%0 Journal Article %A C Labbé-Jullié %A J M Botto %A M V Mas %A J Chabry %A J Mazella %A J P Vincent %A D Gully %A J P Maffrand %A P Kitabgi %T [3H]SR 48692, the first nonpeptide neurotensin antagonist radioligand: characterization of binding properties and evidence for distinct agonist and antagonist binding domains on the rat neurotensin receptor. %D 1995 %J Molecular Pharmacology %P 1050-1056 %V 47 %N 5 %X The binding of [3H]SR 48692, a new potent and specific nonpeptide neurotensin (NT) receptor antagonist, was characterized in membranes from mouse fibroblast LTK- cells stably transfected with the G protein-coupled rat NT receptor. The binding of [3H]SR 48692 was specific, time dependent, reversible, and saturable. Scatchard analysis of saturation experiments indicated that [3H]SR 48692 bound to a single population of sites, with a Kd of 3.4 nM and a Bmax value that was 30-40% greater than that observed in saturation experiments with [125I]NT. Two SR 48692-related enantiomers, SR 48527 and SR 49711, were 10 and 1000 times less potent, respectively, than unlabeled SR 48692 in inhibiting [3H]SR 48692. Unlabeled NT inhibited [3H]SR 48692 binding in a complex manner that was best analyzed with a three-site model, with high (Ki = 0.22 nM) and low (Ki = 57 nM) affinity NT binding sites and a site insensitive to unlabeled NT (up to 10 microM), which represented 60, 20, and 20%, respectively, of the total number of [3h]SR 48692 binding sites. Digitonin (10 micrograms/ml) markedly reduced the proportion of NT-insensitive sites without affecting [3H]SR 48692 binding. Na+ and guanosine-5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate differentially modulated [3H]SR 48692 and [125I]NT binding and inverted the proportions of the high and low affinity NT binding sites. A mutant rat NT receptor that contained a deletion in a region (amino acids 45-60) of the amino-terminal extracellular domain near the first transmembrane helix and was expressed in COS M6 cells retained the same affinity for [3H]SR 48692 and the same stereoselectivity for SR 48527 and SR 49711 as the wild-type receptor. In contrast, it bound NT with 3000-fold lower potency. In conclusion, the data indicate that [3H]SR 48692 represents a new, potent, nonpeptide antagonist radioligand of the NT receptor that differentiates between agonist- and antagonist-receptor interactions. Furthermore, the data demonstrate that the peptide agonist and the nonpeptide antagonist bind to distinct regions of the NT receptor. %U https://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/molpharm/47/5/1050.full.pdf