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Classic Benzodiazepines Modulate the Open-Close Equilibrium in α1β2γ2L γ-Aminobutyric Acid Type A Receptors
Authors:  sch, Dirk M.D.   Forman, Stuart A. M.D., Ph.D.&#x  
Affiliation:Rüsch, Dirk M.D.*; Forman, Stuart A. M.D., Ph.D.†
Abstract:Background: Classic benzodiazepine agonists induce their clinical effects by binding to a site on [gamma]-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptors and enhancing receptor activity. There are conflicting data regarding whether the benzodiazepine site is allosterically coupled to [gamma]-aminobutyric acid binding versus the channel open-close (gating) equilibrium. The authors tested the hypothesis that benzodiazepine site ligands modulate [alpha]1[beta]2[gamma]2L GABAA receptor gating both in the absence of orthosteric agonists and when the orthosteric sites are occupied.

Methods: GABAA receptors were recombinantly expressed in Xenopus oocytes and studied using two-microelectrode voltage clamp electrophysiology. To test gating effects in the absence of orthosteric agonist, the authors used spontaneously active GABAA receptors containing a leucine-to-threonine mutation at residue 264 on the [alpha]1 subunit. To examine effects on gating when orthosteric sites were fully occupied, they activated wild-type receptors with high concentrations of a partial agonist, piperidine-4-sulfonic acid.

Results: In the absence of orthosteric agonists, the channel activity of [alpha]1L264T[beta]2[gamma]2L receptors was increased by diazepam and midazolam and reduced by the inverse benzodiazepine agonist FG7142. Flumazenil displayed very weak agonism and blocked midazolam from further activating mutant channels. In wild-type receptors activated with saturating concentrations of piperidine-4-sulfonic acid, midazolam increased maximal efficacy.

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