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Clinical Trial
. 1993 Sep;22(3):481-7.
doi: 10.1097/00005344-199309000-00021.

In vivo regulation of human cardiac beta-adrenoceptors by a partial agonist as compared with a full antagonist: selective differences in coupling to adenylate cyclase

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Clinical Trial

In vivo regulation of human cardiac beta-adrenoceptors by a partial agonist as compared with a full antagonist: selective differences in coupling to adenylate cyclase

I R Arnold et al. J Cardiovasc Pharmacol. 1993 Sep.

Abstract

Chronic therapy with the beta 1-selective adrenoceptor partial agonist xamoterol is not associated with the tolerance observed with other beta-adrenoceptor agonists. A possible explanation is that xamoterol therapy does not desensitise human cardiac beta-adrenoceptors in vivo. beta-Adrenoceptor density and adenylate cyclase activities were determined in right atrial appendages obtained from 40 patients randomised in a double-blind fashion to receive either xamoterol or atenolol for at least 5 weeks before coronary artery bypass surgery. There was no significant difference in total or subtype beta-adrenoceptor densities, but basal and isoproterenol stimulated adenylate cyclase activity were significantly greater in the atenolol-treated group, as was the intrinsic activity of the beta 2-adrenoceptor partial agonist procaterol, suggesting that chronic therapy with xamoterol does not downregulate human cardiac beta-adrenoceptors in vivo. Coupling of beta-adrenoceptors to adenylate cyclase, predominantly mediated by the beta 2 subtype, is enhanced, however, after therapy with atenolol relative to therapy with xamoterol.

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