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Human response to α2-adrenergic agonist stimulation studied in an isolated vascular bed in vivo: Biphasic influence of dose, age, gender, and receptor genotype.

Authors :
King, Danuta
Etzel, Jason P.
Chopra, Shagun
Smith, Joshua
Cadman, Peter E.
Fangwen Rao
Funk, Stephen D.
Rana, Brinda K.
Schork, Nicholas J.
Insel, Paul A.
O'Connor, Daniel T.
Source :
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics; May2005, Vol. 77 Issue 5, p388-403, 16p, 4 Charts
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Activation of α<subscript>2</subscript>-adrenergic receptors regulates a broad spectrum of physiologic responses, including blood pressure (centrally and peripherally), sedation, analgesia, insulin release, renal function, cognition, and behavior. The purpose of this study was to explore systematically the local vascular responses in humans triggered by a highly selective α<subscript>2</subscript>-adrenergic agonist (azepexole [B-HT 933]) and whether such responses are dose-dependent or influenced by age, gender, or allelic variation at the drug's receptor. Methods: We evaluated dorsal hand vein vascular responses to the infusion of a wide spectrum of doses of azepexole, assessing any venodilation, as well as the maximal extent of venoconstriction (B<subscript>max</subscript>) and the dose that produced a half-maximal effect (K<subscript>d</subscript>), in 50 healthy normotensive adults of both genders and 4 ethnicities. Genomic deoxyribonucleic acid from the study subjects was evaluated at polymorphisms of the α<subscript>2B</subscript>-adrenergic receptor gene (ADRA2B). Results: We found previously unreported initial venodilation to low doses (10-100 ng/min) of azepexole, followed by progressive, intense venoconstriction to higher doses (200-100,000 ng/min) of the drug. Younger individuals (aged <30 years) had less venodilation than older individuals (aged >30 years) with low doses of azepexole but had a greater extent of venoconstriction at higher doses of azepexole (ANOVA, P = .001). Men had less venodilation than women with low doses of azepexole but greater venoconstriction with higher doses (ANOVA, P = .036). Several common polymorphisms (>10% minor allele frequency) at ADRA2B (insertion/deletion polymorphism [Glu<subscript>322-325</subscript>],G-98C, C1182A, and C1776A) did not show an association with either B<subscript>max</subscript> or K<subscript>d</subscript> for the drug response. The A36G (Thr12Thr) synonymous single nucleotide polymorphism displayed a nonsignificant trend (P = .073) toward higher K<subscript>d</subscript> in A/G heterozygotes compared with A/A homozygotes. Conclusions: Local infusion into the human dorsal hand vein of a highly selective α<subscript>2</subscript>-adrenergic agonist, azepexole, produces biphasic responses, with venodilation at a low dose and intense venoconstriction at a higher concentration. These responses to azepexole show prominent differences as a function of age and gender but appear not to depend on common allelic variations at the ADRA2B receptor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00099236
Volume :
77
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25254803
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clpt.2005.02.008