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Subcellular distribution and binding characterization of the peripheral benzodiazepine receptor in the rat liverDuerson, Kevin Collin, 1958- January 1988 (has links)
The peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBZ) population in the rat liver has been kinetically and pharmacologically characterized. These data revealed a receptor with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 5.67 nM and a receptor density of 758 fmoles/ mg protein in a crude membrane preparation. Subcellular distribution studies demonstrated that PBZs were detected in highly purified nuclear, mitochondrial and microsomal fractions. Porphyrins were shown to interact at the PBZ with protoporphyrin IX and hemin having the highest affinity. Preliminary studies on the subnuclear distribution of PBZs are reported. In summary, the study has (1) characterized liver PBZs, (2) shown the subcellular distribution of these receptors and (3) pharmacologically characterized nuclear, mitochondrial and microsomal PBZs in the liver.
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Topology characterization of a benzodiazepine-binding domain of GABAA receptor and anxiolytic-like effect of baicalin acting through the benzodiazepine-binding site /Xu, Zhiwen. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, 2005. / On t.p. final "A" of GABAA is subscript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 148-167). Also available in electronic version.
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The metabolic profiling of clobazam in ratsBorel, Anthony Gerard Francis January 1990 (has links)
Clobazam (CLBZ) is a 1,5-benzodiazepine with potent anticonvulsant activity. The metabolism of this drug was investigated in the rat and in vitro with the aid of stable isotope-labelled analogues and gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GCMS).
Pentadeuteriophenyl CLBZ [²H₅]CLBZ was synthesized in essentially quantitative isotopic purity, and characterized by ¹H-NMR and GCMS. Of the five steps involved in the synthesis of [²H₅]CLBZ, the most susceptible to deuterium exchange was the nucleophilic substitution of 2,4-dichloronitrobenzene by aniline-d₇ to form N-(5-chloro-2-nitrophenyl)pentadeuteriophenylamine 18. In this step, the isotopic impurity aniline-2,3,4,5,-d₅ introduced protons from nitrogen into the ortho and para positions of the deuteriophenyl ring of 18.
Phenol and catechol metabolites of CLBZ and N-desmethylclobazam (DMC) were synthesized according to the method used for [²H₅]CLBZ using 4-methoxyaniline and 3,4-dimethoxyaniline as starting materials. The methyl ether protecting group was well-suited for the synthetic procedure and was cleanly removed under mild conditions with BBr₃ to afford the phenols and catechols in good yield. The 0-methylated catechols of CLBZ and DMC were enzymatically synthesized from the catechol analogues of CLBZ and DMC using rat liver cytosol as a source of catechol O-methyltransferase (COMT) and S-adenosyl-L-methionine as the methyl donor. A meta/para O-methylation ratio of 2 was obtained from the CLBZ catechol.
Condensation of formaldehyde with DMC catalyzed by K₂CO₃ produced a compound whose GCMS (EI) spectral properties were consistent with the carbinolamide, however, this compound could not be isolated because of its
marginal stability. A major product for this reaction was 3-hydroxymethyl DMC which was characterized by ¹H-NMR and LCMS. Formaldehyde condensation catalyzed by KOH also afforded 3-hydroxymethyl DMC. Whether formaldehyde addition at the 3-position occurs as a kinetic product or whether it arises as a result of an equilibrium process subsequent to N-hydroxymethylation remains to be resolved.
Rats were administered CLBZ:[²H₅]CLBZ as an approximate 50:50 mixture. Isotope shifts detected by GCMS allowed the following CLBZ metabolites to be identified. In bile, decreasing levels of 4'-hydroxy CLBZ, 4'-hydroxy DMC, O-methylated CLBZ catechols, 4'-hydroxy-3'-methoxy DMC and 3',4'-dihydroxy CLBZ appeared as both glucuronide and sulfate conjugates. In urine decreasing levels of the following sulfate conjugates were observed: 4'-hydroxy-3'-methoxy CLBZ, 4'-hydroxy CLBZ, 4'-hydroxy DMC and 3',4'-dihydroxy CLBZ. In bile, the glucuronides were predominant over the sulfates, whereas in urine only sulfate conjugates were detected. There was no detectable evidence of unconjugated CLBZ metabolites in bile or urine. As the biliary glucuronide and urinary sulfate, 3'-hydroxy-4'-methoxy CLBZ constituted ≤2 % of the O-methylated CLBZ catechols, whereas in bile, the sulfate conjugate of this metabolite constituted 30 %. One possible explanation for the higher levels of this metabolite as a biliary sulfate could be the low regiospecific methylation of dihydroxy CLBZ by COMT combined with arylsulfatase activity present in the kidney. Neither the CLBZ carbinolamide nor the N-hydroxy DMC (hydroxamic acid) was present in detectable levels in the conjugated or unconjugated fractions of bile or urine.
