key: cord-0951595-c15f6r28 authors: Perez, Dianne M. title: Current Developments on the Role of α(1)-Adrenergic Receptors in Cognition, Cardioprotection, and Metabolism date: 2021-05-25 journal: Front Cell Dev Biol DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.652152 sha: 9edfa1f03fdb54a1b636c36f836e36ba3a657b76 doc_id: 951595 cord_uid: c15f6r28 The α(1)-adrenergic receptors (ARs) are G-protein coupled receptors that bind the endogenous catecholamines, norepinephrine, and epinephrine. They play a key role in the regulation of the sympathetic nervous system along with β and α(2)-AR family members. While all of the adrenergic receptors bind with similar affinity to the catecholamines, they can regulate different physiologies and pathophysiologies in the body because they couple to different G-proteins and signal transduction pathways, commonly in opposition to one another. While α(1)-AR subtypes (α(1A), α(1B), α(1C)) have long been known to be primary regulators of vascular smooth muscle contraction, blood pressure, and cardiac hypertrophy, their role in neurotransmission, improving cognition, protecting the heart during ischemia and failure, and regulating whole body and organ metabolism are not well known and are more recent developments. These advancements have been made possible through the development of transgenic and knockout mouse models and more selective ligands to advance their research. Here, we will review the recent literature to provide new insights into these physiological functions and possible use as a therapeutic target. INTRODUCTION α 1 -Adrenergic receptors (ARs) regulate the sympathetic nervous system by binding and transducing the effects of the endogenous catecholamines, epinephrine, and norepinephrine (Graham and Lanier, 1986) . ARs are members of the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily and are composed of nine adrenergic receptor subtypes (α 1A , α 1B , α 1D , α 2A , α 2B , α 2C , β 1 , β 2 , and β 3 ) from the three distinct families (α 1 , α 2 , β) which are activated by the same catecholamines and are related as paralogs. The α 1 -AR subtype cDNAs were cloned in the late 1980s and early 1990s (Cotecchia et al., 1988; Schwinn et al., 1990; Lomasney et al., 1991; Perez et al., 1991 Perez et al., , 1994 Laz et al., 1994) . They have distinct pharmacological properties which helped to determine their classification and characterization. Before the cloning of the receptors, α 1 -ARs were already subdivided into the α 1A -and α 1B -AR subtypes based upon radioligand binding data in various tissues which showed two-site competition binding curves to the antagonists WB4101 and phentolamine. The α 1A -AR subtype was defined as having a 10-100-fold higher binding affinity for these two antagonists while the α 1B -AR subtype was defined as having the weaker binding affinity (Morrow and Creese, 1986) . The α 1C -AR designation is missing from the α 1 -AR subtype lineage because of a misclassification early on in the cloning of the receptors 1 . α 1 -ARs are mainly coupled to the heterotrimeric Gq/11 (Gαq) family of G-proteins to activate phospholipase Cβ1 (PLCβ1), resulting in the hydrolysis of membrane-bound phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate and the cytosolic release of inositol triphosphate (IP3) and diacylglycerol (DAG) (Piascik and Perez, 2001 ; Table 1 ). The IP3 plays a key role in calcium regulation by binding to IP3 receptors located on the endoplasmic reticulum resulting in calcium channel opening and the release of intracellular calcium. The DAG activates protein kinase C (PKC) which can phosphorylate many other types of proteins and signals downstream in the signaling cascade. There are also reports that α 1 -ARs can couple to G i G-proteins under overexpressed conditions or in certain cell lines (Akhter et al., 1997; Melien et al., 2000; Snabaitis et al., 2005 ) but this has not been shown to occur in vivo. α 1 -ARs can also signal through G-protein-independent mechanisms involving β-arrestins which act as scaffolds to recruit and activate other second messengers such as ERK 1/2, p38, and Src Segura et al., 2013) . α 1 -ARs can also couple to phospholipase A 2 and calcium channels though this may not be direct coupling (Perez et al., 1993) . While the α 1 -AR subtypes display differences in internalization resulting in spatio-temporal changes in signaling (Stanasila et al., 2008; Perez-Aso et al., 2013; Segura et al., 2013) , there is some evidence that the α 1 -AR subtypes differentially couple to different signaling proteins, such as Regulators of G-protein Signaling (RGS) (Hague et al., 2005) . These G-protein modulators can interact with the alpha subunits of large G-proteins to increase the rate of GTP hydrolysis and to stop the receptor signaling process. RGS2 can directly bind to the third intracellular loop of the α 1A -AR to inhibit its signaling process but does not bind at the α 1B -or α 1D -AR subtypes (Hague et al., 2005) . As RGS2 plays a prominent role in regulating GPCR cardiovascular functions (Tang et al., 2003; Zou et al., 2006) and GPCR G 11 signaling pathways (Cunningham et al., 2001) , α 1A -AR coupling to RGS2 may regulate many of its subtype-specific functions. Another way that α 1 -ARs create differential signaling pathways is through biased agonism (Wootten et al., 2018) . Cirazoline or A61603, imidazolines which are α 1A -AR selective agonists, can bias the receptor toward cAMP signaling rather than Ca +2 release or ERK phosphorylation (Evans et al., 2011; da Silva et al., 2017) or can enhance the α 1A -AR desensitization 1 The α 1C -AR was first designated novel but more detailed analysis revealed that it was a bovine analog of the α 1A -AR (Schwinn et al., 1990; Laz et al., 1994; Perez et al., 1994) . To avoid confusion, an actual novel α 1 -AR subtype discovered through molecular cloning was designated the α 1D -AR (Perez et al., 1991) and the α 1C designation was dropped from the classification scheme. and internalization process (Akinaga et al., 2013) leading to differential coupling to β-arrestin-mediated signaling. Due to the lack of sufficiently selective pharmacological agents to use in order to distinguish subtype-specific effects, a number of transgenic and knockout (KO) mouse models were developed that were used to determine long-term in vivo stimulatory or inhibitory effects of the α 1 -AR subtypes on physiology and pathophysiology ( Table 2) . KOs of the α 1A -AR (Rokosh and Simpson, 2002; Zhang et al., 2020) , α 1B -AR (Cavalli et al., 1997) , and α 1D -AR (Tanoue et al., 2002) were developed using traditional insertion of the β-galactosidase or neomycin resistance gene in place of the first exon of the receptor. Recently, a cardiac-conditional KO of the α 1A -AR was developed (Zhang et al., 2020) . There is also a double KO model created by mating together the α 1A and α 1B -AR KO mice and a triple KO of all three subtypes (Sanbe et al., 2007) . Transgenic mice overexpressing α 1 -ARs were designed to either target to the myocyte using the α myosin heavy chain promoter to drive only cardiac expression of wild-type (WT) or constitutively active mutations (CAMs) in the receptor (Milano et al., 1994; Grupp et al., 1998; Eckhart et al., 2000; Lin et al., 2001) or used CAMs in the receptors that were driven by large fragments of the endogenous mouse promoters to generate systemic expression (Zuscik et al., 2000 Ross et al., 2003; Rorabaugh et al., 2005) . The systemic expression of the CAMs also allows assessment of cardiovascular effects due to chronic α 1 -AR expression outside of the myocyte as well as in the brain or other organ systems. There is also only mild overexpression of the receptor in the heart and brain (2-3 fold) and throughout the body in using the endogenous promoters as compared to using the α myosin heavy chain promoter which caused very high amounts of receptor overexpression, often exceeding 100fold. The use of CAMs instead of the WT receptor results in continuously activated receptors that do not need an agonist to be present and can be representative of a chronically stimulated condition, but this is still debated. In both overexpressed and KO mouse models, there is always the possibility of changes in the expression of other genes and receptors in compensation or as a result of additional insertion or deletion of genetic material, a widespread phenomenon that is hard to decipher and under reported (El-Brolosy and Stainier, 2017) . Recognizing these limitations and seeing if general phenotypes repeat in the various mouse models of particular receptor subtypes is suggested. These different types of mouse models will be referred to throughout this review. The expression of the specific α 1 -AR subtypes in the brain was previously difficult to determine because of the lack of Memory consolidation, fear-motivated exploration, spatial learning-novelty, contraction smooth muscle, blood pressure, negative inotropy, cardiac hypertrophy, cardiac maladaptive, baroreflex, glucose uptake (non-cardiac tissues), glycolysis (adipocytes, skeletal muscle), glucose tolerance, whole body fatty acid oxidation. Contraction smooth muscle, contraction-mesenteric beds, blood pressure. high avidity antibodies to the α 1 -ARs (Jensen et al., 2009c; Böhmer et al., 2014) . Initial autoradiography studies used nonselective radiolabels that could not distinguish between the α 1 -ARs subtypes but did demonstrate high abundance throughout the rat brain (Unnerstall et al., 1985) . Eventually, more specific and sensitive techniques were developed to determine the α 1 -AR subtype localization in the brain such as using the fulllength cDNA sequence of the α 1A -AR in hybridization studies (Domyancic and Morilak, 1997) or transgenic and knock-out (KO) mouse models of the α 1 -AR subtypes with the α 1 -ARs tagged with endogenous promoter-driven expression of EGFP or use of the β-galactosidase gene to KO the receptor (Papay et al., 2004 (Papay et al., , 2006 . Using these approaches, the α 1A -and α 1B -ARs were shown to be expressed in similar areas of the brain, but the relative expression was different (Papay et al., 2004 (Papay et al., , 2006 . The α 1A -AR subtype was more noticeably expressed in the cognitive areas such as the hippocampus, amygdala, and particular cortical areas ( Table 1 ; Papay et al., 2006) , while the α 1B -AR appeared more prominent throughout the cortex and thalamus (Drouin et al., 2002; Papay et al., 2004) . The α 1A -AR subtype was also more prominently expressed in neural progenitors and stem cells (Papay et al., 2006; Gupta et al., 2009) . Using long sequences of antisense to the α 1D -AR to assess brain localization, the α 1D -AR although of low overall abundance, was present in the reticular thalamic nuclei, hippocampus, cortex and spinal cord (Harasawa et al., 2003) . Using the α 1 -AR KO mice and comparing the total amount of α 1 -AR radioligand receptor binding to normal wild-type mice, it was concluded that the brain contains the highest amount of the α 1A -AR subtype at ∼55% (Rokosh and Simpson, 2002) , followed by the α 1B -AR at 35% (Cavalli et al., 1997) but only 10% of the total α 1 -AR pool for the α 1D -AR subtype (Tanoue et al., 2002; Sadalge et al., 2003) . The localization of the α 1 -ARs in the brain may have some species variation (Palacios et al., 1987; Zilles et al., 1991) , but the cognitive areas appear similar in humans with high expression in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex and the lowest expression in the caudate and putamen (Shimohama et al., 1986; Szot et al., 2005) . The α 1A -AR subtype appears to be prominent in expression in the hippocampus as assessed by RNA (Szot et al., 2005) , single cell PCR (Hillman et al., 2005) , protein localization using the EGFP-tagged transgenics (Papay et al., 2006) and functionally by regulating the CA1 hippocampal interneurons ). In addition, the α 1A -AR subtype regulated adult neurogenesis in the mouse subgranular and subventricular zones (Gupta et al., 2009; Jurgens et al., 2009; Collette et al., 2010) as assessed by increased BrdU incorporation and colocalization studies of EGFP-tagged α 1A -ARs with stem cell and neural progenitor markers ( Table 2 ). In addition, when normal WT mice were given the α 1A -AR selective agonist, cirazoline, they also displayed increased neurogenesis (Gupta et al., 2009) . The regulation of neurogenesis by the α 1A -AR and its regulation of hippocampal function and translation to human brain domains may potentially play a therapeutic role to increase synaptic plasticity and cognition in diseases of dementia. The α 1 -ARs have been previously associated with general roles in learning and memory functions (Sirviö and MacDonald, 1999) but these studies were not well characterized nor assigned to specific AR subtypes because of the lack of subtype-specific ligands. A few early studies suggested that α 1 -AR stimulation inhibits memory functions in monkeys (Arnsten and Jentsch, 1997; Mao et al., 1999) or in chickens (Gibbs and Summers, 2001) but used very low replicates, very high concentrations of ligands rendering them non-selective or attributed to species variation. Ross et al., 2003; Rorabaugh et al., 2005; Gupta et al., 2009; Shi et al., 2016 Shi et al., , 2017 Papay and Perez, 2020; Perez, 2021 α 1A -AR αMHC, heart-targeted overexpression (66-fold) Adaptive-increased inotropy, protects after TAC and MI, no hypertrophy, angiogenesis Lin et al., 2001; Du et al., 2004 Du et al., , 2006 Zhao et al., 2015 α 1A -AR αMHC, heart-targeted overexpression (170-fold) However, as will be discussed, most of the recent studies indicate that α 1 -AR stimulation increases various types of memory in both formation and storage. Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a type of long-lasting synaptic plasticity that increases the strength of synaptic transmission over a long period of time (i.e., mins-hours) (Hopkins and Johnston, 1984; Kandel, 2001) . LTP is considered a major mechanism of learning and memory, particularly in the hippocampus (Bliss and Collingridge, 1993) . α 1 -AR stimulation can induce LTP in the hippocampus (Izumi and Zorumski, 1999; Sirviö and MacDonald, 1999; Lv et al., 2016) and there is one report in the neocortex (Pankratov and Lalo, 2015) which is also a center for neuronal spatial and recognition memory (Vann and Albasser, 2011) . Interestingly, the α 1 -ARs can also stimulate ATP release on astrocytes to induce LTP via ATP receptors on the pyramidal neurons in the neocortex, suggesting that glial cell regulation by α 1 -ARs may also be involved in memory formation. Glia communicate through calcium signaling to neurons, causing the release of ATP and its subsequent increase in synaptic plasticity and LTP (Pascual et al., 2005) . LTP stimulation by α 1 -ARs may be α 1A -AR-specific as the CAM α 1A -AR transgenic mice significantly increased LTP at hippocampal synapses ; Table 2 ). The CAM α 1A -AR mice also increased cognitive scores in a series of behavioral tests while the α 1A -AR KO mice performed poorly compared to normal controls . The α 1A -AR selective agonist, cirazoline also increased cognitive scores in normal mice when administered for 2 months. While the α 1B -AR KO mice had impaired cognition in some behavior tests (Knauber and Müller, 2000a,b; Spreng et al., 2001) , there was no assessment of effects of α 1B -or α 1D -AR KO on LTP. Long-term depression (LTD) is also a form of long-term synaptic plasticity that can contribute to cognitive functions by increasing the flexibility of the synapse to store information (Heynen et al., 1996) , such as remembering the exposure to novel objects (Manahan-Vaughan and Braunewell, 1999) . Novelty exposure can reverse LTP in the hippocampus (Xu et al., 1998) , suggesting a correlation between LTD and LTP that may impart different forms of synaptic information during spatial learning (Kemp and Manahan-Vaughan, 2004) . There are reports that α 1 -AR mediated LTD required co-activation with a number of partners such as β-ARs (Katsuki et al., 1997) , NMDA (Scheiderer et al., 2004) and the M1 muscarinic receptor (Scheiderer et al., 2008) . α 1 -ARs have been shown to induce LTD at excitatory CA3-CA1 synapses in the rat hippocampus (Dyer-Reaves et al., 2019) through ERK signaling in the pyramidal neurons (Vanhoose et al., 2002; Scheiderer et al., 2008) and had characteristics of a novel form of synaptic plasticity (Hebb, 1949) . However, there is no evidence of which α 1 -AR subtype(s) mediate LTD. This Hebbian LTD requires coincident presynaptic and postsynaptic NMDAR activity (Scheiderer et al., 2004) and is different and independent of the "classical" LTD which is induced by low frequency synaptic stimulation that is repetitive (Mulkey and Malenka, 1992) . The mechanism of the Hebbian LTD also involves postsynaptic activation of the α 1 -AR as the paired pulse facilitation ratio did not change (Scheiderer et al., 2004) . Paired pulse facilitation is a measurement of synaptic enhancement observed under a short period of time (i.e., milliseconds). For a pulse facilitation effect, a second evoked excitatory postsynaptic potential is increased when it follows immediately after a first evoked excitatory postsynaptic potential (Foster and McNaughton, 1991) and is used as evidence of an increase in the probability of neurotransmitter release. Increases in paired pulse facilitation that occur with LTP suggest a presynaptic mechanism (Schultz et al., 1994) , because potentiated presynaptic neurons must increase neurotransmitter release. The hippocampus also regulates spatial and associative learning functions (Mahmoodi et al., 2010) in addition to long-term memory functions. α 1 -AR blockage using the α 1 -AR antagonist prazosin in the hippocampus demonstrated impaired spatial learning (Petrasek et al., 2010) while stimulation of the α 1 -AR improved spatial memory (Puumala et al., 1998; Torkaman-Boutorabi et al., 2014) . Transgenic mice overexpressing CAM α 1A -ARs, or WT mice given the α 1A -AR selective agonist cirazoline, displayed increased learning and memory using several spatial memory behavioral tests such as the Barnes, dry multi-T, and Morris water mazes , while α 1A -AR KO mice showed decreased learning and memory compared to normal controls in the same cognitive tests Collette et al., 2014 ; Table 2 ). The α 1B -AR KO mice also had impaired spatial learning to novelty and exploration (Spreng et al., 2001 ) and a decrease in non-spatial memory functions such as memory consolidation, fear-motivated exploration (Knauber and Müller, 2000a) , and short and long-term latency in a passive avoidance test (Knauber and Müller, 2000b) . α 1D -AR KO mice did not show changes in several different behavioral cognitive tests (Sadalge et al., 2003) but did show changes in locomotion and attention (Mishima et al., 2004) . Together with enhancement of LTP and paired pulse facilitation (a type of short-term synaptic plasticity) in the CAM α 1A -AR transgenic mice , these studies suggest that the α 1A -and perhaps the α 1B -AR to a lesser degree but not the α 1D -AR are involved in spatial learning and memory processes. Spatial working memory involves executive-type or motivationalrelated types of memory and relies more on the prefrontal cortex than the hippocampus as the task is more complex (Robbins, 1996) . α 1 -AR stimulation increases while α 1 -AR blockade inhibits working memory (Pussinen et al., 1997; Puumala et al., 1998; Lapiz and Morilak, 2006; Hvoslef-Eide et al., 2015) by promoting both focused and flexible attention (Berridge et al., 2012; Berridge and Spencer, 2016) . There is also an improvement in working memory with the cognitive-enhancing, wake-promoting neurochemical modafinil that is hypothesized to be mediated by α 1 -ARs since effects are blocked by prazosin (Duteil et al., 1990; Stone et al., 2002; Winder-Rhodes et al., 2010) . α 1 -ARs regulate spatial working memory through the release of glutamate in the prefrontal cortex due to a sustained excitatory Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology | www.frontiersin.org effect on the pyramidal neurons increasing synaptic plasticity (Marek and Aghajanian, 1999; Zhang et al., 2013) . When the ventral hippocampus was lesioned in vivo and α 1 -AR function was impaired, there was a decrease in glutamatergic synaptic plasticity within the prefrontal cortex which caused memory and learning dysfunction (Bhardwaj et al., 2014) . Glutamatergic synaptic plasticity mediated through α 1 -ARs signals through PKC-dependent pathways in various cortical areas (Mouradian et al., 1991; Marek and Aghajanian, 1996; Chen et al., 2006; Kobayashi et al., 2008; Velásquez-Martinez et al., 2012; Luo et al., 2014 , Luo et al., 2015a and may require the cosignaling from both glutamate and the N-type Ca 2+ channels (Luo et al., 2015a) . PKC can increase synaptic plasticity and associated memory processes through the phosphorylation of synaptic proteins or enhancing the sensitivity to calcium which promotes the exocytosis of the synaptic vesicles, increasing neurotransmitter release (Shimazaki et al., 1996; Stevens and Sullivan, 1998; Hilfiker and Augustine, 1999; Wu and Wu, 2001) . Besides glutamatergic mechanisms, the disruption of GABAergic transmission in the prefrontal cortex can also cause a decrease in working memory (Enomoto et al., 2011; Bañuelos et al., 2014) . α 1 -AR stimulation in the medial prefrontal cortex inhibits the inwardly rectifying potassium channels (Kirs) located on the interneuron, leading to depolarization and an increased calcium influx through calcium channels resulting in increased GABAergic transmission onto the pyramidal neurons (Luo et al., 2015b) . The excitation can be enhanced when the α 1 -ARs stimulation is facilitated by postsynaptic α 2 -ARs decreasing the hyperpolarization of cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channels . Therefore, α 1 -ARs may work to improve spatial working memory through both glutamatergic and GABAergic mechanisms which suggests that α 1 -AR agonists could be used to target enhancement of spatial working memory. α 1 -AR activation can enhance memory recall and consolidation. The process of memory consolidation changes recent and labile memories into long-lasting ones. The process starts in the hippocampus but as time passes and the memory is reorganized, the long-lasting memory is then distributed in the neocortex (Squire et al., 2015) . The α 1 -AR antagonist, prazosin, blocked the norepinephrine-facilitated reconsolidation of memory during fear conditioning (Gazarini et al., 2013) and the consolidation of both short-term and intermediate-term memory in chickens (Gibbs and Bowser, 2010) . The mechanism for α 1 -ARs to consolidate memories was suggested to be mediated through an increase in free cytosolic calcium in astrocytes as effects were blocked with glycolytic inhibitors (Gibbs and Bowser, 2010) . Astrocytes, unlike neurons, mediate learning and memory utilizing glycogenolysis, which the astrocyte needs for the synthesis of glutamate (Gibbs et al., 2008; Newman et al., 2011) . The basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BLA) can also be involved in the storage and consolidation of memory (Ferry and McGaugh, 2000) . As cAMP signaling is mainly involved in mediating the effects of norepinephrine on memory consolidation, the β-ARs were previously considered the main AR to transduce those effects (Ikegaya et al., 1997; Ferry and McGaugh, 2000; Ferry and Quirarte, 2012) . However, both βand α 1 -ARs may be needed together to mediate memory storage in the BLA. The stimulation of cAMP through a β-AR agonist in the BLA can be blocked with an α 1 -AR antagonist and memory storage is increased with use of a synthetic cAMP analog (Ferry et al., 1999a,b) . Similarly, stimulation of α 1 -ARs can potentiate β-AR-mediated cAMP formation in the BLA to enhance memory storage (Ferry et al., 1999a,b) . α 1B -AR KO mice had a decrease in latency in the passive avoidance test suggesting deficits in memory consolidation in vivo (Knauber and Müller, 2000b ; Table 2 ). Research performed in amnesia patients developed the concept of memory consolidation as time was needed for this process to occur and greater memory deficits were seen in retrograde amnesia patients with loss of information from recent memory (Brown, 2002) . α 1 -AR stimulation can reverse cannabinoid-induced (Moshfegh et al., 2011) and scopolamineinduced amnesia (Azami et al., 2010) and enhance recall when α 1 -AR agonists were administered before electroconvulsive shocks (Anand et al., 2001) . α 1 -AR functions may change and contribute to the aging process in the loss of memory function. α 1 -AR protein is increased in the aging mouse brain and with improved learning, supporting a role for these receptors in age-related cognitive decline (Knauber and Müller, 2000b) . In patients suffering from Alzheimer's Disease (AD), α 1 -AR protein and mRNA is reduced in the prefrontal cortex (Shimohama et al., 1986; Kalaria, 1989; Szot et al., 2007) . The mRNA levels of the α 1A -AR were significantly decreased in the prefrontal cortex with AD with no changes in the mRNA of the α 2 -AR (Szot et al., 2007) . There is also an α 1A -AR polymorphism that associates with AD (Hong et al., 2001) . Decreases in spatial memory that are due to the aging process were improved in rats when the α 1 -AR was stimulated . The 3xTG (Transgenic) is a widely used AD mouse model that contains three genetic mutations associated with familial AD (APP Swedish, MAPT P301L, and PSEN1 M146V) (Oddo et al., 2003) . This AD mouse model displays β-amyloid deposits, tau immunoreactivity, cognitive impairment, and decreases in LTP and basal synaptic transmission (Oddo et al., 2003) . When the 3xTG AD mouse model was given a selective α 1A -AR positive allosteric modulator, spatial memory as assessed in the Barnes maze was improved along with LTP (Perez, 2021) . These results suggest that selective agonists that increase α 1A -AR functions may be able to improve cognitive decline in AD. Another cognitive disease is vascular dementia which is the second-most frequent form of dementia after AD. α 1 -AR autoantibodies with agonistic function were found in 50% of people with dementia (Karczewski et al., 2010 (Karczewski et al., , 2012 (Karczewski et al., , 2018 Hempel et al., 2016; Thyrian et al., 2018) . While these agonistic autoantibodies may also cause vascular damage, shown for several neurotransmitters (Wu and Li, 2016) , one interpretation of the data consistent with the role of the α 1A -AR in improving cognition, but also speculative, is that they may develop during dementia to compensate for the loss in receptor density as documented by Shimohama et al. (1986) and Szot et al. (2007) . The heart expresses both the α 1A and α 1B -AR subtypes with relative expression levels depending upon the species (Steinfath et al., 1992; Michel et al., 1994; Jensen et al., 2009a) . The α 1D -AR is weakly expressed if at all in the myocyte (Price et al., 1994; Scofield et al., 1995) but is present in vascular smooth muscle, particularly in the coronary arteries, mesenteric