1. Obidoxime, a weak acetylcholine-esterase (AChE) inhibitor, exerts muscarinic receptor antagonism with a significant muscarinic M2 receptor selective profile.
2. The current examinations aimed to determine the functional significance of muscarinic M2 receptors in the state of AChE inhibition, elucidating muscarinic M2 and M3 receptor interaction.
3. In the in vitro examinations, methacholine evoked concentration- dependent bladder contractile and atrial frequency inhibitory responses. Although atropine abolished both, methoctramine (1 mu mol/L) only affected the cholinergic response in the atrial preparations.
4. However, in the presence of methoctramine, physostigmine, an AChE inhibitor, increased the basal tension of the bladder strip preparations (+68%), as well as the contractile responses to low concentrations of methacholine ( 5 mu mol/L), obidoxime, because of its unselective muscarinic receptor antagonism, inhibited the methacholine bladder responses.
5. In conclusion, the current results show that muscarinic M2 receptors inhibit muscarinic M3 receptor-evoked contractile responses to low concentrations of acetylcholine in the synaptic cleft. The muscarinic M2 and M3 receptor crosstalk could be a counteracting mechanism in the treatment of AChE inhibition when using reactivators, such as obidoxime.