Imipramine and tetrabenazine: effects on monoamine receptor binding sites and phosphoinositide hydrolysis
- PMID: 2540994
- DOI: 10.1016/0014-2999(89)90657-2
Imipramine and tetrabenazine: effects on monoamine receptor binding sites and phosphoinositide hydrolysis
Abstract
Treatment of rats for 21 days with tetrabenazine, a drug which depletes monoamines and is used behaviorally to screen for antidepressants, significantly decreased 5-HT2 receptor density, increased alpha 1-adrenoceptor density but did not alter beta-adrenoceptor density in homogenates of frontal cortices labeled with [3H]ketanserin, [3H]prazosin and [3H]dihydroalprenolol, respectively. These effects were not opposite to those of the antidepressant drug imipramine which decreased both 5-HT2 and beta-adrenoceptor density and did not alter alpha 1-adrenoceptor density. Some evidence for antagonistic interactions between the two drugs was found in that imipramine partially prevented the tetrabenazine-induced increase in alpha 1-adrenoceptor density and tetrabenazine partially prevented the imipramine-induced decrease in beta-adrenoceptor density. Neither drug altered phosphoinositide hydrolysis coupled to alpha 1-adrenoceptors. While the effects of tetrabenazine are frequently attributed to its reserpine-like action of depleting monoamines, these results provide the first indication that tetrabenazine alters 5-HT2 and beta-adrenoceptor density in a manner different from that of reserpine.
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