THE AFFINITY OF RACTOPAMINE, CLENBUTEROL, AND L-644,969 FOR THE BETA-ADRENERGIC-RECEPTOR POPULATION IN PORCINE ADIPOSE-TISSUE AND SKELETAL-MUSCLE MEMBRANE
Me. Spurlock et al., THE AFFINITY OF RACTOPAMINE, CLENBUTEROL, AND L-644,969 FOR THE BETA-ADRENERGIC-RECEPTOR POPULATION IN PORCINE ADIPOSE-TISSUE AND SKELETAL-MUSCLE MEMBRANE, Journal of animal science, 71(8), 1993, pp. 2061-2065
The affinities (Ki) with which ractopamine (RA), clenbuterol (CB), and
L-644,969 (L6) bind the beta-adrenoceptor populations of adipose tiss
ue (middle and outer subcutaneous [SQ] layers) and longissimus (LM) an
d semitendinosus (ST) muscle were determined. Within a given agonist,
K(i) values (nanomolar) were similar among tissues, except for RA, whi
ch had a higher (P less-than-or-equal-to .05) affinity (lower K(i)) fo
r middle SQ adipose tissue than for outer SQ adipose and both muscles.
For all tissues, binding affinities were greatest for CB (126), follo
wed by L6 (350) and RA (856, exclusive of middle SQ adipose). The data
indicate that both adipose and muscle tissues are targets of CB, RA,
and L6 in vivo, and that tissue preferences of the agonists cannot be
established from affinity data alone. The relatively constant affinity
of the agonists for the various tissues examined implies that if tiss
ue preferences exist, the efficiency with which postreceptor events ar
e invoked by these agonists is the determining factor.