Isotope effects in the metabolism of CLBZ and DMC in the rat were marginal for phenyl ring oxidation as measured for phenol metabolites
(kH/kD =1.103 ± .090) and for catechols (kH/kD. = 1.088 ± .207).
The metabolism of CLBZ and DMC in vitro was examined using control and phenobarbital-induced rat liver microsomes. CLBZ metabolism resulted in N-demethylation to DMC and phenyl ring hydroxylation at the 4'-position. There was no detectable evidence for the carbinolamide intermediate. Induction appeared to increase N-demethylation compared to phenyl ring hydroxylation. DMC was metabolized to 4'-hydroxy DMC with no detectable production of the hydroxamic acid.
The isotope effect associated with CLBZ N-demethylation was determined by incubating an approximate 50:50 mixture of pentadeuteriophenyl CLBZ:trideuteriomethyl CLBZ with control and phenobarbital-induced rat liver microsomes. In this way, the source of DMC derived from demethylation ([²H₅]DMC) and dedeuteriomethylation (DMC) could be determined. The values of kH/kD, determined by protio/deuterio product ratios, were calculated at 3.65 ± 0.27 (n = 3) and 2.80 ± 0.16 (n = 4) for control and induced microsomes respectively. / Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of / Graduate
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Synthetic development towards benzodiazepine alkaloids : total synthesis of circumdatin F and C /Witt, Anette, January 2002 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karol. inst., 2002. / Härtill 5 uppsatser.
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ISOLATION AND IN VITRO CHARACTERIZATION OF MAMMALIAN CEREBRAL CORTICAL FACTORS INTERACTIVE WITH THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM BENZODIAZEPINE RECEPTOR (ENDOGENOUS LIGANDS).Chen, Andrew David. January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
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Peripheral benzodiazepine receptors in prostate and prostatic tumors characterization, hormonal regulation and possible role in tumorigenesis /Alenfall, Jan. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Lund University, 1995. / Added t.p. with thesis statement inserted.
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Peripheral benzodiazepine receptors in prostate and prostatic tumors characterization, hormonal regulation and possible role in tumorigenesis /Alenfall, Jan. January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Lund University, 1995. / Added t.p. with thesis statement inserted.
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Development and application of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for the detection of drugs in the equineRoberts, Caroline Jane January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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An enquiry into the neurochemical, neuroanatomical, and electrophysiological basis of benzodiazepine-induced spatial learning deficits in the ratMcNamara, Robert Keith 04 July 2018 (has links)
Benzodiazepine (BZ) drugs, such as diazepam (Valium®) and
chlordiazepoxide (Librium®), are widely prescribed for their
sedative/anxiolytic properties but also impair mnemonic processes in both
humans and animals. In the Morris water maze, an aversively motivated
spatial learning task, BZs impair spatial learning but spare
retention/performance. This spatial learning deficit cannot be attributed to
sedation, gross sensorimotor impairments, hypothermia, state-dependent
learning, or reductions of escape motivation (anxiolysis). The following
series of experiments sought to further characterize the neurochemical,
neuroanatomical, and electrophysiological substrates of BZ-induced
impairments of spatial learning. In Experiment I, the role of endogenous BZs
in spatial learning was assessed. The BZ receptor antagonists flumazenil (Ro
15-1788) and CGS 8216, as well as the BZ receptor inverse-agonist β-carboline,
enhanced spatial learning in an inverted-U dose-dependent manner,
suggesting that endogenously released BZs impede optimal learning. In
Experiment II, the role of the BZ ω1 receptor subtype in spatial learning was
assessed. CL 218,872, a selective agonist for the BZ ω1 receptor subtype,
impaired spatial learning in a dose-dependent and flumazenil-reversible
manner, thereby implicating the ω1 receptor subtype in BZ-induced amnesia.
Together these results suggest that endogenous BZs activity, like BZ drugs, is
detrimental to spatial learning and that specific BZ receptors mediate this
impairment.
Several neurochemical systems are important for spatial learning
in the MWM and arc influenced by BZs. The contributions of two of these
neurochemical systems, the opioids and acetylcholine (ACh), to the spatial
learning deficit produced by BZs were assessed. In Experiment III, a better
understanding of the role of opioid systems in spatial learning was sought.
Morphine, a prototypical opioid, impaired spatial learning in a dose-dependent and naloxone-reversible manner. However, morphine also
impaired performance and escape to a visible platform and its effects on
spatial learning could be attenuated by increasing the escape incentive
(colder water). This impairment pattern suggests that morphine impairs
spatial learning by reducing escape motivation. Because both BZs and cold
water immersion increase endogenous opioid activity, it seemed possible
that the combination of drug- and water-induced opioid release might
mediate the spatial learning deficit produced by BZs. In Experiment IV,
naloxone, an opioid receptor antagonist, completely blocked the spatial
learning deficit produced by morphine but failed, even at a higher dose, to
block the spatial learning deficit produced by diazepam . Conversely,
flumazenil, a BZ receptor antagonist, completely blocked the spatial learning
deficit produced by diazepam but failed to affect the amnesic effects of
morphine. Together, these findings strongly suggest that the spatial learning
deficit produced by BZs is not due to enhanced opioid activity.
