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1.
It has been reported that N-methylcarbamylcholine (MCC), a nicotinic agonist, binds to central nicotinic receptors and causes an increase of acetylcholine (ACh) release from certain central cholinergic nerve terminals. The present experiments determine whether these two phenomena change in response to the chronic administration of nicotine, a procedure known to result in an increase in nicotinic binding sites. Chronic nicotine caused a brain region-specific up-regulation of [3H]MCC sites; binding increased in the frontal cortex, parietal cortex, striatum, and hippocampus, but not in the occipital cortex or cerebellum. The effect of nicotine was selective to nicotinic binding sites, because muscarinic sites, both M1 ([ 3H]pirenzepine) and M2 ([3H]ACh), were unaffected by chronic nicotine treatment. MCC increased the release of ACh from the frontal cortex and hippocampus by a calcium-dependent mechanism; MCC did not alter ACh release from striatum or occipital cortex of control animals. The MCC-induced increase in ACh release was not apparent in those animals which had been treated with nicotine. There was a partial recovery of nicotinic autoreceptor function when animals were allowed to recover (4 days) following chronic nicotine treatment, but the density of binding sites remained increased compared to control. Chronic nicotine did not change the potassium-evoked release of ACh from the frontal cortex or hippocampus, but decreased this measure from striatum. It also decreased the ACh content of the striatum, but not that of the cortex or the hippocampus; the activity of choline acetyltransferase was not altered in any of the regions tested.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The present experiments show that N-[3H]-methylcarbamylcholine ([3H]MCC) binds specifically and with high affinity to rat hippocampus, frontal cortex, and striatum. The highest maximal density of binding sites was apparent in frontal cortex and the lowest in hippocampus. [3H]MCC binding was potently inhibited by nicotinic, but not muscarinic, agonists and by the nicotinic antagonist dihydro-beta-erythroidine in all three brain regions studied. The effect of unlabeled MCC on acetylcholine (ACh) release from slices of rat brain was tested. The drug significantly enhanced spontaneous ACh release from slices of hippocampus and frontal cortex, but not from striatal slices. This effect of MCC to increase ACh release from rat hippocampus and frontal cortex was antagonized by the nicotinic antagonists dihydro-beta-erythroidine and d-tubocurarine, but not by alpha-bungarotoxin or by the muscarinic antagonist atropine. The MCC-induced increase in spontaneous ACh release from hippocampal and frontal cortical slices was not affected by tetrodotoxin. The results suggest that MCC might alter cholinergic transmission in rat brain by a direct activation of presynaptic nicotinic receptors on the cholinergic terminals. That this alteration of ACh release is apparent in hippocampus and frontal cortex, but not in striatum, suggests that there may be a regional specificity in the regulation of ACh by nicotinic receptors in rat brain.  相似文献   

3.
Nicotinic cholinergic receptor binding sites labeled by [3H]acetylcholine were measured in the cerebral cortices, thalami, striata, and hypothalami of rats lesioned by intraventricular injection of either 6-hydroxydopamine or 5, 7-dihydroxytryptamine. In addition, [3H]acetylcholine binding sites were measured in the cerebral cortices of rats lesioned by injection of ibotenic acid into the nucleus basalis magnocellularis. [3H]Acetylcholine binding was significantly decreased in the striata and hypothalami of both 6-hydroxydopamine- and 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine-lesioned rats. There was no change in binding in the cortex or thalamus by either lesion. Ibotenic acid lesions of the nucleus basalis magnocellularis, which projects cholinergic axons to the cortex, did not alter [3H]acetylcholine binding. These results provide evidence for a presynaptic location of nicotinic cholinergic binding sites on catecholamine and serotonin axons in the striatum and hypothalamus.  相似文献   

4.
Neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) were measured in CNS and peripheral tissues following continuous exposure to saline or nicotine hydrogen tartrate (3.3 or 10 mg/kg/day) for 14 days via osmotic pumps. Initially, binding of [3H](-)nicotine, [3H]cytisine and [3H]epibatidine to nAChRs was compared to determine the suitability of each for these kinds of studies. The predominant nAChR labeled by agonists in the cerebral cortex is an alpha 4 beta 2 subtype, whereas the predominant nicotinic receptors in the adrenal gland, superior cervical ganglia and pineal gland contain an alpha 3 subunit, and they do not bind either [3H](-)nicotine or [3H]cytisine with high affinity. In retina some nAChRs bind all three ligands with high affinity, and others appear to bind only [3H]epibatidine. Thus, only [3H]epibatidine had high enough affinity to be useful for measuring the nAChRs in all of the tissues. The receptors from nicotine-treated rats were then measured using [125I]epibatidine, which has binding characteristics very similar to [3H]epibatidine. Treatment with the two doses of nicotine hydrogen tartrate increased binding sites in the cerebral cortex by 40% and 70%, respectively. In contrast, no significant changes in the density of receptor binding sites were found in the adrenal gland, superior cervical ganglia, pineal gland or retina. These data indicate that chronic administration of nicotine even at high doses does not increase all nicotinic receptor subtypes, and that receptors containing alpha 3 subunits may be particularly resistant to this nicotine-induced change.  相似文献   