beds and the aorta ( Table 1 ; Hrometz et al., 1999; Gisbert et al., 2002; Chalothorn et al., 2003; Turnbull et al., 2003; Hosoda et al., 2005; Jensen et al., 2009b; Methven et al., 2009; Martínez-Salas et al., 2011) . A KO mouse model of the α 1B -AR was created with a human placental alkaline phosphatase inserted into the first exon to facilitate reporting . Using this new KO model and the conventional α 1A -KO which has the β-galactosidase reporter, the authors report a heterogenous population of the α 1B and α 1A -AR subtypes in the myocytes. The α 1B was present in all of the myocytes but the α 1A was present in only 60% of the myocytes and 20% of those had very high expression levels. This intermittent variable expression of the α 1A -AR subtype was also observed in the mesenteric arteries in the α 1B/D double KO and in the transgenic systemically expressing α 1 -AR WT mice that were tagged with the green fluorescent protein (Papay et al., 2004; McGrath, 2015) . Since this intermittent expression is only present in genetically altered mouse models, this suggests that intermittent expression may be an artifact. However, the current lack of highly avid α 1 -AR antibodies that can be used for in vivo localization (Jensen et al., 2009c; Böhmer et al., 2014) , precludes using immunoassays to determine if intermittent expression is an artifact. A potential experiment that may confirm intermittent expression in a WT mouse would be to perform autoradiography with and without selective α 1 -AR blockers such as niguldipine to block the α 1A -AR subtype. It is generally accepted that α 1 -AR stimulation can regulate a positive inotropic response in the heart, although the response can be variable and display negative inotropy depending upon the species and the region in the heart analyzed (Endoh et al., 1991; Nishimaru et al., 2001; Endoh, 2016) . The α 1A -and not the α 1B -AR is suggested to play a role in positive inotropy Ross et al., 2003; Luo et al., 2007; Janssen et al., 2018) . The systemically over-expressed CAM α 1B -AR mice had no changes in basal cardiac parameters but had autonomic failure . The autonomic failure in the CAM α 1B -AR mice indicated reduced circulating catecholamine levels, bradycardia, reproductive problems and weight loss. Together with the widespread neurodegeneration and a phenotype that was consistent with a Parkinson Disease plus syndrome, the basal hypotension seen in these mice was likely due to the autonomic failure rather than a direct effect on the ability to contract vascular smooth muscle. The CAM α 1B -AR mice also had a negative inotropic response to phenylephrine (Ross et al., 2003) . Radioligand binding analysis revealed that there was decreased α 1A -AR density which was likely causing the negative inotropic effect (Ross et al., 2003) . This functional antagonism of the positive inotropy of the α 1A -AR by the α 1B -AR was also found in a mouse model of right ventricular failure (Cowley et al., 2015) . The heart-targeted WT α 1B -AR also displayed negative inotropy (Grupp et al., 1998) . In contrast, both the cardiactargeted WT and systemically expressed CAM α 1A -AR mediated a positive inotropic response in the mouse heart Rorabaugh et al., 2005; Table 2 ). In human myocardium, the α 1A -AR selective agonist, A61603, had a strong positive inotropic response representing about 70% of the β-AR response (Janssen et al., 2018) . In human heart failure, radioligand binding indicates that β 1 -ARs are downregulated (Bristow et al., 1982 (Bristow et al., , 1986 Rockman et al., 2002) while α 1 -AR are either unchanged (Bristow et al., 1988; Jensen et al., 2009a) or decreased (Limas et al., 1989; Zhao et al., 1996; Fischer et al., 2008; Shi et al., 2013) . MicroRNA-133 was found to be a key control in the downregulation of the β 1 -AR and several components of its signal transduction cascade in the heart (Castaldi et al., 2014) , opening up new avenues of therapeutics in addition to β-blockers. Radioligand binding of human hearts with end-stage dilated cardiomyopathy versus non-failing controls revealed that while β 1 -ARs are downregulated as previously reported (Bristow et al., 1982 (Bristow et al., , 1986 , there was also a loss in the α 1A -AR subtype receptor levels . The differences in these studies of the density of α 1 -ARs could be the severity of the heart failure (Limas et al., 1989) , the level of sympathetic overdrive (Zhao et al., 1996) or the etiology of heart failure studied (ischemic versus non-ischemic) as α 1 -ARs are known to increase in density during ischemia (Corr et al., 1981; Maisel et al., 1987; Kurz et al., 1991) and could have masked the decrease in α 1A -ARs during failure. α 1 -ARs also can mediate cardiac hypertrophy, an increase in protein mass of the myocyte through an increase in protein synthesis which remodels the heart in response to various physiological and pathophysiological stimuli (Simpson, 1983; Fuller et al., 1990; Ikeda et al., 1991; Perez-Aso et al., 2013; Cotecchia et al., 2015) . While both the α 1A and α 1B -ARs are involved in hypertrophy, the α 1A -AR seems better coupled to enhance hypertrophic signaling pathways. The α 1A -AR agonist, A-61603, increased the size of the myocyte by increasing the rate of protein synthesis (Autelitano and Woodcock, 1998) . The various transgenic mouse models showed variable degrees of cardiac hypertrophy but have never been as robust as seen in cell cultures ( Table 2) . Cardiac hypertrophy can be a normal physiological response which is adaptive and improves function while hypertrophy that is associated with fibrosis or apoptosis is maladaptive and can lead to heart failure. Both the α 1Aand α 1B -AR subtypes are required for physiological cardiac hypertrophy as single KO do not have decreased heart size (Vecchione et al., 2002 ; Table 2 ). The systemic-expressing CAM α 1A displayed adaptive cardiac hypertrophy without increasing blood pressure (Papay et al., 2013) . The heart-targeted CAM α 1B mouse induced hypertrophy (Milano et al., 1994) but displayed maladaptive remodeling after pressure overload . The systemically expressing CAM α 1B also induces cardiac hypertrophy but was more pronounced when the mouse aged (Papay et al., 2013) . A systemically expressing WT α 1B -AR also displayed a lower degree of hypertrophy that only manifested in aged mice with fibrosis indicating a maladaptive cardiac hypertrophy . KO of the α 1B -AR had a loss of NE-induced hypertrophy but not a decrease in heart size at birth (Vecchione et al., 2002) . While a heart-targeted WT α 1B with high overexpression did not induce hypertrophy, it did induce a maladaptive dilated cardiomyopathy (Akhter et al., 1997; Grupp et al., 1998; Lemire et al., 2001) . The α 1B -AR has been suggested to regulate cardiac hypertrophy differently than the α 1A -AR and the two AR subtypes may need to be co-activated to regulate hypertrophy (Papay et al., 2013) . The CAM α 1A -AR mice selectively secreted interleukin-6 (IL-6) and atrial naturietic factor while the CAM α 1B -AR mice activated nuclear factor-kB (Papay et al., 2013) . The α 1AB -AR double KO mice also failed to develop hypertrophy when stimulated with IL-6 but WT mice developed hypertrophy when given IL-6. These hypertrophic signals were blocked in each mouse model and no increase in heart weight observed when the other AR was coactivated or when the two transgenic mouse models were crossbred, resulting in a CAM α 1A/B -AR double transgenic mouse model (Papay et al., 2013) . Hypertrophy became apparent in the CAM α 1AB -AR double transgenic when either the α 1A -AR or α 1B -AR were independently stimulated (Papay et al., 2013) . These results suggest that both the AR subtypes can increase hypertrophy through different signaling pathways. Increased α 1A -AR signaling can induce an adaptive hypertrophy consistent with its postulated role of cardiac protection while increased α 1B -AR signaling induces a maladaptive hypertrophy in the heart. These differences between adaptive versus maladaptive hypertrophy may be due to differences in α 1 -AR mediation of IL-6, ANF, and NF-kB signaling pathways. It is postulated that selective α 1A -AR stimulation may be a potential therapeutic in heart failure (Perez and Doze, 2011; Janssen et al., 2018) while α 1B -AR stimulation, on the other hand, is maladaptive. This is evidenced by the heart-targeted WT α 1B -AR mice induced dilated cardiomyopathy (Lemire et al., 2001) while heart-targeted CAM α 1B -AR progressed to heart failure after pressure-overload Table 2 ). In contrast, the heart-targeted WT α 1A -AR mice were protected against pressure-overload induced heart failure (Du et al., 2004) or dysfunction due to myocardial infarction (Du et al., 2006) compared to non-transgenic controls. This mouse model also showed increased vascular endothelial growth factor-A expression which induced angiogenesis and resulted in increased capillary density and blood flow to the heart, postulated to be a contributing mechanism for cardioprotection (Zhao et al., 2015) . This phenotype of induced angiogenesis could be reproduced when WT mice were given the α 1A -AR agonist, A61603. A61603 or dabuzalgron also increased survival and prevented the damage due to the cardiotoxic agent, doxorubicin (Beak et al., 2017; Montgomery et al., 2017) and increased contraction in a mouse model of right heart failure (Cowley et al., 2015) . The high metabolic rate of the heart can cause the heart to be sensitive to the lack of oxygen (i.e., ischemia) resulting in injury to the muscle. α 1 -AR have long been known to mediate protective effects against ischemia or preconditioning in ischemia in several species (Banerjee et al., 1993; Kitakaze et al., 1994; Tsuchida et al., 1994; Salvi, 2001; Rorabaugh et al., 2005; Zhao et al., 2012; Nazari et al., 2019; Papay and Perez, 2020) . In preconditioning, short periods of ischemia can stimulate signaling in the heart that protects the cardiac muscle from subsequent ischemic injury. The mechanism has been multi-faceted and attributed to PKC (Tsuchida et al., 1994; Mitchell et al., 1995; Rehring et al., 1996; Rorabaugh et al., 2005) , mitochondrial potassium channels (Nazari et al., 2019) , mitochondrial permeability transition pore (Naderi et al., 2010) , 5 -nucleotidase activity (Tsuchida et al., 1994) or angiogenesis (Zhao et al., 2012) . In recent studies, the ischemic protective effect of the α 1 -AR observed in primary cardiomyocytes was also proposed to be through the metabolic effects of glucose (Papay and Perez, 2020) . Most models of ischemic preconditioning and particularly those by α 1 -ARs converge first on PKC, then diverge to other downstream effectors (Downey and Cohen, 1997; Simkhovich et al., 2013) and are postulated to also do so in the human heart (Speechly-Dick et al., 1995). The α 1A -AR subtype has been shown to mediate the cardioprotective effects of α 1 -ARs in ischemic preconditioning. These studies have been performed in transgenic or KO mouse models as blocking one subtype is still not specific enough to perform with antagonists. The systemically expressed CAM α 1A mice were inherently preconditioned against ischemia while the CAM α 1B was not (Rorabaugh et al., 2005 ; Table 2 ). The heart-targeted CAM α 1B -AR also did not show ischemic preconditioning (Gao et al., 2000) . In corroboration, the hearttargeted WT α 1A -AR transgenic rat exhibited preconditioning that appeared during the second window of protection that occurs days (and not minutes) after ischemia (Du et al., 2006; Zhao et al., 2012 Zhao et al., , 2015 . There are also two reports that α 1B -AR stimulation in WT mice can induce ischemic preconditioning involving PKC but used sensitivity to chloroethylclonidine as a criteria to block α 1B -ARs selectively (Hu and Nattel, 1995; Gao et al., 2007) . However, chloroethylclonidine was shown to not be selective against the α 1B -AR but can block all the α 1 -AR subtypes (Xiao and Jeffries, 1998) . Transgenic rats with myocyte-specific α 1A -AR overexpression protected the heart from permanent coronary occlusion and during preconditioning (Zhao et al., 2012 (Zhao et al., , 2015 . The α 1A -AR KO or conditional cardiac KO of the α 1A -AR also had more pathological injury from myocardial infarction after left anterior descending ligation (Yeh et al., 2017; Zhang et al., 2020) . Together, these results strongly suggest that the α 1A -AR subtype mediates ischemic protection in the heart. Hypertension α 1 -ARs are highly expressed in vascular smooth muscle (Hussain and Marshall, 1997; Martí et al., 2005) . The rise in calcium upon stimulation of α 1 -ARs in the vasculature activates myosin light chain kinase and actin/myosin cross-bridge formation to induce vascular muscle contraction and increased blood pressure (Somlyo and Somlyo, 2003) . The smaller resistance arteries play a more important role in blood pressure regulation and are under stronger control from the sympathetic nervous system. Signals mediated through α 1 -AR activation have been shown to be involved in blood pressure regulation through their control of calcium release and sensitization and signaling through mechanisms involving PKC, PI3K, Rho Kinase, and MAPK (Woo and Lee, 1999; Wier and Morgan, 2003; Villalba et al., 2007; Gutiérrez et al., 2019) . While α 1 -AR antagonists are effective blockers to treat hypertension, they are used as a second line of defense (Chobanian et al., 2003) because of the side effects, poorer outcomes, and worsening or increased risk of heart failure (ALLHAT Collaborative Research Group, 