نتایج جستجو برای: muscarinic receptor subtypes

تعداد نتایج: 624271  

Journal: :medical journal of islamic republic of iran 0
slobodan m jankovic from the department of pharmacology, medical faculty, kragujevac, serbia, fr yugoslavia dusan b. beleslin

up to date, there are four pharmacologically characterized subtypes of muscarinic receptors (m1, m2, m3 and m4). in our study we have investigated muscarinic receptor subtypes in smooth muscle layers of human stomach. isolated preparations of longitudinal and circular muscle layers from human stomach were used. acetylcholine, bethanechol, carbachol, pilocarpine and ahr -602 produced concentrati...

DUSAN B. BELESLIN, SLOBODAN M JANKOVIC,

Up to date, there are four pharmacologically characterized subtypes of muscarinic receptors (M1, M2, M3 and M4). In our study we have investigated muscarinic receptor subtypes in smooth muscle layers of human stomach. Isolated preparations of longitudinal and circular muscle layers from human stomach were used. Acetylcholine, bethanechol, carbachol, pilocarpine and AHR -602 produced concen...

Objective(s): Cells perform their functional activities by communicating with each other through endogenous substances and receptors. Post-translation, stem cells function properly in new host tissue by carrying specific cell surface receptors. We aimed to characterize muscarinic receptor subtypes in mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) together with osteogenic and adipogenic...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1999
J Gomeza H Shannon E Kostenis C Felder L Zhang J Brodkin A Grinberg H Sheng J Wess

Members of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor family (M1-M5) are known to be involved in a great number of important central and peripheral physiological and pathophysiological processes. Because of the overlapping expression patterns of the M1-M5 muscarinic receptor subtypes and the lack of ligands endowed with sufficient subtype selectivity, the precise physiological functions of the indiv...

Journal: :Molecular Vision 2009
N.A. McBrien A.I. Jobling H.T. Truong C.L. Cottriall A. Gentle

PURPOSE Muscarinic receptors are known to regulate several important physiologic processes in the eye. Antagonists to these receptors such as atropine and pirenzepine are effective at stopping the excessive ocular growth that results in myopia. However, their site of action is unknown. This study details ocular muscarinic subtype expression within a well documented model of eye growth and inves...

2017
Ondrej Soukup Michael Winder Uday Kumar Killi Vladimir Wsol Daniel Jun Kamil Kuca Gunnar Tobin

BACKGROUND Pharmaceuticals with targets in the cholinergic transmission have been used for decades and are still fundamental treatments in many diseases and conditions today. Both the transmission and the effects of the somatomotoric and the parasympathetic nervous systems may be targeted by such treatments. Irrespective of the knowledge that the effects of neuronal signalling in the nervous sy...

Journal: :General physiology and biophysics 2003
J Myslivecek S Trojan

Receptor activation results in homologous regulation and can also affect other types of receptors (a process that has been reported to heterologous regulation). Heart cells express subtypes of muscarinic receptors and adrenoceptors, almost antagonistic in their action (M2 muscarinic receptors and beta1-adrenoceptors). Therefore, they provide an excellent model of heterologous regulation. Moreov...

2001
Gerald A. Marks Christian G. Birabil

pontine reticular formation of the rat is capable of inducing long-lasting increases in REM sleep (Bourgin et al., 1995; Marks and Birabil, 1998). These effects are blocked by a previous injection of the non-selective, muscarinic antagonist atropine supporting mediation by muscarinic receptors (Bourgin et al., 1995; Marks and Birabil, 1998). Five different muscarinic receptor subtypes have been...

2016
NORMAN H. LEE

Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors belong to a superfamily of structurally related proteins which possess seven transmembrane spanning regions and couple to G-proteins [1-4]. Thus far, five distinct muscarinic receptor subtypes (designated ml-m5) are known to exist based on recent molecular cloning studies [2, 5, 6]. Earlier knowledge of muscarinic receptor heterogeneity was based on binding an...

Journal: :Life sciences 1988
P J Barnes P Minette J Maclagan

Muscarinic receptor subtypes in the airways appear to subserve different physiological functions. M1-receptors facilitate neurotransmission through parasympathetic ganglia and enhance cholinergic reflexes, but are also localized to alveolar walls. M2-receptors act as autoreceptors on post-ganglionic cholinergic nerves and inhibit acetylcholine release. There is some evidence that they may be de...

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