5.
Previous work has shown that [3H]paroxetine is a potent and selective in vitro label for serotonin uptake sites in the mammalian brain. In the present study, [3H]paroxetine was tested in mice as an in vivo label for serotonin uptake sites. Maximum tritium concentration in the whole brain (1.4% of the intravenous dose) was reached 1 h after injection into a tail vein. Distribution of the tracer at 3 h after injection followed the distribution of serotonin uptake sites known from previous in vitro binding studies (r = 0.85). The areas of highest [3H]paroxetine concentration, in decreasing order, were: hypothalamus greater than frontal cortex greater than olfactory tubercles greater than thalamus greater than upper colliculi greater than brainstem greater than hippocampus greater than striatum greater than cerebellum. Preinjection of carrier paroxetine (1 mg/kg) significantly decreased [3H]paroxetine concentration in all areas except in the cerebellum, which is known to contain a relatively low number of specific binding sites. Kinetic studies showed highest specific [3H]paroxetine binding (tissue minus cerebellum) at 2 h after injection and slow clearance of activity thereafter (half-time of dissociation from the hypothalamus, 215 min). The specificity of in vivo [3H]paroxetine binding was studied by preinjecting monoamine uptake blockers or receptor antagonists 5 min before administration of [3H]paroxetine. Serotonergic or muscarinic cholinergic receptor antagonists and dopamine or norepinephrine uptake blockers did not reduce the in vivo binding of [3H]paroxetine. In contrast, there was an excellent correlation (r = 0.99) between the in vivo inhibitory potencies of serotonin uptake blockers in this study and previously published in vitro data on inhibition of [3H] serotonin uptake in brain synaptosomes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Regulation of Brain Nicotinic Receptors by Chronic Agonist Infusion   总被引:8,自引:2,他引:6  
Several studies have demonstrated that chronic treatment with nicotine elicits an increase in the number of brain nicotinic receptors. To determine whether this effect is elicited by other nicotinic agonists found in tobacco, the effects of chronic infusion with nicotine on brain nicotinic receptors were compared with those after anabasine and lobeline. C57BL/6 mice were infused with saline or equimolar doses (18.5 mumol/kg/h) of nicotine, anabasine, or lobeline for 8 days. Nicotinic receptors, quantified by the binding of [3H]nicotine and [125I]iodo-alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-[125I]BTX), and muscarinic receptors, quantified by the binding of [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate ([3H]QNB), were then assayed in eight brain regions. An increase in [3H]nicotine binding was observed in all regions except cerebellum following chronic infusion with nicotine and anabasine, whereas lobeline did not alter the number or affinity of these binding sites. This increase was due to changes in Bmax and not in the affinity of the receptor for the ligand (KD). A slight increase in alpha-[125I]BTX binding was observed in cortex following chronic anabasine infusion. [3H]QNB binding sites were largely unaltered following chronic infusion with any of the nicotinic analogs. The levels of the agonists in the brain were also determined after chronic treatment, and the amounts of lobeline and anabasine were found to be higher than that of nicotine. Thus, the failure of lobeline to elicit changes in nicotine binding is not due to reduced brain concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
A number of studies have found that the chronic administration of nicotine causes an increase in the density of nicotinic binding sites in the brain, but it is not known whether these additional binding sites are functionally active receptors. In this study, the effects of 1-week administration of the potent nicotinic agonist, (+)-anatoxin-a (96 nmol/day via osmotic minipumps), was assessed on [3H]nicotine binding and [3H]dopamine uptake and release in rat striatal synaptosomes. Chronic (+)-anatoxin-a treatment resulted in a 32% increase in the Bmax of [3H]nicotine binding in anatoxin-treated animals compared to control. There was a 43% increase in the activity of 3 microM nicotine to release [3H]dopamine from synaptosomes of anatoxin-treated animals, but the release induced by 20 mM K+ depolarization was unaffected. There was no effect of chronic (+)-anatoxin-a treatment on the uptake of [3H]dopamine. A strong positive correlation (r = 0.64) was found between the density of [3H]nicotine binding sites and the nicotine-induced stimulation of [3H]dopamine release in individual animals. These results indicate that (+)-anatoxin-a, like nicotine, produces an up-regulation of nicotine binding sites following chronic administration, and that these additional sites are functional receptors capable of mediating the release of dopamine from striatal synaptosomes.  相似文献   

