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Title: Antagonism of a peripheral vascular but not an apparently central serotonergic response by xylamidine and BW 501C67. Author: Fuller RW, Kurz KD, Mason NR, Cohen ML. Journal: Eur J Pharmacol; 1986 Jun 05; 125(1):71-7. PubMed ID: 3732393. Abstract: Xylamidine and BW501C67 (alpha-anilino-N-2-m-chlorophenoxypropylacetamidine), serotonin antagonists that have been reported not to cross the blood-brain barrier, were compared to other serotonin antagonists: mianserin, ketanserin, metergoline and LY 53857. All six compounds were potent inhibitors of the binding of tritiated spiperone to 5HT2 receptors in rat frontal cortex membranes in vitro and were less potent inhibitors of the binding of tritiated serotonin to 5HT1 receptors in rat brain membranes. All were potent antagonists of the 5HT2 receptor-mediated contractile response to serotonin in the rat jugular vein in vitro. At doses of 0.1 and 0.3 mg/kg i.p., xylamidine and BW501C67 antagonized the pressor response to intravenously injected serotonin in pithed rats. In contrast, neither xylamidine nor BW501C67 at doses of 1 or 3 mg/kg i.p. antagonized the elevation of serum corticosterone concentration by quipazine in rats, although the other compounds antagonized this effect with ED50 values between 0.03 and 0.9 mg/kg. These data corroborate the previously reported antiserotonin activity of xylamidine and BW501C67. Since xylamidine and BW501C67 were potent antagonists of a peripheral serotonergic response in vivo, their inability to antagonize the elevation of serum corticosterone concentration by quipazine suggests that this effect results from activation of central serotonin receptors.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]