Cristina Cosi
University of Florence
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The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2005
Adrian Newman-Tancredi; Marie-Bernadette Assié; Nathalie Leduc; Anne-Marie Ormière; Nathalie Danty; Cristina Cosi
Serotonin 5-HT1A receptors are promising targets in the management of schizophrenia but little information exists about affinity and efficacy of novel antipsychotics at these sites. We addressed this issue by comparing binding affinity at 5-HT1A receptors with dopamine rD2 receptors, which are important targets for antipsychotic drug action. Agonist efficacy at 5-HT1A receptors was determined for G-protein activation and adenylyl cyclase activity. Whereas haloperidol, thioridazine, risperidone and olanzapine did not interact with 5-HT1A receptors, other antipsychotic agents exhibited agonist properties at these sites. E(max) values (% effect induced by 10 microM of 5-HT) for G-protein activation at rat brain 5-HT1A receptors: sarizotan (66.5), bifeprunox (35.9), SSR181507 (25.8), nemonapride (25.7), ziprasidone (20.6), SLV313 (19), aripiprazole (15), tiospirone (8.9). These data were highly correlated with results obtained at recombinant human 5-HT1A receptors in determinations of G-protein activation and inhibition of forskolin-stimulated adenylyl cyclase. In binding-affinity determinations, the antipsychotics exhibited diverse properties at r5-HT1A receptors: sarizotan (pK(i)=8.65), SLV313 (8.64), SSR181507 (8.53), nemonapride (8.35), ziprasidone (8.30), tiospirone (8.22), aripiprazole (7.42), bifeprunox (7.19) and clozapine (6.31). The affinity ratios of the ligands at 5-HT1A vs. D2 receptors also varied widely: ziprasidone, SSR181507 and SLV313 had similar affinities whereas aripiprazole, nemonapride and bifeprunox were more potent at D2 than 5-HT1A receptors. Taken together, these data indicate that aripiprazole has low efficacy and modest affinity at 5-HT1A receptors, whereas bifeprunox has low affinity but high efficacy. In contrast, SSR181507 has intermediate efficacy but high affinity, and is likely to have more prominent 5-HT1A receptor agonist properties. Thus, the contribution of 5-HT1A receptor activation to the pharmacological profile of action of the antipsychotics will depend on the relative 5-HT1A/D2 affinities and on 5-HT1A agonist efficacy of the drugs.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 1997
Marie Bernadette Assié; Cristina Cosi; Wouter Koek
5-HT1A receptor agonists are thought to enhance the antipsychotic-like effects of dopamine D2 receptor antagonists while reducing their potential to produce extrapyramidal side effects. Thus, 5-HT1A receptor agonist properties of mixed 5-HT1A receptor agonists/D2 receptor antagonists might be of clinical importance. The antipsychotics, clozapine and nemonapride, and the putative antipsychotic, bromerguride, have intermediate to high affinity for 5-HT1A receptors. The present study examined the 5-HT1A receptor agonist activity of nemonapride and bromerguride, in comparison with clozapine, which has partial 5-HT1A receptor agonist properties in vitro. Here, 5-HT1A receptor activation was examined in vitro, by measuring forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation in HeLa cells expressing human 5-HT1A receptors, and in vivo, by using microdialysis to measure the extracellular concentration of hippocampal 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) in rats. Nemonapride markedly decreased both forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation and the extracellular concentration of 5-HT; both effects were antagonized by the 5-HT1A receptor antagonist, N-[2-[4-(2-methoxyphenyl)-1-piperazinyl]ethyl]-N-(2-pyridinyl) cyclohexanecarboxamide (WAY100635). In contrast, clozapine only partially decreased forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation and extracellular 5-HT, and only its effects on cAMP accumulation were attenuated by WAY100635. Bromerguride decreased neither forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation nor extracellular 5-HT; instead, it antagonized the decrease of cAMP accumulation produced by 5-HT and the decrease of extracellular 5-HT produced by the 5-HT1A agonist (+/-)-8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)tetralin (8-OH-DPAT). The selective D2 receptor antagonist, raclopride, affected neither forskolin-stimulated cAMP in vitro nor extracellular 5-HT in vivo. Thus, in contrast with clozapine and bromerguride, only the novel antipsychotic, nemonapride, exhibited marked 5-HT1A receptor agonist properties both in vitro and in vivo; conceivably, these properties may play a role in its preclinical and clinical effects.