8.
Light microscopic autoradiography was used to visualize the neuroanatomical distribution of nicotinic receptors in rat brain using a novel radioligand, [3H]methylcarbamylcholine (MCC). Specific [3H]MCC binding to slide-mounted tissue sections of rat brain was saturable, reversible and of high affinity. Data analysis revealed a single population of [3H]MCC binding sites with a Kd value of 1.8 nM and Bmax of 20.1 fmol/mg protein. Nicotinic agonists and antagonists competed for [3H]MCC binding sites in slide-mounted brain sections with much greater potency than muscarinic drugs. The rat brain areas containing the highest densities of [3H]MCC binding were in thalamic regions, the medial habenular nucleus and the superior colliculus. Moderate densities of [3H]MCC binding were seen over the anterior cingulate cortex, the nucleus accumbens, the zona compacta of substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area. Low densities of [3H]MCC binding were found in most other brain regions. These data suggest that [3H]MCC selectively labels central nicotinic receptors and that these receptors are concentrated in the thalamus, the medial habenular nucleus and the superior colliculus of the rat brain.  相似文献   

9.
Bicuculline Up-Regulation of GABAA Receptors in Rat Brain   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Effects of acute and subacute administration of bicuculline on [3H]muscimol, [3H]flunitrazepam, and t-[35S]butylbicyclophosphorothionate ([35S]TBPS) binding to various brain regions were studied in Sprague-Dawley rats. Acute administration of bicuculline affected neither the KD nor the Bmax of the three receptor sites. In rats treated subacutely with bicuculline (2 mg/kg, i.p., daily for 10 days), [3H]muscimol binding was increased in the frontal cortex, cerebellum, striatum, and substantia nigra. Scatchard analysis revealed that subacute treatment of rats with bicuculline resulted in a significantly lower KD of high-affinity sites in the striatum and in a significantly lower KD of high- and low-affinity sites in the frontal cortex. In the cerebellum, two binding sites were apparent in controls and acutely treated animals; however, only the high-affinity site was defined in subacutely treated animals, with an increase in the Bmax value. Triton X-100 treatment of frontal cortical membranes eliminated the difference in [3H]muscimol binding between control and subacute bicuculline treatments. On the other hand, [3H]muscimol binding was significantly increased in the cerebellum from bicuculline-treated animals even after Triton X-100 treatment. The apparent Ki of bicuculline for the GABAA receptor was also decreased in the frontal cortex and the striatum following the treatment. However, subacute administration of bicuculline affected neither the KD nor the Bmax of [3H]flunitrazepam and [35S]TBPS binding in the frontal cortex and the cerebellum. These results suggest that GABAA receptors are up-regulated after subacute administration of bicuculline, with no change in benzodiazepine and picrotoxin binding sites.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of both (-)- and (+)-nicotine isomers were examined on in vitro uptake and release of [3H]dopamine in rat striatum. Both isomers inhibited uptake of [3H]dopamine in chopped tissue at concentrations well below those necessary for promoting release of preloaded [3H]dopamine. (-)-Nicotine was more potent than (+)-nicotine both at inhibiting uptake and at promoting release. Unlike other dopamine uptake inhibitors, however, nicotine inhibited only 50% of the total uptake. In the presence of 1 nM nicotine, the residual [3H]dopamine uptake was less sensitive to inhibition by cocaine than uptake in the absence of nicotine. Nicotine did not compete against the binding of [3H]GBR 12935, a selective dopamine uptake inhibitor. The nicotinic receptor agonists carbachol and 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium iodide also inhibited uptake, whereas the nicotinic antagonists chlorisondamine and mecamylamine blocked nicotine's effect. Thus, the effect of nicotine on dopamine uptake appears to be mediated by a receptor similar to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. These receptors do not seem to be on the terminals that are accumulating dopamine, however, since tetrodotoxin prevented the effect of nicotine on [3H]dopamine uptake and nicotine had no effect on uptake in a synaptosomal preparation.  相似文献   

