Evidence for inverse agonism of SR141716A at human recombinant cannabinoid CB1 and CB2 receptors

SJ MacLennan, PH Reynen, J Kwan… - British journal of …, 1998 - Wiley Online Library
SJ MacLennan, PH Reynen, J Kwan, DW Bonhaus
British journal of pharmacology, 1998Wiley Online Library
The cannabinoid receptor antagonist SR141716A has been suggested to be an inverse
agonist at CB1 receptors in some isolated intact tissues. We found that the basal
incorporation of [35S]‐GTPγS in Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing human
recombinant CB1 and CB2 receptors was inhibited by SR141716A (mean pEC50s 8.26 and
6.00, respectively), whereas cannabinol (10 μm) had no significant effect at hCB1 receptors
but inhibited the binding at hCB2 receptors. As cannabinol had no effect on basal [35S] …
The cannabinoid receptor antagonist SR141716A has been suggested to be an inverse agonist at CB1 receptors in some isolated intact tissues. We found that the basal incorporation of [35S]‐GTPγS in Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing human recombinant CB1 and CB2 receptors was inhibited by SR141716A (mean pEC50s 8.26 and 6.00, respectively), whereas cannabinol (10 μM) had no significant effect at hCB1 receptors but inhibited the binding at hCB2 receptors. As cannabinol had no effect on basal [35S]‐GTPγS binding at hCB1 at a concentration 100 fold higher than its binding affinity (Ki=0.1 μM), we conclude that endogenous cannabinoid receptor agonists are not a confounding factor and suggest the actions of SR141716A at the hCB1 receptor, and the actions of SR141716A and cannabinol at the hCB2 receptor, are due to inverse agonism.
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