[3H]Desipramine Binding to Rat Brain Tissue: Binding to Both Noradrenaline Uptake Sites and Sites Not Related to Noradrenaline Neurons

Abstract
The pharmacological and biochemical characteristics of [3H]desipramine binding to rat brain tissue were investigated. Competition studies with noradrenaline, nisoxetine, nortriptyline, and desipramine suggested the presence of more than one [3H]desipramine binding site. Most of the noradrenaline-sensitive binding represented a high-affinity site, and this site appeared to be the same as the high-affinity site of nisoxetine-sensitive binding. The [3H]desipramine binding sites were abolished by protease treatment, a result suggesting that the binding sites are protein in nature. When specific binding was defined by 0.1 μM nisoxetine, the binding was saturable and fitted a single-site binding model with a binding affinity of ∼1 nM. This binding fraction was abolished by lesioning of the noradrenaline neurons with the noradrenaline neurotoxin N-(2-chloroethyl)-N-ethyl-2-bromo-benzylamine (DSP4). In contrast, when 10 μM nisoxetine was used to define the specific binding, the binding was not saturable over the nanomolar range, but the binding fitted a two-site binding model with KD values of 0.5 and >100 nM for the high- and low-affinity components, respectively. The high-affinity site was abolished after DSP4 lesioning, whereas the low-affinity site remained. The binding capacity (Bmax) for binding defined by 0.1 μM nisoxetine varied between brain regions, with very low density in the striatum (Bmax not possible to determine), 60-90 fmol/mg of protein in cortical areas and cerebellum, and 120 fmol/mg of protein in the hypothalamus. The binding capacities of these high-affinity sites correlated significantly with the regional distribution of [3H]noradrenaline uptake but not with 5-[3H]hydroxytryptamine uptake. The low-affinity sites did not correlate with the regional distribution of [3H]noradrenaline uptake. Drug inhibition studies showed that noradrenaline inhibits the binding defined by 0.1 μM nisoxetine in a competitive manner. Together, these findings suggest that only a small fraction of the [3H]desipramine binding can be regarded as “specific” binding, and this binding fraction may represent the substrate recognition site for noradrenaline uptake. Assuming that one molecule of desipramine binds to each carrier molecule, the turnover number for the noradrenaline carrier was calculated to be 20/min, i.e., the duration of one transport cycle was 3 s.

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