Quantitative characterization of multiple binding sites for phencyclidine and N-allylnormetazocine in membranes from rat and guinea pig brain. |
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Authors: | G Z Zhou A G Katki S Schwarz P J Munson D Rodbard |
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Affiliation: | Laboratory of Theoretical and Physical Biology, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892. |
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Abstract: | Quantitative ligand binding studies have been used to characterize binding sites for N-allylnormetazocine ((+)SKF10,047) (SKF), 1-(1-phenylcyclohexyl) piperidine (PCP), N-[1-(2-thienyl)cyclohexyl]piperidine (TCP) and haloperidol in membranes from the brain of rat and guinea pig under conditions which permitted simultaneous analysis of the binding of both PCP and SKF. Using four labelled ligands (SKF, TCP, PCP and haloperidol), each displaced by the corresponding four unlabelled ligands, four classes of binding sites were observed in membranes from the brain of the rat, corresponding to sigma (sigma), two classes of PCP sites (PCP1, PCP2) and dopamine (D2) sites. The sigma site was suppressed by 50 nM haloperidol, while the PCP1 and PCP2 sites were not. These results were confirmed by studies employing a self- and cross-displacement design and dose-response surfaces for SKF and TCP, with and without blockade by haloperidol of the sigma site. Using mathematical modelling, employing the program LIGAND, it was possible to reject simpler models involving a common "PCP/sigma" site or a model involving only two classes of sites (sigma and PCP). Similar methods were used to identify two classes of sigma binding sites and two classes of PCP binding sites, in membranes prepared from the brain of the guinea pig. The relative potencies of 18 ligands for displacement of (+)[3H]SKF10,047 and [3H]TCP were compared: there were significant qualitative and quantitative differences in the "sigma" binding sites in the brain of rat and guinea pig, while the PCP binding sites were very similar in the two species. |
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