2000) . Using KO mice, the α 1A was found to decrease blood pressure upon deletion, but only by 15% of the full phenylephrine effect (Rokosh and Simpson, 2002 ; Table 2 ). However, the α 1B -AR KO mediated 45% of the phenylephrine response (Cavalli et al., 1997; Vecchione et al., 2002) . Similar minor effects on blood pressure were observed in the α 1D -AR KO compared to the α 1A -AR or α 1B -AR KOs (Cavalli et al., 1997; Hosoda et al., 2005) . Only the α 1D -AR KO decreased basal resting levels of blood pressure (Vecchione et al., 2002; Hosoda et al., 2005) . Since all of the α 1 -ARs appear to regulate blood pressure to a certain degree, specific blockage of the α 1D -AR may provide better therapeutics to treat hypertension with less overall side effects on other organ systems. This is because the α 1B -AR appears to have the strongest effect on blood pressure while α 1D -AR blockage would still lower blood pressure but is not expressed or minimally expressed in the heart (Price et al., 1994; Scofield et al., 1995) or the brain (Tanoue et al., 2002; Sadalge et al., 2003) , thereby reducing potential side effects. The α 1D -AR is also expressed and regulates contraction in the small resistance mesenteric beds which is an important contributor to total peripheral resistance (Christensen and Mulvany, 1993; Hrometz et al., 1999; Gisbert et al., 2002; Methven et al., 2009 ). The α 1B -AR subtype controls the neuroeffector junction and sympathetic regulation of the baroreflex response (Townsend et al., 2004) and both the α 1A -and α 1B -AR subtypes regulate physiological hypertrophy . The α 1A -AR as reviewed above is a major regulator of neurotransmission and cognition; thus, blockage of α 1A -or α 1B -ARs would affect more off targets than vascular smooth muscle. Therefore, antagonists against the α 1D -AR subtype might be more effective therapeutically against hypertension by avoiding negative side effects on the heart and brain but may focus effects better on blood pressure regulation. The sympathetic nervous system is known to regulate many aspects of metabolism. α 1 -ARs stimulation has long been known to regulate gluconeogenesis in the liver (Chan and Exton, 1978; Hue et al., 1978; García-Sáinz and Hernández-Sotomayor, 1985; de Oliveira et al., 2013) . α 1 -ARs also regulate somatostatininduced gluconeogenesis in the kidney (Dileepan et al., 1982; Dileepan and Wagle, 1985) . Gluconeogenesis generates the synthesis of glucose from non-carbohydrate sources while glycolysis breaks down glucose to yield energy (i.e., ATP). Gluconeogenesis becomes important during fasting or starvation when glucose is needed by the cell after glycogen is depleted. α 1 -AR agonists also stimulate glycogen phosphorylase activity, the rate limiting step in glycogen breakdown, which inhibits glycogen synthesis, and increases the breakdown of glycogen (Assimacopoulos-Jeannet et al., 1977; Aggerbeck et al., 1980; Thomas et al., 1985; Ballou et al., 2001; de Oliveira et al., 2013) and stimulates the release of glucagon from the pancreas (Ahrén and Lundquist, 1987; Skoglund et al., 1987; Vieira et al., 2004) . However, recent studies have indicated that α 1 -ARs regulate metabolism at a much more systemic level as reviewed below. α 1 -AR Stimulation Increases Glucose Tolerance α 1 -AR stimulation is known to increase glucose uptake in the heart or in primary myocytes (Doenst and Taegtmeyer, 1999; Egert et al., 1999; Shi et al., 2016 Shi et al., , 2017 Sato et al., 2018; Papay and Perez, 2020) . The systemically expressing CAM α 1A but not the CAM α 1B -AR mice increased glucose uptake into the heart and only the α 1A -AR KO mice displayed decreased glucose uptake into the heart (Shi et al., 2017) . In corroboration, the α 1A -selective agonist, A61603 increased glucose uptake into primary cardiomyocytes or human α 1A -AR transfected Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells (Sato et al., 2018) . While glucose uptake into the heart appears α 1A -AR specific, both the α 1A -and α 1B -AR subtypes mediate glucose uptake into other tissues. The systemically expressing CAM α 1A and α 1B -AR mice both increased glucose uptake into adipose tissue and skeletal muscle while KO of the respective subtype decreased glucose uptake into those same tissues (Shi et al., 2017) . The mechanism of α 1A -AR mediated glucose uptake in the myocyte was through PKCδ signaling that resulted in GLUT 1/4 translocation which causes their activation to transport glucose into the cell (Shi et al., 2016) . The KO and CAM mice also displayed effects on glucose utilization and homeostasis. Both the systemically expressing CAM α 1A -and α 1B -AR mice had an increased tolerance for glucose, lower fasting glucose levels while KO mice had poor tolerance and high blood glucose after fasting (Shi et al., 2017) . α 1 -AR stimulation also increased glucose absorption in the intestines (Mourad and Saadé, 2011) . Hypothalamic central administration of prazosin increased plasma glucose levels (Murashita et al., 2007; Ikegami et al., 2013b) and glucose intolerance (Ikegami et al., 2013a) . When fatty acid oxidation was suppressed centrally in the brain, α 1 -ARs stimulated the counter-regulatory increases in plasma glucose levels (Sajapitak et al., 2008) . A metabolomic analysis in a neuronal cell culture also showed that α 1 -AR stimulation results in lower levels of carbohydrates (Wenner et al., 2016) . These results are consistent with other studies in the α 1B -AR KO mice which displayed insulin resistance and dysfunctional glucose homeostasis (Burcelin et al., 2004) and the use of prazosin treatment, an α 1 -AR antagonist, which increases risk of metabolic syndrome and high fasting plasma glucose levels in patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (Lee et al., 2013) . The mechanism of the increase in glucose tolerance and lowering of plasma glucose levels is likely due to the increased utilization of glucose through uptake and oxidation in various organs. α 1 -AR Mediated Glucose Oxidation in the Heart α 1 -AR stimulation can also directly increase glucose oxidation in both normal and ischemic primary adult myocytes performed by measuring the rate of 14 C-CO 2 production using 14 C-glucose as a substrate (Papay and Perez, 2020) . This study confirmed that the glucose uptake into the heart also drives the oxidation of glucose for energy utilization to the heart. Stimulation of glucose oxidation in the heart improves the recovery from damage during ischemia (Dyck et al., 2006; Ussher et al., 2012; Masoud et al., 2014; . Ischemia in the heart can increase glucose uptake by increasing the translocation of GLUT 1/4 (Egert et al., 1999) , as this was also shown to be mediated by the α 1A -AR (Shi et al., 2016) . The α 1 -AR mediated glucose oxidation in primary myocytes was also blocked by PKC and AMPK inhibitors (Papay and Perez, 2020) consistent with the role of PKCδ in translocating the glucose transporters in the heart by the α 1A -AR (Shi et al., 2016) . α 1 -AR stimulation increased glucose uptake in the L6 skeletal muscle cell line also through an AMPK pathway (Hutchinson and Bengtsson, 2006) . AMPK is an energy sensor that can regulate the rate of glucose and fatty acid uptake and oxidation according to the needs of the cell. AMPK signaling is cardioprotective during heart failure by switching the energy production in the heart from fatty acid oxidation to glucose oxidation (Kim et al., 2012) . AMPK also can increase glucose uptake during ischemia to prevent post-ischemic cardiac damage and dysfunction (Russell et al., 2004; Kim et al., 2011) . While α 1A -AR mediated ischemic preconditioning was mediated through PKC (Rorabaugh et al., 2005) , PKC was also shown to mediate its protection against ischemic damage through AMPK (Wang et al., 2011) . These results suggest that glucose uptake and subsequent oxidation in the heart may be α 1A -AR specific, signal through PKC/AMPK activation and may mediate α 1A -AR's cardioprotective effects during ischemia and heart failure. α 1 -AR Mediated Glucose Metabolism in Other Tissues α 1 -ARs are the main receptors that regulate the control of hepatic glucose metabolism in mice (Chu et al., 2000; Miyamoto et al., 2012; de Oliveira et al., 2013) . α 1 -AR stimulation increased glucose uptake into L6 muscle cells Bengtsson, 2005, 2006) and C2C12 skeletal myoblasts . α 1 -AR stimulation also increases glucose uptake into brown and white adipocytes (Faintrenie and Géloën, 1998; Cheng et al., 2000; Boschmann et al., 2002; Flechtner-Mors et al., 2002 , 2004 Chernogubova et al., 2005) . The sympathetic nervous system enhances glucose uptake into human adipocytes independently of insulin action through the α 1 -AR (Flechtner-Mors et al., 2002 , 2004 McCarty, 2004) . In obese people that have insulin resistance, α 1 -AR stimulation may provide a critical alternative pathway for glucose uptake. α 1 -ARs Mediated Fatty Acid Oxidation The KO and transgenic mice of the α 1 -AR subtypes were used to discern effects of the specific subtypes on general whole-body metabolism. Systemically expressing CAM mice were assessed by indirect calorimetry and found that both CAM α 1A -and α 1B -AR mice decreased the respiratory exchange ratio (RER) (ratio of CO 2 production and O 2 consumption) which indicated an increase in whole body preference to metabolize fatty acids as a substrate (i.e., fatty acid oxidation) while the KO mice from both subtypes preferred to burn carbohydrates and increased the RER (Shi et al., 2017) . It is likely that α 1 -AR stimulation increases fatty acid oxidation in the skeletal muscle as that muscle utilizes 40-50% of a body's whole energy metabolism. While there is a report that prazosin can increase angiogenesis in skeletal muscle resulting in increased capillarization to improve the diffusion of glucose into the muscle and may increase glucose oxidation due to substrate availability (Akerstrom et al., 2014) , prazosin's effect was due to improved blood flow and not to GLUT 1/4 translocation. Both systemically expressing CAM α 1A -and α 1B -AR mice displayed increased plasma levels of leptin while KO mice decreased leptin levels (Shi et al., 2017) . In obese humans, α 1 -AR blockade reduces leptin levels (Ihara et al., 2006) . While leptin can also directly increase glucose oxidation in the absence of insulin in skeletal muscle through a neural hypothalamic β-AR mechanism (Nevzorova et al., 2006; Glund et al., 2007; Shiuchi et al., 2009; Minokoshi et al., 2012; Cadaret et al., 2017) , leptin mainly increases fatty acid oxidation in skeletal muscle and the liver through α 1 -AR stimulation of AMPK activity (Minokoshi et al., 2002 (Minokoshi et al., , 2012 Miyamoto et al., 2012) . α 1 -ARs can also couple to peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-delta (PPARs) to regulate fatty acid oxidation and utilization (Tanaka et al., 2003) . PPAR subtypes β/δ are nuclear receptors and serve as sensors of fatty acid levels. They bind and are activated by fatty acids and their derivatives and activate transcription factors to regulate metabolism (Poulsen et al., 2012) . Using midodrine to non-selectively stimulate α 1 -ARs, α 1 -ARs activated PPARs and AMPK to increase oxidative phosphorylation in rat skeletal muscle or in C2C12 skeletal muscle cells (Lee et al., 2020) . PPARs are crucial to maintain normal cardiac function and its energy requirements. Cardiac-targeted KO of PPARδ decreases basal fatty acid oxidation leading to cardiac dysfunction, lipid accumulation and heart failure (Cheng et al., 2004) . Overexpression of a CAM PPARβ/δ leads to increased levels of fatty acid oxidation (Barak et al., 2002) . Tissue transglutaminase (TG2) is an ubiquitous and multifunctional protein and enzyme with regulatory crosslinking functions in cell adhesion and the cytoskeleton but also has GTP hydrolyzing activities (Fesus and Piacentini, 2002; Eckert et al., 2014) . Phenylephrine, an α 1 -AR non-selective agonist was injected into TG2 KO mice and resulted in a lowering of the RER indicating that the mice were burning more wholebody fatty acids than glucose when compared to normal mice with intact TG2 (Lénárt et al., 2020) . α 1 -AR stimulation also resulted in lower organ damage particularly in the heart but also in the lung, liver, kidney, and skeletal muscle and a weaker vasoconstriction response compared to normal mice (Lénárt et al., 2020) . When the same mice were given a β 3 -AR agonist, the RER was lowered and organ damage was changed to the same extent in both TG2 KO or normal mice (Lénárt et al., 2020) . A β 3 agonist lowers the RER because of its high density in adipose tissue (Ferrer-Lorente et al., 2005) . These results concur with the whole-body indirect calorimetry studies that showed that the systemically expressing CAM α 1 -AR mice burned more fatty acids (Shi et al., 2017) and protected the heart from ischemic damage (Rorabaugh et al., 2005; Shi et al., 2016) . TG2 is a protein ubiquitously found in cells and can function in both protein cross-linking and bind GTP to act as a G-protein transducer at α 1 -ARs (Nakaoka et al., 1994; Baek et al., 1996; Feng et al., 1996; Kang et al., 2004) . α 1 -AR stimulation can increase the rate of lipolysis in obese individuals (Flechtner-Mors et al., 2002) increasing the availability of fatty acids. α 1 -ARs stimulation also increase fatty acid oxidation in the liver or in hepatocytes (Sugden et al., 1980; Kosugi et al., 1983; Oberhaensli et al., 1985; de Oliveira et al., 2013) and during a high-fat diet can reduce hepatic steatosis (i.e., fatty liver