HIGH-AFFINITY DEXTROMETHORPHAN BINDING-SITES IN GUINEA-PIG BRAIN - FURTHER CHARACTERIZATION AND ALLOSTERIC INTERACTIONS

  • 1 November 1988
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 247  (2) , 424-431
Abstract
Dextromethorphan (DM), a non-narcotic antitussive with anticonvulsant activity, binds to high (Kd, 57 nM)- and low-affinity sites (Kd, 24 .mu.M) in the guinea pig brain. This work, done at physiological pH, expands previous results obtained at pH 8.3. Phenytoin (PHT) produces an allosteric increase in the binding of [3H]DM, which is more marked than that reported previously: PHT (100 .mu.M,) at pH 7.4, increased the binding affinity of [3H]DM to brain homogenates 4-fold, without changing the concentration of DM sites. Moreover, ropizine (SC-13504) and anticonvulsant benzhydryl piperazine, also produced a marked concentration-dependent increase in the binding of [3H]DM, which is mediated by a decrease in the dissociation rate of [3H]DM. Importantly, the effects of ropizine are fully apparent at 10 .mu.M, 10-fold lower than those of PHT. The effects of PHT and ropizine show that the affinity of the DM sites can be increased by other ligands, suggesting that these sites are located on macromolecules that can exist in at least two conformational states. [3H]DM also binds to peripheral tissues, but the brain displays the highest affinity. Besides, the central and peripheral sites are different as determined by competition studies with caramiphen and carbetapentane, which are DM site ligands with antitussive and anticonvulsant activity. The results reported in this communication are consistent with the hypothesis that the high-affinity DM binding sites mediate antitussive and anticonvulsant activity when occupied by the appropriate ligand.