Stroke, Vol 19, 80-83, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
T Tsukahara, T Taniguchi, S Miwa, S Shimohama, M Fujiwara, M Nishikawa and H Handa
The nature of alpha-adrenergic receptors in human cerebral arteries was
characterized, and alteration of these receptors after subarachnoid
hemorrhage was examined using a radioligand binding assay. Norepinephrine
content of control arteries was also analyzed and compared with that of
arteries after subarachnoid hemorrhage. Norepinephrine content in human
cerebral arteries in cases of subarachnoid hemorrhage was about 5% of the
control group. Specific binding of [3H]yohimbine, a selective alpha
2-antagonist, to cerebral arteries of the control group indicated two
classes of binding sites: high-affinity sites with KD of 0.5 nM and Bmax of
18 fmol/mg protein and low-affinity sites with KD of 29 nM and Bmax of 248
fmol/mg protein. In cerebral arteries obtained from the subarachnoid
hemorrhage group, [3H]yohimbine binding sites were of a single class with
KD of 53 nM and Bmax of 456 fmol/mg protein. These results suggest that
sympathetic denervation and subsequent alterations in alpha 2- adrenergic
receptors occurred after subarachnoid hemorrhage in human cerebral
arteries. These changes in sympathetic innervation to cerebral arteries
were considered to be one of the antecedents of delayed vasospasm after
subarachnoid hemorrhage.
ARTICLES
Presynaptic and postsynaptic alpha 2-adrenergic receptors in human cerebral arteries and their alteration after subarachnoid hemorrhage
Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Kyoto University, Japan.
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