disease) (Nakade et al., 2020) . Using a metabolomic analysis, the α 1A -AR selective agonist, A61603, produced a reduction in cardiac polyunsaturated fatty acids (Willis et al., 2016) . The systemically expressed CAM α 1A -AR mice displayed significantly decreased fasting plasma triglycerides while α 1A -AR KO displayed increased levels of triglycerides (Shi et al., 2017) . In contrast, α 1 -AR blockers such as prazosin or doxazosin have been reported to lower triglycerides and cholesterol but increase high density lipoproteins in humans (Ferrara et al., 1986; Weinberger, 1986; Trost et al., 1987) . The reason for this discordance is unknown. However, α 1 -AR quinazoline-based antagonists and particularly prazosin and doxazosin have known non-α 1 -AR mediated offtarget effects (Benning and Kyprianou, 2002; Lin et al., 2007; Isgor and Isgor, 2012) . Development of selective α 1 -AR subtype ligands has not been a focus in the pharmaceutical industry because of the ALLHAT Collaborative Research Group (2000) clinical trials and the major cardiovascular events that occur when α 1 -AR antagonists are used. There are still no selective blockers or agonists for the α 1B -AR, and while BMY 7378 is somewhat selective for the α 1D -AR (Goetz et al., 1995) , there is no clear clinical target. α 1A -AR antagonists have fared better in drug development because they target prostate and lower urinary tract problems which often affect men with increasing age and who also have high blood pressure; thus, tackling two problems with one therapeutic (Van Asseldonk et al., 2015) . However, these therapeutics, as are all α 1 -AR antagonists, are contraindicated in people with heart problems (O'Connell et al., 2013) . Recent studies also suggest that α 1 -AR antagonists increase mortality rates in hospitalized patients with Covid-19 (Rose et al., 2020) . The above review indicates that the α 1A -AR subtype may be a target for drug development for cardioprotection and cognitive enhancement in dementia-type diseases. The potential for α 1A -AR agonists to be used to treat these diseases has a major problematic side effect of increasing blood pressure (Woo and Lee, 1999; Wier and Morgan, 2003; Villalba et al., 2007; Gutiérrez et al., 2019) . This drawback has limited the development of α 1 -AR-based therapeutics by pharmaceutical companies (Fordyce et al., 2015) . However, there are two avenues of development that are recently being used to circumvent the blood pressure effect of α 1A -AR agonists. The first one is the use of the imidazoline pharmacophore instead of the endogenous phenethylamine pharmacophore that is possessed by norepinephrine, epinephrine and several other α 1 -AR agonists (Figure 1 ). In general, imidazolines have better binding and functional agonistic selectivity for α 2 -ARs and reduce blood pressure by decreasing norepinephrine release at the α 2A -AR autoreceptor (Ruffolo et al., 1983) . However, in the early days of α 1 -AR agonist drug development, it was noted imidazolines interacted with the α 1 -ARs in a different way structurally than with α 2 -ARs. The Easson-Stedman hypothesis states that adrenergic agonists that are chiral by possessing an asymmetric hydroxyl-substituted benzylic carbon atom will have higher binding affinity and potency for the R(-) (i.e., right hand) isomer when compared to the S(+) (i.e., desoxy) isomer (Easson and Stedman, 1933) . Imidazoline binding to α 1 -ARs did not adhere to the Easson-Stedman hypothesis that held with phenethylamines, such as norepinephrine (Patil et al., 1974; Ruffolo et al., 1980 Ruffolo et al., , 1983 Hieble et al., 1986) . While most imidazolines that selectively bind to the α 2 -AR are agonists, they become weak antagonists at the α 1 -AR (Ruffolo and Waddell, 1982) . During drug development, specific substitutions off the imidazoline pharmacophore can convert imidazolines from α 2 -AR agonists to α 1 -AR agonists (Ruffolo et al., 1980; Hieble et al., 1986; Knepper et al., 1995) . Furthermore, subsequent studies indicated that imidazolines that had higher affinity for the α 1 -AR than the α 2 -AR had agonistselectivity for the α 1A -AR subtype in both binding affinity and function compared to the other two α 1 -AR subtypes, the α 1Bor α 1D -AR (Minneman et al., 1994) . Structure-function analysis revealed that imidazolines, while agonists at the α 1A -AR, interact with amino acid residues closer to the cell surface in the α 1A -AR binding pocket, similar to α 1 -AR antagonists, confirming the differences seen with the Easson-Stedman hypothesis (Waugh et al., 2001) . These differences in binding also explained why most imidazolines are partial and not full agonists at the α 1 -ARs. FIGURE 1 | Chemical structures for common α 1 -AR agonists. Ligands such as norepinephrine that contain a phenyl, two-carbon ethyl, and amine group in their structural backbone are referred to as phenethylamines. Ligands that contain an imidazole ring in its structural backbone instead of the phenyl ring are referred to as imidazolines. There are several commercially available imidazolines, such as cirazoline and A61603, that are selective for the α 1A -AR versus the α 1B -and α 1D -AR subtypes and with lower affinity against the α 2 -AR. An analog of cirazoline and an α 1A -AR partial agonist, RO 115-1240 and later by the commercial product dabuzalgron, was shown to reduce stress urinary incontinence without increasing blood pressure (Blue et al., 2004; Musselman et al., 2004) . The therapeutic index is wide enough that R0 115-1240 can contract bladder smooth muscle at a much lower dose than required to contract vascular smooth muscle by the α 1A -AR. This is possible because of the higher receptor density of the α 1A -AR in the urinary tract compared with vascular smooth muscle and its partial agonist activity that allows reflex mechanisms to control changes in blood pressure (Ford et al., 1996; Walden et al., 1997; Kava et al., 1998; Musselman et al., 2004; Michel and Vrydag, 2006) . While all of the above are indeed possible mechanisms for α 1A -AR agonists to avoid increasing blood pressure, imidazolines were subsequently shown to have bias signaling or agonist trafficking which can lead to lower efficacy of the signaling pathways known to increase blood pressure. Imidazolines induce a more robust cAMP signaling response versus the inositol phosphate signal which increases calcium release to cause the vascular smooth muscle contraction (Evans et al., 2011; da Silva et al., 2017) . Confirming the role of α 1A -AR-selective imidazolines in cardioprotection, dabuzalgron was shown to protect against cardiac damage induced by doxorubicin (Beak et al., 2017; Montgomery et al., 2017) and A61603 increased inotropy in a mouse model of right heart failure (Cowley et al., 2015) , but blood pressure was not assessed at the dosage used in these experiments. Confirming the role of α 1A -AR-selective imidazolines in enhancing cognition, cirazoline, which crosses the blood brain barrier, was shown to increase cognition in normal mice . A second avenue of drug development for α 1A -AR agonists with a wide therapeutic index to avoid increases in blood pressure are allosteric modulators. Allosteric modulators offer greater selectivity in both binding and signaling than conventional ligands which bind to the natural endogenous site on the receptor (i.e., orthosteric) (Christopoulos, 2002) . Besides greater selectivity because they bind in a different place than orthosteric agonists that is non-conserved between subtypes of the receptor, allosteric modulators offer many other benefits in therapeutics. These are the saturability of its binding site (i.e., ceiling effect) and conformational or probe bias that can alter the receptor to induce a bias in signaling and activation properties but only when the receptor is already occupied with a specific ligand or probe (Christopoulos, 2002) . Allosteric modulators are classified by their ability to modulate function. Positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) increase a receptor's functional response while negative allosteric modulators (NAMs) decrease the functional response. There are also neutral or silent allosteric modulators (SAMs) that bind to the receptor and display no measurable changes in function (Lindsley et al., 2016) but can block the effects of PAMs or NAMS (Rodriguez et al., 2005) . There are now many GPCR allosteric modulators that have been developed (Chen et al., 2008; Wold et al., 2019; Zhou and Cunningham, 2019; Fasciani et al., 2020) with several in clinical trials or with FDA approval (Wold et al., 2019) . The HIV entry inhibitor maraviroc is the most known clinically used GPCR allosteric modulator against the CCR5 receptor (Maeda et al., 2012) . There are a few NAMs that have been characterized for the α 1 -AR but have not been developed for clinical use (Leppik et al., 2000; Sharpe et al., 2003; Chen et al., 2004; Lima et al., 2005; Ragnarsson et al., 2013; Campbell et al., 2017) . We have developed the first PAM of the α 1 -ARs with selectivity at the α 1A -AR subtype. It has the imidazoline pharmacophore and can cross the blood brain barrier in sufficient concentration to cause neurological effects without increased blood pressure (Perez, 2021) . We have demonstrated its ability to significantly increase LTP in a mouse model of AD along with increases in cognitive behavior using the Barnes maze and fear-conditioning tests. This was achieved using a 10-month dosing scheme and studies are underway to test effects of this compound in a dose-efficacy preclinical trial for 3 months (Perez, 2021) . There has been recent work in therapeutic vaccines directed at the α 1 -AR subtypes and their roles in hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Autoantibodies against the α 1 -ARs were first found in patients over 20 years ago with severe hypertension (Fu et al., 1994; Luther et al., 1997; Wenzel et al., 2008) . A vaccine made against the second extracellular loop of the α 1D -AR was found to have antagonistic behavior (Li et al., 2019) . The vaccine was injected into spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) with or without pre-treatment with NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) to generate NO and to reduce blood pressure (Li et al., 2019) . This α 1D -AR vaccine reduced the systolic blood pressure up to 15 mmHg in the SHR group and up to 29 mmHG in the SHR + L-NAME group. This vaccine also prevented cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis, vascular remodeling, and renal injury even better than compared to treatment with prazosin, suggesting that the antibody has blocking activity. There is one commercially available α 1D -AR antagonist, BMY7378 (Goetz et al., 1995) , but is not sufficiently selective to avoid blocking the other α 1 -AR subtypes for therapeutic use. Because of the unique amino acid sequence used in a non-conserved region of the second extracellular loop of the receptor, vaccines against the α 1D -AR subtype would be highly selective and avid to regulate the blood pressure response and avoid blocking the other α 1 -AR subtypes. However, the vast majority of autoantibodies are associated with agonistic activity resulting from a rise in intracellular calcium, and postulated to result in a vasoconstrictive effect (Bkaily et al., 2003; Karczewski et al., 2010; Yan et al., 2014) . However, one controlled clinical study indicated that hypertensive patients with α 1 -AR autoantibodies displayed normal cardiovascular responses to α 1 -AR stimulation and removal of α 1 -AR autoantibodies by immunoadsorption did not alter that response (Schroeder et al., 2012) . While the autoantibody against the α 1D -AR appears antagonistic, several autoantibodies have been developed or discovered against the first or second extracellular loop of the α 1 -AR appear to be agonistic in behavior (Zhou et al., 2008; Karczewski et al., 2012; Hempel et al., 2016; Wallukat et al., 2020) . While developing these autoantibodies for cardioprotective effects for the α 1A -AR may be tempting, they may not be regulated by the normal desensitization and negative feedback mechanisms common in GPCRs to turn off or wane the signal, resulting in abnormal and non-physiological signaling and proliferation (Zhou et al., 2008; Karczewski et al., 2018; Becker et al., 2019; Wallukat et al., 2020) . This abnormal signaling and proliferation may account for the vascular damage that many autoantibodies also impart (Zhou et al., 2008; Karczewski et al., 2012 Karczewski et al., , 2018 Becker et al., 2019; Wallukat et al., 2020) . Autoantibodies against the α 1 -AR have also been associated with coronary heart disease (Thyrian et al., 2018) , cardiac remodeling and dysfunction (Zhou et al., 2005; , pre-eclampsia (Ma et al., 2013) , thromboangiitis obliterans (Buerger's Disease) (Klein-Weigel et al., 2014) , AD and vascular dementia (Karczewski et al., 2012 (Karczewski et al., , 2018 Hempel et al., 2016) , and prostate cancer (Wallukat et al., 2020) . Therefore, both agonistic and antagonistic autoantibodies against the α 1 -AR subtypes would need to be thoroughly analyzed for off target effects. SUMMARY α 1 -ARs are part of the adrenergic family of sympathetic control and have long been known to regulate blood pressure, smooth muscle contraction and cardiac hypertrophy. In recent work, α 1A -AR stimulation also mediates adaptive effects and signals in the heart that lead to protective outcomes against ischemia and heart failure. They are also highly expressed in the cognitive centers of the brain and