epiboxidine and 3-methyl-5-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl)isoxazole

epiboxidine has been researched along with 3-methyl-5-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl)isoxazole* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for epiboxidine and 3-methyl-5-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl)isoxazole

ArticleYear
Synthesis and nicotinic activity of epiboxidine: an isoxazole analogue of epibatidine.
    European journal of pharmacology, 1997, Feb-26, Volume: 321, Issue:2

    Synthetic (+/-)-epiboxidine (exo-2-(3-methyl-5-isoxazolyl)-7-azabicyclo[2.2.1]heptane) is a methylisoxazole analog of the alkaloid epibatidine, itself a potent nicotinic receptor agonist with antinociceptive activity. Epiboxidine contains a methylisoxazolyl ring replacing the chloropyridinyl ring of epibatidine. Thus, it is also an analog of another nicotinic receptor agonist, ABT 418 ((S)-3-methyl-5-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl)isoxazole), in which the pyridinyl ring of nicotine has been replaced by the methylisoxazolyl ring. Epiboxidine was about 10-fold less potent than epibatidine and about 17-fold more potent than ABT 418 in inhibiting [3H]nicotine binding to alpha 4 beta 2 nicotinic receptors in rat cerebral cortical membranes. In cultured cells with functional ion flux assays, epiboxidine was nearly equipotent to epibatidine and 200-fold more potent than ABT 418 at alpha 3 beta 4(5) nicotinic receptors in PC12 cells. Epiboxidine was about 5-fold less potent than epibatidine and about 30-fold more potent than ABT 418 in TE671 cells with alpha 1 beta 1 gamma delta nicotinic receptors. In a hot-plate antinociceptive assay with mice, epiboxidine was about 10-fold less potent than epibatidine. However, epiboxidine was also much less toxic than epibatidine in mice.

    Topics: Animals; Anti-Anxiety Agents; Cerebral Cortex; Ganglia; Isoxazoles; Kinetics; Male; Mice; Nicotine; Nicotinic Agonists; Nociceptors; PC12 Cells; Pyrrolidines; Rats; Receptors, Nicotinic; Tritium

1997