Risperidone compared with new and reference antipsychotic drugs: in vitro and in vivo receptor binding.

Article Details

Citation

Schotte A, Janssen PF, Gommeren W, Luyten WH, Van Gompel P, Lesage AS, De Loore K, Leysen JE

Risperidone compared with new and reference antipsychotic drugs: in vitro and in vivo receptor binding.

Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1996 Mar;124(1-2):57-73.

PubMed ID
8935801 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Risperidone and its active metabolite 9-OH-risperidone were compared to reference antipsychotic drugs (haloperidol, pipamperone, fluspirilene, clozapine, zotepine) and compounds under development (olanzapine, seroquel, sertindole, ORG-5222, ziprasidone) for in vitro binding to neurotransmitter receptors in brain tissue and on membranes of recombinant cells expressing cloned human receptors and for in vivo occupancy of neurotransmitter receptors in rat and guinea-pig brain following acute treatment (2 h., s.c.). An ex vivo autoradiography technique was applied to determine the receptor occupancy by the drugs administered in vivo. Of particular interest are the central 5HT2A receptors and D2-type receptors. Predominant 5HT2A receptor antagonism is supposed to add to an atypical profile of the antipsychotics (treatment of the negative symptoms, low incidence of extrapyramidal side effects). D2 antagonism is required the treatment of positive symptoms. A contribution of the new dopamine receptor subtypes D3 and in particular D4 receptors has been proposed. In vitro, all compounds, except the 'typical' antipsychotics haloperidol and fluspirilene, showed higher affinity for 5HT2A than for D2 receptors. Subnanomolar affinity for human 5HT2A receptors was observed for ORG-5222, sertindole, risperidone, 9-OH-risperidone and ziprasidone. Fluspirilene, ORG-5222, haloperidol, ziprasidone, risperidone, 9-OH-risperidone and zotepine displayed nanomolar affinity for human D2 receptors. Sertindole and olanzapine were slightly less potent. Pipamperone, clozapine and seroquel showed 2 orders of magnitude lower D2 affinity in vitro. Clozapine, but even more so pipamperone, displayed higher affinity for D4 than for D2 receptors. For most other compounds, D4 affinity was only slightly lower than their D2 affinity. Seroquel was totally devoid of D4 affinity. None of the compounds had nanomolar affinity for D1 receptors; their affinity for D3 receptors was usually slightly lower than for D2 receptors. In vivo, ORG-5222, risperidone, pipamperone, 9-OH-risperidone, sertindole, olanzapine, zotepine and clozapine maintained a higher potency for occupying 5HT2A than D2 receptors. Risperidone and ORG-5222 had 5HT2A versus D2 potency ratio of about 20. Highest potency for 5HT2A receptor occupancy was observed for ORG-5222 followed by risperidone and olanzapine. Ziprasidone exclusively occupied 5HT2A receptors. ORG-5222, haloperidol, fluspirilene and olanzapine showed the highest potency for occupying D2 receptors. No regional selectivity for D2 receptor occupancy in mesolimbic versus nigrostriatal areas was detected for any of the test compounds. Risperidone was conspicuous because of its more gradual occupancy of D2 receptors; none of the other compounds showed this property. The various compounds also displayed high to moderate occupancy of adrenergic alpha 1 receptors, except fluspirilene and ziprasidone. Clozapine, zotepine, ORG-5222 and sertindole occupied even more alpha 1 than D2 receptors. Clozapine showed predominant occupancy of H1 receptors and occupied cholinergic receptors with equivalent potency to D2 receptors. A stronger predominance of 5HT2A versus D2 receptor occupancy combined with a more gradual occupancy of D2 receptors differentiates risperidone and its 9-OH-metabolite from the other antipsychotic compounds in this study. The predominant 5HT2A receptor occupancy probably plays a role in the beneficial action of risperidone on the negative symptoms of schizophrenia, whereas maintenance of a moderate occupancy of D2 receptors seems adequate for treating the positive symptoms of schizophrenia. A combined 5HT2A and D2 occupancy and the avoidance of D2 receptor overblockade are believed to reduce the risk for extrapyra