stimulation of α 1 -ARs, particularly the α 1A -AR, can increase both short-term as well as LTP leading to increased learning and memory functions. With its ability to increase adult neurogenesis, there is a potential for α 1A -AR agonists or positive allosteric modulators to treat AD and to protect the heart at the same time. α 1 -AR stimulation also mediates several aspects of whole-body and organ-specific metabolism to regulate glucose uptake, gluconeogenesis, glucose breakdown, lipolysis, and fatty acid oxidation for energy production. The regulation of cardiac metabolism by the α 1A -AR is likely a contributing factor for its protective effects in the heart. For pharmacological interventions, it is suggested that therapeutics that focus on α 1A -AR agonism be developed. To avoid the potential side effects on blood pressure, the imidazoline rather than the phenethylamine pharmacophore should be of primary focus for drug discovery. Several α 1A -AR imidazolinebased agonists have been used in preclinical studies and allosteric agonists that will not increase blood pressure are now in development for heart failure and AD. DP performed all of the research, writing, and editing of this manuscript. This manuscript was funded through grants from the National Institute on Aging (RO1-AG066627) and The Edward N. and Della L. Thome Memorial Foundation (award Program in Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Research). Adrenergic receptor of the alpha1-subtype mediates the activation of the glycogen phosphorylase in normal rat liver Alpha-adrenoceptor blockade by phentolamine inhibits beta-adrenergically and cholinergically induced glucagon secretion in the mouse Increased skeletal muscle capillarization enhances insulin sensitivity Transgenic mice with cardiac overexpression of α1B-adrenergic receptors. In vivo α1-adrenergic receptor-mediated regulation of β-adrenergic signaling Differential phosphorylation, desensitization, and internalization of α1A-adrenoceptors activated by norepinephrine and oxymetazoline Major cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients randomized to doxazosin vs chlorthalidone: the antihypertensive and lipid-lowering treatment to prevent heart attack trial (ALLHAT). ALLHAT collaborative research group Phenylephrine and ECS-induced retrograde amnesia The α1-adrenergic agonist, cirazoline, impairs spatial working memory performance in aged monkeys Studies on alpha-adrenergic activation of hepatic glucose output. Studies on role of calcium in alpha-adrenergic activation of phosphorylase 5-HT2A and alpha1b-adrenergic receptors entirely mediate dopamine release, locomotor response and behavioural sensitization to opiates and psychostimulants Selective activation of alpha1A-adrenergic receptors in neonatal cardiac myocytes is sufficient to cause hypertrophy and differential regulation of alpha1-adrenergic receptor subtype mRNAs Involvement of dorsal hippocampal alpha-adrenergic receptors in the effect of scopolamine on memory retrieval in inhibitory avoidance task A 50 KDa protein modulates guanine nucleotide binding of transglutaminase II Dual regulation of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta by the alpha1A-adrenergic receptor Preconditioning against myocardial dysfunction after ischemia and reperfusion by an α1-adrenergic mechanism Prefrontal cortical GABAergic dysfunction contributes to agerelated working memory impairment Effects of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor delta on placentation, adiposity, and colorectal cancer An oral selective alpha-1A adrenergic receptor agonist prevents doxorubicin cardiotoxicity Functional autoantibody diseases: basics and treatment related to cardiomyopathies Quinazoline-derived alpha1-adrenoceptor antagonists induce prostate cancer cell apoptosis via an alpha1-adrenoceptor-independent action Differential sensitivity to psychostimulants across prefrontal cognitive tasks: differential involvement of Noradrenergic α1-vs. α2-Receptors Differential cognitive actions of norepinephrine α2 and α1 receptor signaling in the prefrontal cortex Impaired adrenergic-mediated plasticity of prefrontal cortical glutamate synapses in rats with developmental disruption of the ventral hippocampus Modulation of intracellular Ca2+ via L-type calcium channels in heart cells by the autoantibody directed against the second extracellular loop of the alpha1-adrenoceptors. Can A synaptic model of memory: long-term potentiation in the hippocampus Pharmacological characteristics of Ro 115-1240, a selective α1A/Ladrenoceptor partial agonist: a potential therapy for stress urinary incontinence Three commercial antibodies against α1-adrenergic receptor subtypes lack specificity in paraffin-embedded sections of murine tissues In vivo response to alpha(1)-adrenoreceptor stimulation in human white adipose tissue Decreased catecholamine sensitivity and beta-adrenergicreceptor density in failing human hearts β1-and β2-adrenergic-receptor subpopulations in nonfailing and failing human ventricular myocardium: coupling of both receptor subtypes to muscle contraction and selective β1-receptor downregulation in heart failure Alpha-1 adrenergic receptors in the nonfailing and failing human heart Consolidation theory and retrograde amnesia in humans Impaired glucose homeostasis in mice lacking the α1b-adrenergic receptor subtype Acute exposure of primary rat soleus muscle to zilpaterol HCl (β2 adrenergic agonist), TNFα, or IL-6 in culture increases glucose oxidation rates independent of the impact on insulin signaling or glucose uptake Homobivalent conjugation increases the allosteric effect of 9-aminoacridine at the α1-adrenergic receptors MicroRNA-133 modulates the β1-adrenergic receptor transduction cascade Decreased blood pressure response in mice deficient of the alpha1b-adrenergic receptor Differential cardiovascular regulatory activities of the α 1B -and α 1D -adrenoceptor subtypes Studies on α-adrenergic activation of hepatic glucose output. Studies on α-adrenergic inhibition of hepatic pyruvate kinase and activation of gluconeogenesis Sustained augmentation of cardiac alpha1A-adrenergic drive results in pathological remodeling with contractile dysfunction, progressive fibrosis and reactivation of matricellular protein genes Presynaptic alpha1-adrenergic receptors differentially regulate synaptic glutamate and GABA release to hypothalamic presympathetic neurons N-{4-Chloro-2-[(1,3-dioxo-1,3-dihydro-2H-isoindol-2-yl) methyl]phenyl}-2-hydroxybenzamide (CPPHA) acts through a novel site as a positive allosteric modulator of group 1 metabotropic glutamate receptors Subtype-selective noncompetitive or competitive inhibition of human alpha1-adrenergic receptors by rho-TIA Role of α1A-adrenoceptor in the regulation of glucose uptake into white adipocyte of rats in vitro Cardiomyocyte-restricted peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-δ deletion perturbs myocardial fatty acid oxidation and leads to cardiomyopathy Alpha1-and beta1-adrenoceptor signaling fully compensates for beta3-adrenoceptor deficiency in brown adipocyte norepinephrine-stimulated glucose uptake The seventh report of the joint national committee on prevention, detection, evaluation, and treatment of high blood pressure: the JNC 7 report Mesenteric arcade arteries contribute substantially to vascular resistance in conscious rats Allosteric binding sites on cell-surface receptors: novel targets for drug discovery The direct effects of catecholamines on hepatic glucose production occur via alpha(1)-and beta(2)-receptors in the dog through activation of α1A-ARs, stimulates production of new neurons, leading to an alleviation of depression and anxiety Long-term α1B-adrenergic receptor activation shortens lifespan, while α1A-adrenergic receptor stimulation prolongs lifespan in association with decreased cancer incidence Increased α-adrenergic receptors in ischemic cat myocardium: a potential mediator of electrophysiological derangements The alpha1-adrenergic receptors in cardiac hypertrophy: signaling mechanisms and functional implications Molecular cloning and expression of the cDNA for the hamster alpha 1-adrenergic receptor The alpha1A-adrenergic receptor subtype mediates increased contraction of failing right ventricular myocardium Protein kinase C phosphorylates RGS2 and modulates its capacity for negative regulation of Galpha 11 signaling Factors influencing biased agonism in recombinant cells expressing the human α1A-adrenoceptor Adrenergic metabolic and hemodynamic effects of octopamine in the liver Studies on the mechanism of action of somatostatin on renal gluconeogenesis: evidence for the involvement of alpha 1-adrenergic stimuli Somatostatin: a metabolic regulator α-adrenergic stimulation mediates glucose uptake through phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase in rat heart Distribution of alpha1A adrenergic receptor mRNA in the rat brain visualized by in situ hybridization Signal transduction in ischemic preconditioning Long-term α1A-adrenergic receptor stimulation improves synaptic plasticity, cognitive function, mood, and longevity Alpha1b-adrenergic receptors control locomotor and rewarding effects of psychostimulants and opiates Genetic enhancement of ventricular contractility protects against pressureoverload-induced cardiac dysfunction Transgenic alpha1A-adrenergic activation limits post-infarct ventricular remodeling and dysfunction and improves survival Central alpha 1-adrenergic stimulation in relation to the behaviour stimulating effect of modafinil; studies with experimental animals Absence of malonyl coenzyme A decarboxylase in mice increases cardiac glucose oxidation and protects the heart from ischemic injury Alpha1-adrenergic receptor mediated long-term depression at CA3-CA1 synapses can be induced viaaccumulation of endogenous norepinephrine and is preserved following noradrenergic denervation Studies on the relationship between chemical constitution and physiological action: molecular dissymmetry and physiological activity Transglutaminase regulation of cell function Hybrid transgenic mice reveal in vivo specificity of G proteincoupled receptor kinases in the heart Contribution of alpha-adrenergic and beta-adrenergic stimulation to ischemia-induced glucose transporter (GLUT) 4 and GLUT1 translocation in the isolated perfused rat heart Genetic compensation: a phenomenon in search of mechanisms Cardiac α1-adrenoceptors and inotropy: myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity, intracellular Ca2+ mobilization, signaling pathway, and pathophysiological relevance Myocardial alpha 1-adrenoceptors mediate positive inotropic effect and changes in phosphatidylinositol metabolism. Species differences in receptor distribution and the intracellular coupling process in mammalian ventricular myocardium Reducing prefrontal gammaaminobutyric acid activity induces cognitive, behavioral, and dopaminergic abnormalities that resemble schizophrenia Quantification of functional selectivity at the human α1A-adrenoceptor Alpha-1 adrenergic stimulation of glucose uptake in rat white adipocytes Allosteric modulators of G protein-coupled dopamine and serotonin receptors: a new class of atypical antipsychotics Evidence that phospholipase delta-1 is the effector in the Gh (transglutaminase II)-mediated signalling Effects of alpha-adrenergic and beta-adrenergic receptor blockade on lipid metabolism Combined effects of oleoyl-estrone and a beta3-adrenergic agonist (CL316,243) on lipid stores of diet-induced overweight male Wistar rats Role of amygdala norepinephrine in mediating stress hormone regulation of memory storage Role of norepinephrine in mediating inhibitory avoidance memory storage: a critical involvement of the basolateral amygdala Basolateral amygdala noradrenergic influences on memory storage are mediated by an interaction between beta-and alpha1-adrenoceptors Involvement of α1-adrenergic receptors in the basolateral amygdala in modulation of memory storage Transglutaminase 2: an enigmatic enzyme with diverse functions Heart adrenoceptor gene expression and binding sites in the human failing heart Sympathetic regulation of glucose uptake by the alpha1-adrenoceptor in human obesity In vivo alpha (1)-adrenergic lipolytic activity in subcutaneous adipose tissue of obese subjects RS-17053 (N-[2-(2-cyclopropylmethoxyphenoxy) ethyl]-5-chloroalpha, alpha-dimethyl-1H-indole-3-ethanamine hydrochloride), a selective alpha 1A-adrenoceptor antagonist, displays low affinity for functional alpha 1-adrenoceptors in human prostate: implications for adrenoceptor classification Cardiovascular drug development: is it dead or just hibernating? Long-term synaptic enhancement in CA1 is due to increased quanta1 size, not quanta1 content Functional autoimmune epitope on alpha 1-adrenergic receptors in patients with malignant hypertension Effects of catecholamines on protein synthesis in cardiac myocytes and perfused hearts isolated from adult rats. Stimulation of translation is mediated through the alpha 1-adrenoceptor Activation of α1B-adrenoceptors alleviates ischemia/reperfusion injury by limitation of mitochondrial Ca2+ overload in cardiomyocytes Expression of active alpha(1B)-adrenergic receptors in the heart does not alleviate ischemic reperfusion injury Adrenergic regulation of gluconeogenesis: possible involvement of two mechanisms of signal transduction in alpha 1-adrenergic action Enhanced noradrenergic activity potentiates fear memory consolidation and reconsolidation by differentially recruiting α1-and β-adrenergic receptors