There is also biochemical evidence that BZs interact with ACh systems.
In Experiment V, flumazenil attenuated the spatial learning deficit produced
by scopolamine, an ACh (muscarinic) antagonist, but physostigmine, an
acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, failed to attenuate the spatial learning deficit
produced by chlordiazepoxide, even at doses that completely reversed the
spatial learning deficit produced by scopolamine. Together these results fail
to support the notion that BZs impair spatial learning by reducing ACh
activity but suggest that scopolamine impairs spatial learning by enhancing
endogenous BZ activity.
Several neuroanatomical regions possess a high density of BZ
receptors and are also integral for spatial learning in the MWM. In
Experiment VI, infusions of chlordiazepoxide into the medial septum, but
not frontal cortex, nucleus basalis magnocellularis, amygdala, hippocampus,
or cerebellum, impaired spatial learning but had little effect on anxiety.
Conversely, infusions of chlordiazepoxide into the amygdala reduced anxiety
but had little effect on spatial learning. These results suggest that the medial
septum mediates the amnesic effects of BZs and that the amygdala mediates
the anxiolytic effects. In Experiment VII, intraseptal infusions of
chlordiazepoxide were additionally found to impair spatial learning in a
dose-dependent and flumazenil-reversible manner. However, infusions of
flumazenil into the medial septum failed to block the amnesic effects of
systemically administered chlordiazepoxide, suggesting that the amnesic
to
effects of BZs are not mediated by the medial septum exclusively.
Tetrahydroaminoacridine, an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, failed to
attenuate the spatial learning deficit produced by intraseptal infusions of
chlordiazepoxide, suggesting that the deficit was not due to a disruption of
the septohippocampal ACh projection. Together, these results suggest that
chlordiazepoxide impairs spatial learning by interacting with the
septohippocampal GABAergic projection.
The septohippocampal GABAergic projection regulates the
excitability of hippocampal afferents (e.g., perforant path). Experiment VIII
assessed the effects of systemically administered BZs on the induction of
long-term potentiation (LTP) in the perforant path. CL 218,872, but not
chlordiazepoxide or diazepam , significantly suppressed long-term
potentiation. However, all drugs impaired spatial learning. These findings
suggest that CL 218,872 impairs spatial learning by suppressing LTP but that
BZ-induced spatial learning deficits can occur in the absence of perforant
path LTP suppression.
Taken together, the above results suggest that endogenous BZ
systems, particularly those in the septohippocampal system, are important
modulators of mnemonic processes. These findings are discussed in the
context of understanding information storage processes and the
implications for clinical populations. / Graduate
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Synthetic and spectrometric investigation of 1,4-benzoxazepinesWhittal, R D January 1990 (has links)
Flavanone (2,3-dihydro-2-phenyl-4H-benzopyran-4-one) and a series of 4'- and 7-halogeno derivatives were prepared from the corresponding 2'-hydroxychalcones [1-(2-hydroxyphenyl)-3-phenyl-2-propen-l-ones], which, in turn, were synthesized by aldol condensation of substituted 2'-hydroxacetophenones with various benzaldehydes. A series of 2,3-dihydro-2-phenyl-l,4-benzoxazepin-5(4H)-ones were prepared by ring expansion of the corresponding flavanones, via the Schmidt reaction, using trimethylsilylazide and trifluoroacetic acid. A series of tetrazoles {2,3-dihydro-2-phenyl-tetrazolo[1,5-d]-1,4-benzoxazepines} were also isolated as by-products of the Schmidt reaction. Flavanone oxime was synthesized for use in Beckmann reactions, and its molecular structure was determined by x-ray crystallography. Attempts to prepare 1,4-benzoxazepinone or its 1,5-analogue via Beckmann rearrangement of flavanone oxime, with polyphosphoric acid or phosphorus pentachloride catalysts, however, were unsuccessful. Several methods for introducing Δ²-unsaturation into the benzoxazepinone system were also examined. High resolution ¹H n.m.r., computer modelling, and molecular mechanics techniques were used to determine the conformations of the heterocycles of the benzoxazepinones and tetrazoles and results are compared with earlier studies in this field. Certain trends in the fragmentation patterns were observed in the low resolution mass spectra of the benzoxazepinones and tetrazoles, and high resolution mass spectrometric data were used to explore the major fragmentation patterns of these compounds.
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