11.
Presynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on striatal nerve terminals modulate the release of dopamine. We have compared the effects of a number of nicotinic agonists and antagonists on a perfused synaptosome preparation preloaded with [3H]dopamine. (-)-Nicotine, acetylcholine, and the nicotinic agonists cytisine and 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium iodide (DMPP), at micromolar concentrations, stimulated the release of [3H]dopamine from striatal nerve terminals. Carbamylcholine was a much weaker agonist. The actions of (-)-nicotine, cytisine, and DMPP were inhibited by low concentrations of the nicotinic antagonists dihydro-beta-erythroidine, mecamylamine, pempidine, and neosurugatoxin; alpha-bungarotoxin was without effect, and extending the time of exposure to this toxin resulted in only very modest inhibition. This pharmacology points to a specific nicotinic receptor mechanism that is clearly distinct from that at the neuromuscular junction. Atropine failed to antagonise the effects of acetylcholine and carbamylcholine, suggesting that no muscarinic component is involved. The nicotinic receptor ligands (-)-[3H]nicotine and 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin bound to specific sites enriched in the synaptosome preparation. Drugs tested on the perfused synaptosomes were examined for their ability to interact with these two ligand binding sites in brain membranes. The differential sensitivity to the neurotoxins alpha-bungarotoxin and neosurugatoxin of the 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin and (-)-[3H]nicotine binding sites, respectively, leads to a tentative correlation of the (-)-[3H]nicotine site with the presynaptic nicotinic receptor on striatal nerve terminals.  相似文献   

12.
This study establishes that presynaptic nicotinic receptors modulate dopamine release in the mouse striatum. Nicotinic agonists elicit a dose-dependent increase in the release of [3H]dopamine from synaptosomes prepared from mouse striatum. At low concentrations, this release is Ca2+ dependent, whereas at higher concentrations Ca(2+)-independent, mecamylamine-insensitive release was also observed. The Ca(2+)-dependent nicotine-evoked release was not blocked by alpha-bungarotoxin but was effectively blocked by neuronal bungarotoxin as well as several other nicotinic receptor antagonists. The relationship between potency for stimulation of release for agonists and potency for inhibition of release for antagonists was compared to the affinity of these compounds for the [3H]nicotine binding site. The overall correlation between release and binding potency was not high, but the drugs may be classified into separate groups, each of which has a high correlation with binding. This finding suggests either that more than one nicotinic receptor regulates dopamine release or that not all agonists interact with the same receptor in an identical fashion.  相似文献   

13.
[3H] 1-Nicotine was used as a receptor ligand in the intact mouse. It was injected i.v., and radioactivity in brain regions was assayed. Nonspecific binding was estimated by pretreatment with unlabelled 1-nicotine. Radioactivity entered the brain rapidly, was heterogeneously distributed, and declined after 5 min. Estimated specific binding was highest in the medial and posterior cortex, midbrain, thalamus/hypothalamus and medulla/pons; intermediate in the cerebellum, caudate/putamen, frontal and frontoparietal cortex; and lowest in the hippocampus and olfactory bulb. Autoradiography showed similar patterns. Coinjection of unlabelled 1-nicotine reduced specific binding so that it approached estimated nonspecific binding. Nicotinic agonists reduced radioactivity in the thalamus/hypothalamus, but nicotinic antagonists were less active. Non-nicotinic drugs did not reduce brain radioactivity. The results suggest that radiolabelled nicotine may be used for in vivo receptor studies despite problems in estimating nonspecific binding.  相似文献   

14.
Presynaptic muscarinic and nicotinic receptors in the cerebral cortex reportedly inhibit and increase acetylcholine (ACh) release, respectively. In this study, we investigated whether these receptors reside on cholinergic nerve terminals projecting to the cerebral cortex from the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (nbm). Adult male rats received unilateral infusions of ibotenic acid (5 micrograms/1 microliter) in the nbm. Two weeks later, cerebral cortical cholinergic markers (choline acetyltransferase activity, high-affinity choline uptake, and coupled ACh synthesis) were significantly reduced in synaptosomes prepared from the lesioned hemispheres compared to contralateral controls. The depolarization-induced release of [3H]ACh from these synaptosomes was also reduced in the lesioned hemispheres, reflecting the reduced synthesis of transmitter. However, the nbm lesions had no effect on the inhibition of release induced by 100 microM oxotremorine. Synaptosomal [3H]ACh release was not altered by nicotine or the nicotinic agonists anabaseine and 2-(3-pyridyl)-1,4,5,6-tetrahydropyrimidine. Nicotine (10-100 microM) did increase [3H]ACh release in control and lesioned hemispheres in cortical minces, but to a similar extent. These results suggest that neither muscarinic nor nicotinic receptors modulating ACh release reside on nbm-cholinergic terminals.  相似文献   