Astrocytic adrenoceptors and learning: alpha1-adrenoceptors Stimulation of α1-adrenoceptors inhibits memory consolidation in the chick Astrocytic involvement in learning and memory consolidation Pathological role of a constitutively active population of alpha (1D)-adrenoceptors in arteries of spontaneously hypertensive rats Interleukin-6 directly increases glucose metabolism in resting human skeletal muscle BMY 7378 is a selective antagonist of the D subtype of alpha 1-adrenoceptors Identification and characterization of alpha-adrenergic receptors Overexpression of α1B-adrenergic receptor induces left ventricular dysfunction in the absence of hypertrophy α1-Adrenergic receptors regulate neurogenesis and gliogenesis Role of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and protein kinase C (PKC) in calcium signaling pathways linked to the α1-adrenoceptor in resistance arteries Selective inhibition of α1A-adrenergic receptor signaling by RGS2 association with the receptor third intracellular loop Responses to noxious stimuli in mice lacking α1D-adrenergic receptors The Organization of Behavior Immunoadsorption of agonistic autoantibodies against α1-adrenergic receptors in patients with mild to moderate dementia Bidirectional modification of CA1 synapses in the adult hippocampus in vivo Evidence for and against heterogeneity of α1-adrenoceptors Regulation of synaptic vesicle fusion by protein kinase C Adrenergic receptor characterization of CA1 hippocampal neurons using real time single cell RT-PCR A study of α-adrenoceptor gene polymorphisms and Alzheimer disease Frequency-dependent noradrenergic modulation of long-term potentiation in the hippocampus Two alpha1-adrenergic receptor subtypes regulating the vasopressor response have differential roles in blood pressure regulation Expression of multiple α1-adrenoceptors on vascular smooth muscle: correlation with the regulation of contraction Mechanisms of ischemic preconditioning in rat hearts. Involvement of alpha 1B-adrenoceptors, pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins, and protein kinase C Control of gluconeogenesis and of enzymes of glycogen metabolism in isolated rat hepatocytes. A parallel study of the effect of phenylephrine and of glucagon Characterization of alpha1-adrenoceptor subtypes mediating contractions to phenylephrine in rat thoracic aorta, mesenteric artery and pulmonary artery α1A-adrenoceptors activate glucose uptake in L6 muscle cells through a phospholipase C-, phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase-, and atypical protein kinase C-dependent pathway AMP-activated protein kinase activation by adrenoceptors in L6 skeletal muscle cells: mediation by alpha1-adrenoceptors causing glucose uptake Facilitation of spatial working memory performance following intra-prefrontal cortical administration of the adrenergic alpha1 agonist phenylephrine An alpha1-receptor blocker reduces plasma leptin levels in hypertensive patients with obesity and hyperleptinemia Alpha 1-adrenergic stimulation is coupled to cardiac myocyte hypertrophy Olanzapine induces glucose intolerance through the activation of AMPK in the mouse hypothalamus Olanzapine-induced hyperglycemia: possible involvement of histaminergic, dopaminergic and adrenergic functions in the central nervous system Amygdala betanoradrenergic influence on hippocampal long-term potentiation in vivo Effect of alpha-1-adrenoceptor blocker on cytosolic enzyme targets for potential use in cancer chemotherapy Norepinephrine promotes long-term potentiation in the adult rat hippocampus in vitro Human myocardium has a robust α1A-subtype adrenergic receptor inotropic response Alpha1-Adrenergic receptor subtypes in nonfailing and failing human myocardium The alpha-1D Is the predominant alpha-1-adrenergic receptor subtype in human epicardial coronary arteries Ten commercial antibodies for alpha1-adrenergic receptor subtypes are nonspecific α1-Adrenergic receptor regulation of interneuron function Characterization of [125I]-HEAT binding to alpha 1-receptors in human brain: assessment in aging and Alzheimer's disease The molecular biology of memory storage: a dialogue between genes and synapses Alpha1B-adrenoceptor signaling and cell motility: GTPase function of Gh/transglutaminase 2 inhibits cell migration through interaction with cytoplasmic tail of integrin alpha subunits Agonistic antibody to the alpha1-adrenergic receptor mobilizes intracellular calcium and induces phosphorylation of a cardiac 15-kDa protein Role of alpha1-adrenergic receptor antibodies in Alzheimer's disease Agonistic autoantibodies to the α(1) -adrenergic receptor and the β(2) -adrenergic receptor in Alzheimer's and vascular dementia Noradrenergic regulation of synaptic plasticity in the hippocampal CA1 region α1L-Adrenoceptor mediation of smooth muscle contraction in rabbit bladder neck: a model for lower urinary tract tissues of man Hippocampal long-term depression and long-term potentiation encode different aspects of novelty acquisition A small molecule AMPK activator protects the heart against ischemia-reperfusion injury AMPK isoform expression in the normal and failing hearts Alpha 1-adrenoceptor activation mediates the infarct size-limiting effect of ischemic preconditioning through augmentation of 5'-nucleotidase activity G-protein coupled receptor auto-antibodies in thromboangiitis obliterans (Buerger's disease) and their removal by immunoadsorption Decreased exploratory activity and impaired passive avoidance behaviour in mice deficient for the α1b-adrenoceptor Subchronic treatment with prazosin improves passive avoidance learning in aged mice: possible relationships to alpha1-receptor up-regulation A-61603, a potent α1-adrenergic receptor agonist, selective for the α1A receptor subtype Activation of alpha1-adrenoceptors increases firing frequency through protein kinase C in pyramidal neurons of rat visual cortex Mechanism of adrenergic stimulation of hepatic ketogenesis Alpha 1-adrenergic system and arrhythmias in ischaemic heart disease Noradrenergic modulation of cognitive function in rat medial prefrontal cortex as measured by attentional set shifting capability The rat homologue of the bovine alpha 1c-adrenergic receptor shows the pharmacological properties of the classical alpha 1A subtype The impact of metabolic syndrome on the responsiveness to α1-blocker in men with BPH/LUTS Stimulation of Alpha1-Adrenergic receptor ameliorates cellular functions of multiorgans beyond vasomotion through PPARδ Cardiac-directed overexpression of wild-type alpha1B-adrenergic receptor induces dilated cardiomyopathy Transglutaminase 2 has metabolic and vascular regulatory functions revealed by in vivo activation of alpha1-adrenergic receptor Allosteric interactions between the antagonist prazosin and amiloride analogs at the human α1A-adrenergic receptor Vaccine targeted alpha 1D-adrenergic receptor for hypertension Glucose oxidation positively regulates glucose uptake and improves cardiac function recovery after myocardial reperfusion Increase in G protein-coupled receptor autoantibodies with decline of cardiac function in hypercholesterolemic rats Differential antagonism by conotoxin rho-TIA of contractions mediated by distinct alpha1-adrenoceptor subtypes in rat vas deferens, spleen and aorta Intracellular distribution of adrenoceptors in the failing human myocardium Targeted alpha(1A)-adrenergic receptor overexpression induces enhanced cardiac contractility but not hypertrophy Prazosin displays anticancer activity against human prostate cancers: targeting DNA and cell cycle Practical strategies and concepts in GPCR allosteric modulator discovery: recent advances with metabotropic glutamate receptors Stimulatory effect of isoferulic acid on α1A-adrenoceptor to increase glucose uptake into cultured myoblast C2C12 cells of mice Molecular cloning and expression of the cDNA for the alpha 1Aadrenergic receptor. The gene for which is located on human chromosome 5 Receptor subtype involved in alpha 1-adrenergic receptor-mediated Ca2+ signaling in cardiomyocytes Phenylephrine enhances glutamate release in the medial prefrontal cortex through interaction with N-type Ca2+ channels and release machinery Stimulation of α1-adrenoceptors facilitates GABAergic transmission onto pyramidal neurons in the medial prefrontal cortex Activation of alpha1-adrenoceptors enhances excitatory synaptic transmission via a pre-and postsynaptic protein kinase C-dependent mechanism in the medial prefrontal cortex of rats Alpha 1-adrenergic receptor antibodies in patients with primary hypertension α1-Adrenoceptors in the hippocampal dentate gyrus involved in learningdependent long-term potentiation during active-avoidance learning in rats Association between the presence of autoantibodies against adrenoreceptors and severe pre-eclampsia: a pilot study CCR5 inhibitors: emergence, success, and challenges Inhibitory avoidance memory deficit induced by scopolamine: Interaction of cholinergic and glutamatergic systems in the ventral tegmental area Ischemiaand agonist-induced changes in alpha-and beta-adrenergic receptor traffic in guinea pig hearts Novelty acquisition is associated with induction of hippocampal long-term depression Local infusion of an α1-adrenergic agonist into the prefrontal cortex impairs spatial working memory performance in monkeys Alpha1B-adrenoceptor-mediated excitation of piriform cortical interneurons 5-HT2A receptor or α1-adrenoceptor activation induces excitatory postsynaptic currents in layer V pyramidal cells of the medial prefrontal cortex Correlation between mRNA levels and functional role of alpha1-adrenoceptor subtypes in arteries: evidence of alpha1L as a functional isoform of the alpha1A-adrenoceptor α(1D)-Adrenoceptor regulates the vasopressor action of α(1A)-adrenoceptor in mesenteric vascular bed of α(1D)-adrenoceptor knockout mice Failing mouse hearts utilize energy inefficiently and benefit from improved coupling of glycolysis and glucose oxidation Elevated sympathetic activity may promote insulin resistance syndrome by activating alpha-1 adrenergic receptors on adipocytes Abnormal myocardial contraction in α 1A -and α 1B -adrenoceptor double-knockout mice Localization of α-adrenoceptors: JR vane medal lecture Effects of pertussis toxin on extracellular signal-regulated kinase activation in hepatocytes by hormones and receptor-independent agents: evidence suggesting a stimulatory role of G(i) proteins at a level distal to receptor coupling Alpha1A/B-knockout mice explain the native alpha1D-adrenoceptor's role in vasoconstriction and show that its location is independent of the other alpha1-subtypes Radioligand binding studies of alpha 1-adrenoceptor subtypes in rat heart Alpha1-, alpha2-and beta-adrenoceptors in the urinary bladder, urethra and prostate Myocardial expression of a constitutively active alpha 1B-adrenergic receptor in transgenic mice induces cardiac hypertrophy Selectivity of agonists for cloned α1-adrenergic receptor subtypes Leptin stimulates fatty-acid oxidation by activating AMP-activated protein kinase Regulatory role of leptin in glucose and lipid metabolism in skeletal muscle Characteristics of behavioral abnormalities in alpha1d-adrenoceptors deficient mice Preconditioning of isolated rat heart is mediated by protein kinase C Leptin activates hepatic 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase through sympathetic nervous system and alpha1-adrenergic receptor: a potential mechanism for improvement of fatty liver in lipodystrophy by leptin An alpha-1A adrenergic receptor agonist prevents acute doxorubicin cardiomyopathy in male mice Characterization of alpha 1-adrenergic receptor subtypes in rat brain: a reevaluation of [3H]-WB4104 and [3H]-prazosin binding Involvement of dorsal hippocampal α1-adrenergic receptors in the effect of WIN55,212-2 on memory retrieval in inhibitory avoidance task Neural regulation of intestinal nutrient absorption Noradrenergic potentiation of excitatory transmitter action in cerebrocortical slices: evidence for mediation by an alpha 1 receptor-linked second messenger pathway Mechanisms underlying induction of homosynaptic long-term depression in area CA1 of the hippocampus Acute administration of clozapine concurrently increases blood glucose and circulating plasma ghrelin levels in rats A randomized crossover study to evaluate Ro 115-1240, a selective α1A/L -adrenoceptor partial agonist in women with stress urinary incontinence Adrenergic receptors in individual ventricular myocytes: the beta-1 and alpha-1B are in all cells, the alpha-1A is in a subpopulation, and the beta-2 and beta-3 are mostly absent Phenylephrine induces early and late cardioprotection through mitochondrial permeability transition pore in the isolated rat heart Effect of adrenergic agonists on high-fat diet-induced hepatic steatosis in mice Gh: A GTP binding protein with transglutaminase activity and receptor signaling function Late cardiac perconditioning by phenylephrine in an isolated rat heart model is mediated by mitochondrial potassium channels Multiple signalling pathways involved in β2-adrenoceptor-mediated glucose uptake in rat skeletal muscle cells Lactate produced by glycogenolysis in astrocytes regulates memory processing alpha-Adrenoceptor stimulation-mediated negative inotropism and enhanced Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange in mouse ventricle Effect of norepinephrine on ketogenesis, fatty acid oxidation, and esterification in isolated rat hepatocytes The α(1a/c)-and α(1b)-adrenergic receptors are required for physiological cardiac