Project Details
Description
The long-term objective of this project is to test the hypotheses, which
were proposed by us in previous years and are now gaining acceptance, that
the sensitivity of target organs is a dynamic phenomenon controlled by
inherent feedback mechanisms; that experimental manipulation of this
sensitivity provides a new avenue for studying individual components of
complex systems like the eye, in which several target organs have the same
pharmacological characteristics; that such alterations in target organ
sensitivity may affect the efficacy of drugs; and that the cause of some
disorders involves the failure of such control mechanisms which, once
identified, can be corrected by pharmacological means. Our specific aims
for the next five-years will be to elucidate the nature and specificity of
pharmacologically- (DFP, pilocarpine, oxotremorine) and
physiologically-induced (stimulus deprivation or overstimulation)
sensitivity changes, using intraocular muscles as primary model systems.
We will develop techniques to induce subsensitivity in the iris sphincter
without affecting the sensitivity of the ciliary muscles, to induce
specific subsensitivity in each subcomponent of the muscarinic system, and
will use the techniques of selective sensitivity alterations as one means
of analyzing the complexity of the muscarinic system. We will further test
the hypothesis that such changes in sensitivity are associated with changes
in the concentration of (different subpopulations of) muscarinic
receptors. We will also study the effects of altered iris sphincter and
ciliary muscle sensitivity on the normal functions of these organs using
pupillographic and ultrasonic techniques, respectively. Elucidation of the
mechanism of the control of target organ sensitivity is of great general
significance with regard to virtually all areas of biomedical science and
especially with regard to the eye, where autonomic agents are used
chronically for the treatment of glaucoma and accomodative esotropia.
Experiments aimed at identifying the endogenous factors responsible for
episodes of sustained miosis in cholinergically subsensitive rhesus eyes
will also be undertaken. Such studies may explain the cause of sustained
miosis in the eyes of cholinesterase inhibitor-treated patients, which
should be subsensitive to ACh, and reveal some, as yet unknown, basic
aspects of cholinergic mechanisms.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 12/1/84 → 1/1/90 |
Funding
- National Eye Institute
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Ophthalmology
- Pharmacology
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