15.
(-)-[3H]Nicotine was found to bind specifically to membranes of human brains obtained at autopsy. The binding was stereospecific, (-)-nicotine being 40 times more potent than (+)-nicotine in displacing labeled (-)-nicotine. Saturation binding studies revealed the presence of two binding sites with dissociation constant (KD) values of 8.1 and 86 nM, and maximum binding capacity (Bmax) values of 36 and 90 fmol/mg protein, respectively. In competition studies, nicotinic agonists were 1,000 times more potent than ganglionic, neuromuscular, and muscarinic blocking drugs in displacing labeled (-)-nicotine. IC50 values for cholinergic drugs of (-)-[3H]nicotine binding were as follows: (-)-nicotine, 0.51 nM; acetylcholine, 12.6 nM; (+)-nicotine, 19.9 nM; cytisine, 27.3 nM; and carbachol, 527 nM. IC50 values of alpha-bungarotoxin, hexamethonium, d-tubocurarine, and atropine were larger than 50 microM. (-)-[3H]Nicotine binding was highest in the nucleus basalis of Meynert and thalamus and lowest in the cerebral cortex and caudate in the brain regions tested. These results suggest that nicotinic cholinergic receptors are present in human brain and that there are regional differences in the density of these receptors.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: Muscarinic and nicotinic cholinergic receptors and choline acetyltransferase activity were studied in postmortem brain tissue from patients with histopathologically confirmed Parkinson's disease and matched control subjects. Using washed membrane homogenates from the frontal cortex, hippocampus, caudate nucleus, and putamen, saturation analysis of specific receptor binding was performed for the total number of muscarinic receptors with [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate, for muscarinic M1 receptors with [3H]pirenzepine, for muscarinic M2 receptors with [3H]oxotremorine-M, and for nicotinic receptors with (–)-[3H]nicotine. In comparison with control tissues, choline acetyltransferase activity was reduced in the frontal cortex and hippocampus and unchanged in the caudate nucleus and putamen of parkinsonian patients. In Parkinson's disease the maximal binding site density for [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate was increased in the frontal cortex and unaltered in the hippocampus, caudate nucleus, and putamen. Specific [3H]pirenzepine binding was increased in the frontal cortex, unaltered in the hippocampus, and decreased in the caudate nucleus and putamen. In parkinsonian patients Bmax values for specific [3H]oxotremorine-M binding were reduced in the cortex and unchanged in the hippocampus and striatum compared with controls. Maximal (–)-[3H]nicotine binding was reduced in both the cortex and hippocampus and unaltered in both the caudate nucleus and putamen. Alterations of the equilibrium dissociation constant were not observed for any ligand in any of the brain areas examined. The present results suggest that both the innominatocortical and the septohippocampal cholinergic systems degenerate in Parkinson's disease. The reduction of cortical [3H]oxotremorine-M and (–)-[3H]nicotine binding is compatible with the concept that significant numbers of the binding sites labelled by these ligands are located on presynaptic cholinergic nerve terminals, whereas the increased [3H]pirenzepine binding in the cortex may reflect postsynaptic denervation supersensitivity.  相似文献   

17.
Chronic nicotine exposure up-regulates neuronal nicotinic receptors, but the functional consequences for these receptors is less well understood. Following 2 weeks of nicotine or saline treatment by osmotic minipump, the functional activity of nicotinic receptors was measured by concentration-response curves for epibatidine-stimulated (86)Rb efflux. Nicotine-treated animals had a significantly higher maximal efflux in cerebral cortex and superior colliculus, but not in thalamus or interpeduncular nucleus plus medial habenula. This increase was confirmed in a separate experiment with stimulation by single concentrations of epibatidine (cortex, superior colliculus) or nicotine (cortex only). Chronic nicotine did not alter (86)Rb efflux stimulated by cytisine, an alpha3beta4-selective agonist, or by potassium chloride, in any region. Short-term (16 h) nicotine exposure caused no changes in either (86)Rb efflux or receptor binding measured with [(3)H]epibatidine. Binding was significantly increased after 2 weeks nicotine exposure in cortex, superior colliculus and thalamus, but not in interpeduncular nucleus plus medial habenula. The increases in epibatidine-stimulated (86)Rb efflux in the four regions tested was linearly correlated with the increases in [(3)H]epibatidine binding in these regions (R(2) = 0.91), suggesting that rat brain receptors up-regulated by chronic nicotine are active. These results have important consequences for understanding nicotinic receptor neurobiology in smokers and users of nicotine replacement therapy.  相似文献   

