The effects of phentolamine alone or in combination with propranolol, atenolol and chlorisondamine were studied on the concentration and turnover of noradrenaline in the heart of light-dark (L:D=12:12h) synchronized rats. In order to detect possible circadian phase-dependent variations in the drug effects, the same experiments were performed in the light-period and dark-period, respectively. The parameters of the turnover were calculated from the exponential decline of i.v. injected
3H-(-)-noradrenaline. Phentolamine significantly decreased the noradrenaline concentration during L, but not during D. Reduction in
3H-noradrenaline accumulation by phentolamine was 42.3% during L and 22.2% during D. Phentolamine increased the turnover rate of cardiac noradrenaline more than 3-fold in either photoperiod. Chlorisondamine reversed all the effects of phentolamine studied. Propranolol, but not atenolol, antagonized the effects of phentolamine in a dose-dependent and stereospecific way, being more effective when applied during D. Thus, the chronopharmacological studies in unrestrained rats show a circadian phase-dependency of the effects of adrenoceptor blocking drugs. It is concluded that a central site of action is responsible for the antagonism by propranolol of the phentolamine-induced increase in the turnover of the cardiac noradrenaline
in vivo.
Key words Noradrenaline turnover - Rat heart -
-and
-adrenoceptor antagonists - Chlorisondamine - Circadian rhythm
Parts of this work were presented at the 18th Spring Meeting of the German Pharmacological Society, Mainz 1977 (Lemmer and Charrier, 1977) and at the 7th International Congr. of Pharmacology, Satellite Symposium on chronopharmacology, Paris 1978 (Lemmer and Charrier, 1978)