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Evidence for a displaceable non-specific [3H]neurotensin binding site in rat brain.

Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology (1986-08-01)
A Schotte, J E Leysen, P M Laduron
RESUMEN

Levocabastine is a potent antihistamine drug, structurally unrelated to neurotensin. In rat and mouse brain but not in other animal species, it inhibited 60% of the [3H]neurotensin binding displaced by unlabelled neurotensin or neurotensin(8-13). The levocabastine-sensitive site or "site 1" displayed high affinity properties for levocabastine (IC50 = 25 nM) and was highly sterospecific (IC50-value higher than 10 microM for one of the isomers). Binding to the "site 1" in rat brain corresponded to the [3H]neurotensin binding displaceable by 1 microM levocabastine, whereas binding to the "site 2" corresponded to the binding displaced by 1 microM neurotensin when the "site 1" was occluded by 1 microM levocabastine. Both "site 1" and "site 2" appeared to be saturable. Scatchard plots obtained in rat bulbus olfactorius allowed to calculate a KD-values of 7.1 nM and a Bmax-values of 37.2 fmol/mg original tissue for "site 1", while "site 2" displayed a KD-value of 0.7 nM and a Bmax-value of 16.3 fmol/mg original tissue. The regional distributions of both sites showed marked differences. The "site 1" was homogeneously distributed throughout all rat brain areas, whereas the amount of "site 2" binding was markedly different in separate brain areas: bulbus olfactorius and substantia nigra had the highest amounts (8.9 and 7.8 fmol/mg tissue) while cerebellum had the lowest (0.4 fmol/mg tissue). In spite of its high affinity and stereospecificity, "site 1" has to be considered as an acceptor or recognition site for [3H]neurotensin because of its species-link, low saturability and homogeneous distribution in all rat brain areas.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)