Ethanol potently and competitively inhibits binding of the alcohol antagonist Ro15-4513 to α 4/6 β 3 δ GABA A receptors
Open Access
- 30 May 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (22) , 8546-8551
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0509903103
Abstract
Although GABAA receptors have long been implicated in mediating ethanol (EtOH) actions, receptors containing the “nonsynaptic” δ subunit only recently have been shown to be uniquely sensitive to EtOH. Here, we show that δ subunit-containing receptors bind the imidazo-benzodiazepines (BZs) flumazenil and Ro15-4513 with high affinity (Kd < 10 nM), contrary to the widely held belief that these receptors are insensitive to BZs. In immunopurified native cerebellar and recombinant δ subunit-containing receptors, binding of the alcohol antagonist [3H]Ro15-4513 is inhibited by low concentrations of EtOH (Ki ≈ 8 mM). Also, Ro15-4513 binding is inhibited by BZ-site ligands that have been shown to reverse the behavioral alcohol antagonism of Ro15-4513 (i.e., flumazenil, β-carbolinecarboxylate ethyl ester (β-CCE), and N-methyl-β-carboline-3-carboxamide (FG7142), but not including any classical BZ agonists like diazepam). Experiments that were designed to distinguish between a competitive and allosteric mechanism suggest that EtOH and Ro15-4513 occupy a mutually exclusive binding site. The fact that only Ro15-4513, but not flumazenil, can inhibit the EtOH effect, and that Ro15-4513 differs from flumazenil by only a single group in the molecule (an azido group at the C7 position of the BZ ring) suggest that this azido group in Ro15-4513 might be the area that overlaps with the alcohol-binding site. Our findings, combined with previous observations that Ro15-4513 is a behavioral alcohol antagonist, suggest that many of the behavioral effects of EtOH at relevant physiological concentrations are mediated by EtOH/Ro15-4513-sensitive GABAA receptors.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Low-dose alcohol actions on α4β3δ GABAAreceptors are reversed by the behavioral alcohol antagonist Ro15-4513Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Variations on an inhibitory theme: phasic and tonic activation of GABAA receptorsNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2005
- On the Benzodiazepine Binding Pocket in GABAA ReceptorsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2004
- Subunit composition and quantitative importance of GABAA receptor subtypes in the cerebellum of mouse and ratJournal of Neurochemistry, 2003
- Characterization of wild-type (R100R) and mutated (Q100Q) GABAA α6 subunit in Sardinian alcohol non-preferring rats (sNP)Brain Research, 2003
- Identification of the Bovine γ-Aminobutyric Acid Type A Receptor α Subunit Residues Photolabeled by the Imidazobenzodiazepine [3H]Ro15-4513Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
- Deduction of amino acid residues in the GABAA receptor α subunits photoaffinity labeled with the benzodiazepine flunitrazepamNeuropharmacology, 2000
- Pharmacology of recombinant γ‐aminobutyric acidA receptors rendered diazepam‐insensitive by point‐mutated α‐subunitsFEBS Letters, 1998
- The Major Site of Photoaffinity Labeling of the γ-Aminobutyric Acid Type A Receptor by [3H]Flunitrazepam Is Histidine 102 of the α SubunitJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Relationship between the inhibition constant (KI) and the concentration of inhibitor which causes 50 per cent inhibition (I50) of an enzymatic reactionBiochemical Pharmacology, 1973