activity requirements for stimulation of striatal dopaminergic mechanisms were investigated using a series of phenethylamine derivatives, apomorphine and isoapomorphine, and the intracerebral injection technique for direct application into the striatum. Asymmetric body posturing (unilateral injections in saline-and haloperidol-pretreated rats) and hyperactive/stereotyped be-behaviour (bilateral injections in nialamide-pretreated rats) were used as indices of dopaminergic stimulation. Of 24 phenethylamine derivatives studied, 2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)ethylamine (dopamine) possessed maximum activity. Alteration in length of the ethylamine side-chain, substitution of the α-C atom (α-methyldopamine) or hydroxylation of ß-C atom (noradrenaline) markedly reduced or abolished activity. Activity was also decreased by N-methyl substitution but epinine was active. The catechol moiety appeared essential for dopaminergic stimulation since the 3- or 4-hydroxyphenethylamines (tyramine, m-tyramine) were inactive and 2-(3,4-methylenedioxyphenyl)ethylamine was only weakly active. The marked dopamine-like activity of the 2-(3,4-diacetoxyphenyl)ethylamine compounds was attributed to their non-enzymic hydrolysis to dopamine in situ. The stereoselectivity of the dopamine-induced effects was assessed using trans and cis-2-(3,4-methylenedioxyphenyl)cyclopropylamine. The trans conformer was active and the importance of this conformation was further indicated by the inactivity of isoapomorphine compared with apomorphine. It is suggested that the results provide a rational basis for the design of drugs required to stimulate striatal dopamine receptors and that the intrastriatal injection technique may be useful in the detection of potential antiparkinson agents.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacology
Cited by
98 articles.
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