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drugs
Drug Targets
DrugTargetKindOrganismPharmacological ActionActions
Fluspirilene5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AProteinHumans
Unknown
Antagonist
Details
FluspirileneDopamine D2 receptorProteinHumans
Yes
Antagonist
Details
Pipamperone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AProteinHumans
Unknown
Agonist
Details
PipamperoneAlpha-1 adrenergic receptors (Protein Group)Protein groupHumans
Unknown
Antagonist
Details
PipamperoneAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorProteinHumans
Unknown
Antagonist
Details
PipamperoneDopamine D2 receptorProteinHumans
Unknown
Antagonist
Details
PipamperoneDopamine D4 receptorProteinHumans
Unknown
Antagonist
Details
Binding Properties
DrugTargetPropertyMeasurementpHTemperature (°C)
AstemizoleHistamine H1 receptorKi (nM)0.8N/AN/ADetails
Clozapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AKi (nM)140N/AN/ADetails
Clozapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1BKi (nM)390N/AN/ADetails
Clozapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1DKi (nM)580N/AN/ADetails
Clozapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1EKi (nM)430N/AN/ADetails
Clozapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AKi (nM)9.6N/AN/ADetails
ClozapineAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorKi (nM)50N/AN/ADetails
ClozapineAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorKi (nM)22N/AN/ADetails
ClozapineAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorKi (nM)9.1N/AN/ADetails
ClozapineHistamine H1 receptorKi (nM)0.23N/AN/ADetails
Fluspirilene5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AKi (nM)9.5N/AN/ADetails
Haloperidol5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AKi (nM)200N/AN/ADetails
ImipramineSodium-dependent serotonin transporterKi (nM)0.15N/AN/ADetails
Olanzapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AKi (nM)2.5N/AN/ADetails
OlanzapineHistamine H1 receptorKi (nM)0.65N/AN/ADetails
OxymetazolineAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorKi (nM)1.3N/AN/ADetails
Paliperidone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AKi (nM)590N/AN/ADetails
Paliperidone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1DKi (nM)170N/AN/ADetails
Paliperidone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AKi (nM)1N/AN/ADetails
PaliperidoneAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorKi (nM)30N/AN/ADetails
PaliperidoneAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorKi (nM)9.4N/AN/ADetails
PaliperidoneAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorKi (nM)11N/AN/ADetails
PaliperidoneHistamine H1 receptorKi (nM)32N/AN/ADetails
PropranololBeta-1 adrenergic receptorKi (nM)0.02N/AN/ADetails
Quetiapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AKi (nM)320N/AN/ADetails
Quetiapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1BKi (nM)2050N/AN/ADetails
Quetiapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1DKi (nM)5000N/AN/ADetails
Quetiapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1EKi (nM)1250N/AN/ADetails
Quetiapine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AKi (nM)96N/AN/ADetails
QuetiapineAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorKi (nM)2230N/AN/ADetails
QuetiapineAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorKi (nM)90N/AN/ADetails
QuetiapineAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorKi (nM)350N/AN/ADetails
QuetiapineHistamine H1 receptorKi (nM)2.2N/AN/ADetails
Sertindole5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AKi (nM)0.39N/AN/ADetails
Sumatriptan5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1BKi (nM)1.2N/AN/ADetails
Sumatriptan5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1DKi (nM)1.7N/AN/ADetails
Ziprasidone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AKi (nM)12N/AN/ADetails
Ziprasidone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1BKi (nM)0.99N/AN/ADetails
Ziprasidone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1DKi (nM)5.1N/AN/ADetails
Ziprasidone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1EKi (nM)360N/AN/ADetails
Ziprasidone5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AKi (nM)1.4N/AN/ADetails
ZiprasidoneAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorKi (nM)160N/AN/ADetails
ZiprasidoneAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorKi (nM)48N/AN/ADetails
ZiprasidoneAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorKi (nM)77N/AN/ADetails
ZiprasidoneHistamine H1 receptorKi (nM)15N/AN/ADetails
Drug Interactions
DrugsInteraction