4.7 Article

CC4, a dimer of cytisine, is a selective partial agonist at α4β2/α6β2 nAChR with improved selectivity for tobacco smoking cessation

期刊

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
卷 168, 期 4, 页码 835-849

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.2012.02204.x

关键词

partial agonist; alpha 4 beta 2 and alpha 6 beta 2 nicotinic Ach receptor subtypes; 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptors; neurotransmitter release; self-administration; conditioned place preference; rat

资金

  1. European Union [HEALTH-F2-2008-202088]
  2. CNR Research Project on Aging
  3. European Union grant Eranet
  4. Italian PRIN [2009R7WCZS]
  5. National Institutes of Health (USA) [DA003194]

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BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Many of the addictive and rewarding effects of nicotine are due to its actions on the neuronal nicotinic ACh receptor (nAChR) subtypes expressed in dopaminergic mesocorticolimbic cells. The partial agonists, cytisine and varenicline, are helpful smoking cessation aids. These drugs have a number of side effects that limit their usefulness. The aim of this study was to investigate the preclinical pharmacology of the cytisine dimer1,2-bisN-cytisinylethane (CC4). EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH The effects of CC4 on nAChRs were investigated using in vitro assays and animal behaviours. KEY RESULTS When electrophysiologically tested using heterologously expressed human subtypes, CC4 was less efficacious than cytisine on neuronal alpha 4 beta 2, alpha 3 beta 4, alpha 7 and muscle-type receptors, and had no effect on 5-hydroxytryptamine3 receptors. Acting through alpha 4 beta 2 and alpha 6 beta 2 nAChRs, CC4 is a partial agonist of nAChR-mediated striatal dopamine release and, when co-incubated with nicotine, prevented nicotine's maximal effect on this response. In addition, it had low affinity for, and was less efficacious than nicotine and cytisine on the alpha 3 beta 4 and alpha 7-nAChR subtypes. Like cytisine and nicotine, CC4-induced conditioned place preference (CPP), and its self-administration shows an inverted-U dose-response curve. Pretreatment with non-reinforcing doses of CC4 significantly reduced nicotine-induced self-administration and CPP without affecting motor functions. CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS Our in vitro and in vivo findings reveal that CC4 selectively reduces behaviours associated with nicotine addiction consistent with the partial agonist selectivity of CC4 for beta 2-nAChRs. The results support the possible development of CC4 or its derivatives as a promising drug for tobacco smoking cessation.

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