Characterization of the Binding of [3H]SR 95531, a GABAA Antagonist, to Rat Brain Membranes
- 1 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Neurochemistry
- Vol. 48 (6) , 1677-1686
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-4159.1987.tb05723.x
Abstract
A synthetic derivative of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), SR 95531 [2-(3′-carboxy-2′-propyl)-3-amino-6-p-methoxyphenylpyridazinium bromide], has recently been reported, on the basis of biochemical and in vivo microion-tophoretic studies, to be a potent, selective, competitive, and reversible GABAA antagonist. In the present study, the binding of [3H]SR 95531 to washed, frozen, and thawed rat brain membranes was characterized. Specific binding was linear with tissue concentrations, had a pH optimum at neutrality, and was maximal at 4°C after 30 min of incubation. Pretreatment of the membranes with Triton X-100 resulted in a 50% decrease of specific binding. Addition of iodide, thiocyanate, or nitrate to the incubation mixture decreased the affinity of [3H]SR 95531 for its binding site; Na+ had no effect. Subcellular fractionation showed that 74% of the P2 binding was in synaptosomes; 31% of the total homogenate binding was in P2 and 50% in P3. The binding of [3H]SR 95531 was saturable; Scatchard analysis of the saturation isotherm revealed two apparent populations of binding sites (KD of 6.34 nM and Bmax of 0.19 pmol/mg of protein; KD of 32 nM and Bmax of 0.81 pmol/mg of protein). The binding of [3H]SR 95531 was reversible, and association and dissociation kinetics confirmed the existence of two binding sites. Only GABAA ligands were effective displacers of [3H]SR 95531. GABAA antagonists were relatively more potent in displacing [3H]SR 95531 than [3H]GABA; the inverse was true for GABAA agonists. There were marked regional differences in the distribution of binding sites: hippocampus = cerebral cortex > thalamus = olfactory bulb = hypothala-mus = amygdala = striatum > pons-medulla and cerebellum. The surprisingly low density of binding sites in the cerebellum was owing to a marked reduction of Bmax values at both the high- and the low-affinity binding sites. In conclusion, the present results demonstrate specific, high-affinity, saturable, and reversible binding of [3H]SR 95531 to rat brain membranes and strongly suggest that this radioligand labels the GABAA receptor site in its antagonist conformation.Keywords
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