PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - A P Ford AU - N F Arredondo AU - D R Blue, Jr AU - D W Bonhaus AU - J Jasper AU - M S Kava AU - J Lesnick AU - J R Pfister AU - I A Shieh AU - R L Vimont AU - T J Williams AU - J E McNeal AU - T A Stamey AU - D E Clarke TI - RS-17053 (N-[2-(2-cyclopropylmethoxyphenoxy)ethyl]-5-chloro-alpha, alpha-dimethyl-1H-indole-3-ethanamine hydrochloride), a selective alpha 1A-adrenoceptor antagonist, displays low affinity for functional alpha 1-adrenoceptors in human prostate: implications for adrenoceptor classification. DP - 1996 Feb 01 TA - Molecular Pharmacology PG - 209--215 VI - 49 IP - 2 4099 - http://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/49/2/209.short 4100 - http://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/49/2/209.full SO - Mol Pharmacol1996 Feb 01; 49 AB - Norepinephrine (NE) contracts smooth muscle cells within the human lower urinary tract (LUT) (bladder neck, prostate, and urethra). Receptor distribution and pharmacological evidence have implicated activation of alpha 1A-adrenoceptors. We disclose the pharmacological properties of the novel, selective alpha 1A-adrenoceptor antagonist N-[2-(2-cyclopropylmethoxyphenoxy)ethyl]-5-chloro- alpha,alpha-dimethyl-1H-indole-3-ethanamine hydrochloride (RS-17053) and examine critically the pharmacological identity of the alpha 1-adrenoceptor mediating contractions to NE in human LUT tissues. In several tissues from rat and cloned adrenoceptors, RS-17053 displayed high affinity for the alpha 1A-adrenoceptor (pKi and pA2 estimates of 9.1-9.9) and a 30-100-fold selectivity over the alpha 1B- and the alpha 1D-adrenoceptor subtypes (pK1 and pA2 estimates of 7.7-7.8). However, in isolated smooth muscle preparations from human LUT tissues, RS-17053 antagonized responses to NE only at high concentrations. Estimates of affinity (pA2) at alpha 1-adrenoceptors mediating NE-induced contractions were 7.5 in prostatic periurethral longitudinal smooth muscle (compared with 8.6 for prazosin), 6.9 in anterior fibromuscular stroma (prazosin, 8.9), and 7.1 in bladder neck (prazosin, 8.5). These findings indicate that contractile responses to NE in human LUT tissues are mediated by a receptor displaying pharmacological properties that are clearly different from those of the defined alpha 1A-adrenoceptor and raise the possibility that multiple forms of the alpha 1A-adrenoceptor may exist in human LUT that are discriminated by RS-17053. In this regard, the affinity estimates obtained with RS-17053 and other alpha 1-adrenoceptor antagonists in human LUT tissues are identical to those described for the putative alpha 1L-adrenoceptor.