Adenosine uptake and [3H]nitrobenzylthioinosine binding in developing rat brain |
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Authors: | J D Geiger |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, University of Manitoba, Faculty of Medicine, Winnipeg, Canada. |
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Abstract: | The ontogenesis of adenosine transport sites as labelled with [3H]nitrobenzylthioinosine ([3H]NBI) was examined using radioligand binding and membrane preparations from whole brain and 4 brain regions of rats between the postnatal ages of one day through to adulthood. In whole brain, cerebral cortex and cerebellum, [3H]NBI binding was two-fold higher in 6-day-old than in 50-day-old rats. In contrast, [3H]NBI binding was higher in adults than in one-day-old rats by 4-fold in hypothalamus and 8-fold in superior colliculus. In cortex and hypothalamus, the levels of [3H]NBI binding in newborn and adult rats were reflected by changes in Bmax and not Kd values. As a measure of the utility of [3H]NBI as a probe for identifying functional adenosine transport sites, we examined [3H]NBI binding to and [3H]adenosine accumulation by intact brain cells prepared from adult and newborn rats. For [3H]NBI binding to brain cells from adult rats, the values of Kd were 0.092 nM and of Bmax were 274 fmol/mg protein. For newborns, slightly higher Kd and Bmax values were observed; 0.2 nM and 395 fmol/mg protein, respectively. [3H]Adenosine accumulation was higher in brain cells from one-day-old than from adult rat brains. Kinetically this uptake was best described by a two-component model: the Vmax values for the high- and low-affinity uptake, and the Km value for the high-affinity component in one-day-old rats were greater than in adults.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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