Brain Research | 2005
Cristina Cosi; Aurelie Waget; Karin Rollet; Valentina Tesori; Adrian Newman-Tancredi
Excessive activation of non-NMDA receptors, AMPA and kainate, contributes to neuronal degeneration in acute and progressive pathologies, possibly including schizophrenia. Because 5-HT(1A) receptor agonists have neuroprotective properties (e.g., against NMDA-induced neurotoxicity), we compared the effects of the antipsychotics, clozapine, ziprasidone and aripiprazole, that are partial agonists at 5-HT(1A) receptor, with those of haloperidol, which is devoid of 5-HT(1A) agonist properties, on kainic acid (KA)-induced striatal lesion volumes, in C57Bl/6N mice. The involvement of 5-HT(1A) receptors was determined by antagonist studies with WAY100635, and data were compared with those obtained using the potent and high efficacy 5-HT(1A) receptor agonist, F13714. Intra-striatal KA lesioning and measurement of lesion volumes using cresyl violet staining were carried out at 48 h after surgery. F13714, antipsychotics or vehicle were administered ip twice, 30 min before and 3 1/2 h after KA injection. WAY100635 (0.63 mg/kg) or vehicle were given sc 30 min before each drug injection. Clozapine (2 x 10 mg/kg), ziprasidone (2 x 20 mg/kg) and aripiprazole (2 x 10 mg/kg) decreased lesion volume by 61%, 59% and 73%, respectively. WAY100635 antagonized the effect of ziprasidone and of aripiprazole but only slightly attenuated that of clozapine. In contrast, haloperidol (2 x 0.16 mg/kg) did not affect KA-induced lesion volume. F13714 dose-dependently decreased lesion volume. The 61% decrease of lesion volume obtained with F13714 (2 x 0.63 mg/kg) was antagonized by WAY100635. WAY100635 alone did not affect lesion volume. These results show that 5-HT(1A) receptor activation protects against KA-induced striatal lesions and indicate that some atypical antipsychotic agents with 5-HT(1A) agonist properties may protect against excitotoxic injury, in vivo.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2001
Wouter Koek; Bernard Vacher; Cristina Cosi; Marie Bernadette Assié; Jean François Patoiseau; Petrus J. Pauwels; Francis C. Colpaert
To examine further the hypothesis that the magnitude of the intrinsic activity of agonists at 5-HT1A receptors determines the magnitude of their psychotropic activity, we studied the relationship between the maximal receptor activation produced by various 5-HT1A receptor ligands and their antidepressant-like effects (i.e., decreased immobility in the forced swimming test in rats). Using three different in vitro assays suitable to measure differences among high, intermediate, and low efficacy 5-HT1A receptor agonists, ligands were identified with intrinsic activities ranging from low-negative (i.e., the inverse agonist N-[2-[4-(2-methoxyphenyl)-1-piperazinyl]ethyl]-N-(2-pyridinyl)cyclohexane-carboxamide (WAY 100635)) to high-positive (i.e., 3-chloro-4-fluorophenyl-(4-fluoro-4-[[(5-methyl-6-methylamino-pyridin-2-ylmethyl)-amino]-methyl]-piperidin-1-yl-methanone (F 13714)). In addition, novel compounds with intermediate intrinsic activity, like buspirone, but with high selectivity for 5-HT1A receptors, unlike buspirone, were identified. The maximal effects of the 5-HT1A receptor ligands in the forced swimming test correlated positively (rS=0.91, P<0.005) with the rank order of their intrinsic activity at 5-HT1A receptors. This relationship constitutes evidence that the magnitude of the psychotropic activity of 5-HT1A receptor ligands is a positive function of their intrinsic activity at the receptor, and suggests that F 13714, which had maximal effects in the forced swimming test significantly larger than any of the other compounds examined here, did so because of its higher intrinsic activity at 5-HT1A receptors.
Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 1986
Giancarlo Pepeu; Fiorella Casamenti; Felicita Pedata; Cristina Cosi; Ileana Marconcini Pepeu
A review of the work on the neurochemical, electroencephalographic and behavioral changes induced in the rat by lesions of the nucleus basalis is presented. The similarities and differences between the effects of the lesions and the neurochemical and clinical alterations characterizing senile dementia of Alzheimer type are pointed out. The decrease in choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity in the cortex following unilateral or bilateral electrolytic or neurotoxic lesions of the nucleus basalis are described and compared with the decrease in ChAT activity found in the cortex and hippocampus of patients affected by senile dementia. At variance with the latter condition, in rats with lesions of the nucleus basalis a spontaneous recovery in cortical ChAT activity has been observed 3-6 months after the lesion. The lesions of the nucleus basalis decrease high affinity choline uptake activity which, however, undergoes a rapid recovery. Lesions also decrease spontaneous and drug-stimulated ACh release from the cerebral cortex. Transitory changes in the number of muscarinic binding sites have been reported in the cerebral cortex of the lesioned rats while a decrease in the number of muscarinic binding sites has generally been found in the cerebral cortex of patients with senile dementia. [3H] glutamate uptake in the striatum of the lesioned rats was not affected. In both lesioned rats and patients affected by senile dementia, a decrease of low voltage high frequency electrocortical activity has been reported. Unilateral and bilateral lesions of the nucleus basalis bring about an impairment of the acquisition of active and passive avoidance responses and of the rewarded alternation discriminatory tasks involving working memory and spatial memory. On the other hand, memory impairment is a typical symptom of senile dementia. In conclusion, the lesions of the nucleus basalis only partly mimic the complex clinical picture of senile dementia of Alzheimer type. They offer, nevertheless, a useful tool for understanding the critical role of the central cholinergic pathways in some of the cognitive processes and identifying potentially useful pharmacological treatments.
Brain Research | 2004
Cristina Cosi; Karen Guerin; Marc Marien; Wouter Koek; Karin Rollet
Overactivation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) in response to genotoxic insults can cause cell death by energy deprivation. We previously reported that neurotoxic amounts of kainic acid (KA) injected into the rat striatum produce time-dependent changes in striatal PARP activity in vivo. Here, we have investigated the time-course of KA-induced toxicity and the effects of the PARP inhibitor benzamide on KA, AMPA and NMDA neurotoxicities in vivo, by measuring changes in the volume of the lesion and in NAD+ and ATP levels induced by the intra-striatal injection of these excitotoxins in C57Bl/6N mice. The KA-induced lesion volume was dependent on the amount of toxin injected and the survival time. The lesion was well developed at 48 h and was almost undetectable after one week. KA produced an extensive astrogliosis at one week. Benzamide partially prevented both KA- and NMDA- but not AMPA-induced lesions when measured at 48 h after the treatment. The effects of benzamide appeared to be in part related to changes in energy metabolism, since KA produced decreases in striatal levels of NAD+ and ATP that were partially prevented by benzamide at 48 h and which returned to control levels at one week. NMDA did not affect NAD+ and induced little alteration in ATP levels. Benzamide had no effect on AMPA-induced decreases in either NAD+ or ATP levels at 48 h. These results (1) indicate that PARP overactivation and energy depletion could be responsible in part for the cellular demise during the development of the lesion induced by KA; (2) confirm that PARP is involved in NMDA but not AMPA toxicities; (3) suggest the existence of differences between KA and AMPA-mediated toxicities; and (4) provide further evidence supporting PARP as a novel target for new drug treatments against neurodegenerative disorders.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 1986
Fiorella Casamenti; Cristina Cosi; Giancarlo Pepeu
The effect of N-methyl-N-(1-methyl-4-pyrrolidino-2-butynyl) acetamide (BM-5) on acetylcholine release from the cerebral cortex was investigated in unanaesthetized and urethane-anaesthetized rats. BM-5 at doses ranging from 0.3 to 5 mg/kg i.p. enhanced acetylcholine output in both groups of rats. The maximum increase occurred with 0.5 mg/kg in the unanaesthetized and 2 mg/kg in the anaesthetized rats. The effect lasted approximately 60 min. At the largest doses peripheral muscarinic effects including salivation, chromodachryorrhea and rhinorrhea were also seen. These results demonstrate that BM-5 exerts presynaptic antagonistic and postsynaptic agonistic effects on muscarine receptors in vivo also.
Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology | 2017
Adrian Newman-Tancredi; Jean-Claude Martel; Cristina Cosi; Peter Heusler; Fabrice Lestienne; Mark A. Varney; Didier Cussac
NLX‐112 (befiradol, F13640) is a selective serotonin 5‐HT1A receptor agonist. Although it has been tested in vivo, little has been reported on its in vitro signal transduction profile.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2006
Cristina Cosi; Elisabeth Carilla-Durand; Marie Bernadette Assié; Anne Marie Ormiere; Mireille Maraval; Nathalie Leduc; Adrian Newman-Tancredi
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1999
Bernard Vacher; Bernard Bonnaud; Philippe Funes; Nathalie Jubault; Wouter Koek; Marie Bernadette Assié; Cristina Cosi; Mark S. Kleven