Participation of histamine H1 and H2 receptors in passive cutaneous anaphylaxis-induced scratching behavior in ICR mice
- PMID: 10079012
- DOI: 10.1016/s0014-2999(98)00974-1
Participation of histamine H1 and H2 receptors in passive cutaneous anaphylaxis-induced scratching behavior in ICR mice
Abstract
Scratching behavior associated with passive cutaneous anaphylaxis was examined and compared to that induced by compound 48/80 or histamine in ICR mice. Elicitation of passive cutaneous anaphylaxis, and intradermal injections of compound 48/80, histamine or serotonin induced both scratching behavior and vascular permeability increase in ICR mice. In mast cell-deficient WBB6F1-W/Wv mice, although histamine induced scratching behavior and vascular permeability increase, passive cutaneous anaphylaxis was not observed. Cetirizine and terfenadine significantly inhibited the scratching behavior and vascular permeability increase caused by passive cutaneous anaphylaxis, compound 48/80 and histamine. The histamine H1 receptor antagonists inhibited the vascular permeability increase almost completely, whereas they failed to abolish the scratching behavior. Famotidine and ranitidine significantly inhibited the scratching behavior caused by histamine. The histamine H2 receptor antagonists did not affect the vascular permeability increase caused by histamine. The combination of cetirizine and ranitidine abolished the histamine-induced scratching behavior. The combination, however, failed to potentiate the inhibition of passive cutaneous anaphylaxis-induced scratching behavior significantly. The results indicated that histamine induces scratching behavior in ICR mice through both histamine H1 and H2 receptors, and that histamine plays a major role in passive cutaneous anaphylaxis-induced scratching behavior. Histamine might also play an important role in compound 48/80-induced scratching behavior.
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