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Molecular Pharmacology, Vol 14, 381-390, Copyright © 1978 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
-Aminobutyric Acid Receptor-Ionophores
1 Department of Biochemistry and Division of Toxicology and Physiology, University of California, Riverside,
California 92521
[3H]
-Dihydropicrotoxinin, a biologically active analogue of the
-aminobutyric acid
synaptic antagonist picrotoxin, was found to bind to a small quantity of saturable, high-affinity (KD, 1 µM) sites in crayfish muscle homogenates. Dihydropicrotoxinin binding
was rapid, reversible, and proportional to protein concentration. This binding, like that of
-aminobutyric acid, was enriched in sarcolemma fractions, being present at 6-8
pmoles/mg of protein or per gram of wet muscle. The quantity of binding sites varied
with muscle types in a manner consistent with varying degrees of inhibitory innervation.
The binding was inhibited by picrotoxinin analogues in the same order of potency shown
by these compounds in convulsant activity or in inhibition of
-aminobutyric acid synaptic
responses: picrotoxinin and tutin were slightly more active than dihydropicrotoxinin in
all systems, whereas picrotin was less active and picrotoxinin acetate and alkali-hydrolyzed picrotoxinin were inactive.
-Aminobutyric acid up to 0.2 mM did not inhibit
dihydropicrotoxinin binding.
-Dihydropicrotoxinin binding sites appear to be related to
the physiological action of the drug, and this radioactive toxin may provide a useful probe
for postsynaptic membrane macromolecules that regulate the inhibitory chloride ionophore at sites distinct from the
-aminobutyric acid receptor.
Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank J. Kennedy and M. Ban for technical
assistance, and B. Meiners, D. M. Shaner, and V.
Salgado for helpful discussions.