hypertrophy in the double-knockout mouse Cardiac alpha1-adrenergic receptors: novel aspects of expression, signaling mechanisms, physiologic function, and clinical importance Triple-transgenic model of Alzheimer's disease with plaques and tangles: intracellular Abeta and synaptic dysfunction Alpha 1-Adrenoceptors in the mammalian brain: similar pharmacology but different distribution in rodents and primates Role for astroglial α1-adrenoreceptors in gliotransmission and control of synaptic plasticity in the neocortex Localization of the mouse alpha1A-adrenergic receptor (AR) in the brain: alpha1AAR is expressed in neurons, GABAergic interneurons, and NG2 oligodendrocyte progenitors Mouse alpha1B-adrenergic receptor is expressed in neurons and NG2 oligodendrocytes α1-Adrenergic receptors increase glucose oxidation under normal and ischemic conditions in adult mouse cardiomyocytes α1A-adrenergic receptors regulate cardiac hypertrophy in vivo through interleukin-6 secretion Astrocytic purinergic signaling coordinates synaptic networks Molecular geometry and adrenergic drug activity Novel positive allosteric modulators of the α1A-adrenergic receptor to treat Alzheimer's disease Coupling of expressed alpha 1B-and alpha 1D-adrenergic receptor to multiple signaling pathways is both G protein and cell type specific Cardiac and neuroprotection regulated by α(1)-adrenergic receptor subtypes Solution-phase library screening for the identification of rare clones: isolation of an alpha 1D-adrenergic receptor cDNA Cloning, expression, and tissue distribution of the rat homolog of the bovine alpha 1C-adrenergic receptor provide evidence for its classification as the alpha 1A subtype The three α1-adrenoceptor subtypes show different spatio-temporal mechanisms of internalization and ERK1/2 phosphorylation Combined administration of alpha1-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin and beta-blocker propranolol impairs spatial avoidance learning on a dry arena Alpha1-adrenergic receptors: new insights and directions PPARs: fatty acid sensors controlling metabolism Localization of mRNA for three distinct alpha 1-adrenergic receptor subtypes in human tissues: implications for human alpha-adrenergic physiology Enhancement of intermediate-term memory by an α-1 agonist or a partial agonist at the glycine site of the NMDA receptor Stimulation of α-1 adrenergic receptors facilitates spatial learning in rats Conopeptide ρ-TIA defines a new allosteric site on the extracellular surface of the α1B-adrenoceptor Alpha-adrenergic preservation of myocardial pH during ischemia is PKC isoform dependent Effects of stimulation of alpha 1-adrenergic and NMDA/glycine-B receptors on learning defects in aged rats Dissociating executive functions of the prefrontal cortex Seven-transmembranespanning receptors and heart function A close structural analog of 2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)-pyridine acts as a neutral allosteric site ligand on metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 5 and blocks the effects of multiple allosteric modulators Knockout of the alpha1A/C-adrenergic receptor subtype: the alpha1A/C is expressed in resistance arteries and is required to maintain arterial blood pressure alpha1A-but not alpha1B-adrenergic receptors precondition the ischemic heart by a staurosporine-sensitive, chelerythrineinsensitive mechanism The association between Alpha-1 adrenergic receptor antagonists and in-hospital mortality from COVID-19 The alpha(1B)-adrenergic receptor decreases the inotropic response in the mouse Langendorff heart model Differences in the applicability of the Easson-Stedman hypothesis to the α1-and α2-adrenergic effects of phenethylamines and imidazolines Receptor interactions of imidazolines. IX. Cirazoline is an alpha-1 adrenergic agonist and an alpha-2 adrenergic antagonist Receptor interactions of imidazolines. VI. Significance of carbon bridge separating phenyl and imidazoline rings of tolazoline-like α-adrenergic imidazolines AMP-activated protein kinase mediates ischemic glucose uptake and prevents postischemic cardiac dysfunction, apoptosis, and injury α1d Adrenoceptor signaling is required for stimulus induced locomotor activity Paraventricular alpha1-and alpha2-adrenergic receptors mediate hindbrain lipoprivation-induced suppression of luteinizing hormone pulses in female rats Protecting the myocardium from ischemic injury: a critical role for alpha(1)-adrenoreceptors? Alpha1-adrenoceptors are required for normal male sexual function α1A-Adrenoceptors activate mTOR signalling and glucose uptake in cardiomyocytes Novel form of long-term synaptic depression in rat hippocampus induced by activation of α1-adrenergic receptors Coactivation of M(1) muscarinic and alpha1 adrenergic receptors stimulates extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase and induces long-term depression at CA3-CA1 synapses in rat hippocampus Adrenergic cardiovascular control before and after removal of stimulatory α1-adrenoreceptor antibodies Changes in paired-pulse facilitation suggest presynaptic involvement in long-term potentiation Molecular cloning and expression of the cDNA for a novel α1-adrenergic receptor subtype Quantification of steady state expression of mRNA for α1-adrenergic receptor subtypes using reverse transcription and a competitive polymerase chain reaction Differences in the signaling pathways of α1A-and α1B-adrenoceptors are related to different endosomal targeting Novel proteins associated with human dilated cardiomyopathy: selective reduction in α(1A)-adrenergic receptors and increased desensitization proteins α1A-Adrenergic receptor prevents cardiac ischemic damage through PKCδ/GLUT1/4-mediated glucose uptake The role of α1-adrenergic receptors in regulating metabolism: increased glucose tolerance, leptin secretion and lipid oxidation Phosphorylation of 25-kDa synaptosome-associated protein. Possible involvement in protein kinase C-mediated regulation of neurotransmitter release Biochemical characterization of α1-adrenergic receptors in human brain and changes in Alzheimer-type dementia Hypothalamic orexin stimulates feeding-associated glucose utilization in skeletal muscle via sympathetic nervous system Role of protein kinase C in ischemic "conditioning": from first evidence to current perspectives Norepinephrine-stimulated hypertrophy of cultured rat myocardial cells is an alpha1-adrenergic response Central alpha1-adrenoceptors: their role in the modulation of attention and memory formation Alpha 1-and alpha 2-adrenoceptor activation increases plasma glucagon levels in the mouse Regulation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway in adult myocardium: differential roles of G(q/11), Gi and G(12/13) proteins in signalling by alpha1-adrenergic, endothelin-1 and thrombin-sensitive protease-activated receptors Ca2+ sensitivity of smooth muscle and nonmuscle myosin II: modulated by G proteins, kinases, and myosin phosphatase Does ischemic preconditioning in the human involve protein kinase C and the ATP-dependent K+ channel? Studies of contractile function after simulated ischemia in an atrial in vitro model A behavioral study of alpha-1b adrenergic receptor knockout mice: increased reaction to novelty and selectively reduced learning capacities Memory consolidation Different internalization properties of the alpha1a-and alpha1b-adrenergic receptor subtypes: the potential role of receptor interaction with beta-arrestins and AP50 Cardiac alpha 1-adrenoceptor densities in different mammalian species Synaptic plasticity Role of brain alpha 1B-adrenoceptors in modafinil-induced behavioral activity α-adrenergic stimulation of [1-14C]-oleate oxidation to 14CO2 in isolated rat hepatocytes Alpha1-adrenoreceptor in human hippocampus: binding and receptor subtype mRNA expression Changes in adrenoreceptors in the prefrontal cortex of subjects with dementia: evidence of compensatory changes Activation of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor δ induces fatty acid β-oxidation in skeletal muscle and attenuates metabolic syndrome Regulator of G-protein signaling-2 mediates vascular smooth muscle relaxation and blood pressure The alpha(1D)-adrenergic receptor directly regulates arterial blood pressure via vasoconstriction Interactions between insulin and alpha 1-adrenergic agents in the regulation of glycogen metabolism in isolated hepatocytes Prevalence and determinants of agonistic autoantibodies against α1-adrenergic receptors in patients screened positive for dementia: results from the population-based DelpHi-study Hippocampal α-adrenoceptors involved in the effect of histamine on spatial learning Critical role for the alpha-1B adrenergic receptor at the sympathetic neuroeffector junction Comparative effects of doxazosin and hydrochlorothiazide on serum lipids and blood pressure in essential hypertension Alpha 1-adrenergic agonists precondition rabbit ischemic myocardium independent of adenosine by direct activation of protein kinase C Alpha 1-adrenergic receptor responses in alpha 1AB-AR knockout mouse hearts suggest the presence of alpha 1D-AR The alphaadrenergic receptor: radiohistochemical analysis of functional characteristics and biochemical differences Stimulation of glucose oxidation protects against acute myocardial infarction and reperfusion injury Medical therapy for benign prostatic hyperplasia: a review ERK activation by G-protein-coupled receptors in mouse brain is receptor identity-specific Hippocampus and neocortex: recognition and spatial memory Cardiovascular influences of alpha1b-adrenergic receptor defect in mice Activation of alpha1-adrenoceptors enhances glutamate release onto ventral tegmental area dopamine cells Involvement of alpha1 and betaadrenoceptors in adrenaline stimulation of the glucagon-secreting mouse alpha-cell Contribution of both Ca2+ entry and Ca2+ sensitization to the alpha1-adrenergic vasoconstriction of rat penile small arteries Localization of mRNA and receptor binding sites for the alpha 1a-adrenoceptor subtype in the rat, monkey and human urinary bladder and prostate Autoantibodies directed against α1-adrenergic receptor and endothelin receptor A in patients with prostate cancer Adverse effects of constitutively active alpha(1B)-adrenergic receptors after pressure overload in mouse hearts Activated protein C protects against myocardial ischemic/reperfusion injury through AMP-activated protein kinase signaling Phe308 and Phe312 in TM VII are major sites of α1-adrenergic receptor antagonist binding: imidazoline agonists bind like antagonists Antihypertensive therapy and lipids: Paradoxical influences on cardiovascular disease risk The potential of metabolomic analysis techniques for the characterisation of α1-adrenergic receptors in cultured N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells Potential relevance of a1-adrenergic receptor autoantibodies in refractory hypertension Alpha1-adrenergic signaling mechanisms in contraction of resistance arteries The alpha-1A adrenergic receptor agonist A61603 reduces cardiac polyunsaturated fatty acid and endocannabinoid metabolites associated with inflammation in vivo Effects of modafinil and prazosin on cognitive and physiological functions in healthy volunteers Allosteric modulation of class A GPCRs: targets, agents, and emerging concepts Role of PKC in the effects of alpha1-adrenergic stimulation on Ca2+ transients, contraction and Ca2+ current in guinea-pig ventricular myocytes Mechanisms of signalling and biased agonism in G protein-coupled receptors Autoantibodies in Alzheimer's disease: potential biomarkers, pathogenic roles, and therapeutic implications Protein kinase C increases the apparent affinity of the release machinery to Ca 2+ by enhancing the release machinery downstream of the Ca 2+ sensor Kinetics of alkylation of cloned rat α1-adrenoceptor subtypes by chloroethylclonidine Spatial exploration induces a persistent reversal of long-term potentiation in rat hippocampus Enhanced vasoconstriction to α1 adrenoceptor autoantibody in spontaneously hypertensive rats Shift toward greater pathologic post-myocardial infarction remodeling with loss of the adaptive hypertrophic signaling of alpha1 adrenergic receptors in mice An essential protective role for cardiomyocyte alpha1A-adrenergic receptors in a mouse model of myocardial infarction Norepinephrine drives persistent activity in prefrontal cortex via synergistic alpha1 and alpha2 adrenoceptors Regulation of alpha 1-, beta 1-, and beta 2-adrenergic receptors in rat heart by norepinephrine Overexpression of cardiomyocyte α1A-adrenergic receptors attenuates postinfarct remodeling by inducing angiogenesis through heterocellular signaling Cardiomyocyte overexpression of the α1A-adrenergic receptor in the rat phenocopies second but not first window preconditioning Positive-allosteric modulation of the 5-HT2C receptor: implications for neuropsychopharmacology and neurotherapeutics Vascular damages in rats immunized by alpha1-adrenoceptor peptides Cardiac remodeling after long-term stimulation by antibodies against the alpha1-adrenergic receptor in rats Regional and laminar distributions of alpha1-adrenoceptors and their subtypes in human and rat hippocampus RGS2 is upregulated by and attenuates the hypertrophic effect of alpha1-adrenergic activation in cultured ventricular myocytes Hypotension, autonomic failure, and cardiac hypertrophy in transgenic mice overexpressing the alpha 1B-adrenergic receptor Overexpression of the alpha1B-adrenergic receptor causes apoptotic neurodegeneration: multiple system atrophy