1. Academic Validation
  2. Anticonvulsant effects of U-54494A and U-50488H in genetically epilepsy-prone rats and DBA/2 mice: a possible involvement of glycine/NMDA receptor complex

Anticonvulsant effects of U-54494A and U-50488H in genetically epilepsy-prone rats and DBA/2 mice: a possible involvement of glycine/NMDA receptor complex

  • Gen Pharmacol. 1993 Mar;24(2):439-47. doi: 10.1016/0306-3623(93)90330-z.
G De Sarro 1 G R Trimarchi S Sinopoli Y Masuda A De Sarro
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, University of Reggio Calabria, Italy.
Abstract

1. The effects of U-54494A and U-50488H on convulsions produced by sound have been studied in genetically epilepsy-prone DBA/2 mice and genetically epilepsy-prone rats. 2. Both compounds showed a dose-dependent anticonvulsant activity. U-54494A was less potent as an anticonvulsant than U-50488H in genetically epilepsy-prone rats and elicited a similar potency to that of U-50488H in DBA/2 mice when administered intracerebroventricularly or intraperitoneally. 3. Similar sedative and hypothermic effects were observed after the highest dose of U-54494A and U-50488H in DBA/2 mice. U-50488H seems to exhibit a greater sedative effect and to affect the rotarod test in rats much more than U-54494A. U-54494A elicited a better therapeutic index than U-50488H. 4. The anticonvulsant properties of both compounds are antagonized by high doses of naloxone and nor-binaltorphimine, a selective kappa-opioid antagonist. 5. The effects of U-50488H and U-54494A in DBA/2 mice were also antagonized by the glycine/NMDA Receptor Antagonist D-serine. 6. The present results suggest a possible interaction between kappa-opioid and the glycine/NMDA receptors during epileptic phenomena.

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