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British Journal of Pharmacology logoLink to British Journal of Pharmacology
. 1998 Dec;125(7):1393–1395. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0702190

In vitro functional evidence of neuronal cannabinoid CB1 receptors in human ileum

Tiziano Croci 1,*, Luciano Manara 1, Giulio Aureggi 1, Fabio Guagnini 1, Murielle Rinaldi-Carmona 5, Jean-Pierre Maffrand 3, Gérard Le Fur 4, Sylvain Mukenge 2, Gianfranco Ferla 2
PMCID: PMC1565718  PMID: 9884065

Abstract

We investigated the effect of the cannabinoid agonist (+)WIN-55212-2 on human ileum longitudinal smooth muscle preparations, either electrically stimulated or contracted by carbachol. Electrical field stimulation mostly activated cholinergic neurons, since atropine and tetrodotoxin (TTX), alone or co-incubated, reduced twitch responses to a similar degree (85%). (+)WIN-55212-2 concentration-dependently inhibited twitch responses (IC50 73 nM), but had no additive effect with atropine or TTX. The cannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonist SR 141716 (pA2 8.2), but not the CB2 receptor antagonist, SR 144528, competitively antagonized twitch inhibition by (+)WIN-55212-2. Atropine but not (+)WIN-55212-2 or TTX prevented carbachol-induced tonic contraction.  These results provide functional evidence of the existence of prejunctional cannabinoid CB1-receptors in the human ileum longitudinal smooth muscle. Agonist activation of these receptors prevents responses to electrical field stimulation, presumably by inhibiting acetylcholine release. SR 141716 is a potent and competitive antagonist of cannabinoid CB1 receptors naturally expressed in the human gut.

Keywords: Cannabinoids, CB1 receptors, WIN-55212-2, SR 141716, SR 144528, human ileum

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