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Xanomeline oxalate

Names

[ CAS No. ]:
141064-23-5

[ Name ]:
Xanomeline oxalate

[Synonym ]:
xanomeline oxalate
Pyridine, 3-[4-(hexyloxy)-1,2,5-thiadiazol-3-yl]-1,2,5,6-tetrahydro-1-methyl-, ethanedioate (1:1)
5-[4-(Hexyloxy)-1,2,5-thiadiazol-3-yl]-1-methyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine ethanedioate (1:1)
unii-jf5a0pk3g5
Xanomeline (oxalate)

Biological Activity

[Description]:

Xanomeline(LY246708) is a selective M1 muscarinic receptor agonist.IC50 value:Target: M1 muscarinic receptorin vitro: Xanomeline had high affinity for muscarinic receptors in brain homogenates, but had substantially less or no affinity for a number of other neurotransmitter receptors and uptake sites. In cells stably expressing genetic m1 receptors, xanomeline increased phospholipid hydrolysis in CHO, BHK and A9 L cells to 100, 72 and 55% of the nonselective agonist carbachol. In isolated tissues, xanomeline had high affinity for M1 receptors in the rabbit vas deferens (IC50 = 0.006 nM), low affinity for M2 receptors in guinea pig atria (EC50 = 3 microM), was a weak partial agonist in guinea pig ileum and was neither an agonist nor antagonist in guinea pig bladder [1]. Xanomeline produced small increases in striatal acetylcholine levels and did not antagonize the large increases in acetylcholine produced by the nonselective muscarinic agonist oxotremorine, indicating that xanomeline did not block M2 autoreceptors [2]. in vivo: Xanomeline increased striatal levels of dopamine metabolites, presumably by acting at M1 heteroreceptors on dopamine neurons to increase dopamine release. In contrast, xanomeline had only a relatively small effect on acetylcholine levels in brain, indicating that it is devoid of actions at muscarinic autoreceptors [1]. The effects of xanomeline on ex vivo binding and DOPAC levels lasted for about 3 hr and were evident after oral administration. An analog of xanomeline with similar in vivo effects did not inhibit acetylcholinesterase or choline acetyltransferase and inhibited choline uptake only at concentrations much higher than those required to inhibit binding. These data indicate xanomeline is selective agonist for M1 over M2 and M3 receptors in vivo in rat [2].

[Related Catalog]:

Signaling Pathways >> GPCR/G Protein >> mAChR
Signaling Pathways >> Neuronal Signaling >> mAChR
Research Areas >> Neurological Disease

[References]

[1]. Shannon HE, et al. Xanomeline: a novel muscarinic receptor agonist with functional selectivity for M1 receptors. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1994 Apr;269(1):271-81.

[2]. Bymaster FP, et al. Neurochemical effects of the M1 muscarinic agonist xanomeline (LY246708/NNC11-0232).J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1994 Apr;269(1):282-9.


[Related Small Molecules]

Carbachol | Darifenacin HBr | Arecoline hydrobromide | Pirenzepine, Dihydrochloride | Glycopyrrolate | Imidafenacin | Benztropine Mesylate | Batefenterol | Bethanechol chloride | Cevimeline hydrochloride hemihydrate | Otilonium Bromide | solifenacin | VU0467154 | Anisodamine | Hyoscyamine

Chemical & Physical Properties

[ Molecular Formula ]:
C16H25N3O5S

[ Molecular Weight ]:
371.452

[ Exact Mass ]:
371.151489

[ PSA ]:
141.09000

[ LogP ]:
2.30960

[ Storage condition ]:
2-8℃

Synthetic Route

Precursor & DownStream


Related Compounds