18.
The influence of beta-amyloid on cholinergic neurotransmission was studied by measuring alterations in nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) in autopsy brain tissue from subjects carrying the Swedish amyloid precursor protein (APP) 670/671 mutation. Significant reductions in numbers of nAChRs were observed in various cortical regions of the Swedish 670/671 APP mutation family subjects (-73 to -87%) as well as in sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) cases (-37 to -57%) using the nicotinic agonists [3H]epibatidine and [3H]nicotine, which bind with high affinity to both alpha3 and alpha4 and to alpha4 nAChR subtypes, respectively. Saturation binding studies with [3H]epibatidine revealed two binding sites in the parietal cortex of AD subjects and controls. A significant decrease in Bmax (-82%) for the high-affinity site was observed in APP 670/671 subjects with no change in K(D) compared with controls (0.018 nM APP 670/671; 0.036 nM control). The highest load of neuronal plaques (NPs) was observed in the parietal cortex of APP 670/671 brains, whereas the number of [3H]nicotine binding sites was less impaired compared with other cortical brain regions. Except for a positive significant correlation between the number of [3H]nicotine binding sites and number of NPs in the parietal cortex, no strict correlation was observed between nAChR deficits and the presence of NPs and neurofibrillary tangles, suggesting that these different processes may be closely related but not strictly dependent on each other.  相似文献   

19.
R D Schwartz 《Life sciences》1986,38(23):2111-2119
The relative distribution of muscarinic and nicotinic cholinergic receptors labeled with [3H]acetylcholine was determined using autoradiography. [3H]Acetylcholine binding to high affinity muscarinic receptors was similar to what has been described for an M-2 distribution: highest levels of binding occurred in the pontine and brainstem nuclei, anterior pretectal area and anteroventral thalamic nucleus, while lower levels occurred in the caudate-putamen, accumbens nucleus and primary olfactory cortex. Nicotinic receptors were labeled with [3H]acetylcholine to the greatest extent in the interpeduncular nucleus, several thalamic nuclei, medial habenula, presubiculum and superior colliculus, and to the least extent in the hippocampus and inferior colliculus. By using autoradiography to localize cholinergic binding sites throughout the brain it was observed that the distributions of high affinity muscarinic and nicotinic sites labeled with the endogenous ligand, [3H]acetylcholine are different from each other and are different from distributions of muscarinic and nicotinic sites labeled with muscarinic and nicotinic antagonists.  相似文献   

20.
H N Bhargava  S Das  M Bansinath 《Peptides》1987,8(2):231-235
The binding of [3H] [3-MeHis2] thyrotropin releasing hormone [( 3H]MeTRH) to brain membranes prepared from 8 week old spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats was determined. [3H]MeTRH bound specifically to rat brain membranes at a single high affinity site. The density (Bmax value) of [3H]MeTRH binding sites was significantly greater (28%) in SHR rats compared to WKY rats. The apparent dissociation constants (Kd values) for the binding of [3H]MeTRH in SHR and WKY rats did not differ. Binding in the various brain regions revealed that the density of [3H]MeTRH was highest in the hypothalamus followed in decreasing order by pons + medulla, midbrain, cortex and striatum. The binding of [3H]MeTRH was approximately 25% greater in cortex, hypothalamus and striatum of SHR rats in comparison to WKY rats. The binding in pons + medulla, midbrain and pituitary of SHR and WKY rats did not differ. To assess the significance of increased binding sites for [3H]MeTRH in some brain regions of SHR rats, the binding studies were carried out during normotensive and hypertensive stages of postnatal age in the two strains. In 3 and 4 week old SHR rats there was neither an increase in blood pressure nor any increase in [3H]MeTRH binding in the hypothalamus and striatum as compared to age matched WKY rats. With the development of elevated blood pressure at 6 weeks, an increase in [3H]MeTRH binding in the hypothalamus and striatum of SHR rats in comparison to the tissues from WKY rats was observed. The results provide, for the first time, evidence for a parallel increase in the density of brain TRH receptors with elevation of blood pressure, and suggest that brain TRH receptors may play an important role in the pathophysiology of hypertension.  相似文献   

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