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1.
It is well established that many receptors couple to G-proteins in order to subserve their pharmacological or physiological effects. In those systems it is possible that a ternary complex mechanism operates in which initiation of an effect depends on the concentration of agonist-receptor-G-protein complex formed. Such systems may be considered to obey a receptor-transducer model (Black & Leff, 1983, Proc. R. Soc. B220, 141). A theoretical analysis of this model is presented which seeks to determine how the operation of the ternary complex mechanism affects the quantification of agonists by conventional pharmacological methods. Previous analyses have concluded that pharmacological models may or may not accommodate the ternary complex mechanism depending upon the relationship between the relative concentrations of receptor and transducer units, [R0], and [T0] respectively. The present study extends these in two ways. It considers the impact of the ternary complex mechanism on agonist quantification under a more complete range of conditions relating [R0] and [T0], and it does so with regard to the analysis of partial agonists (by the comparative method) as well as of full agonists (by the method of receptor inactivation). The following predictions are made: (i) reliable estimates of affinity and efficacy can be made using the comparative method under the conditions [R0] much greater than [T0] and [R0] much less than [T0] whereas the inactivation method only works under the former condition; (ii) errors occur in the estimation of affinity and efficacy by both methods when [R0] = [T0] although better estimates are produced by the comparative method; (iii) when errors occur in the absolute estimation of affinity and efficacy, the orders of affinity and efficacy determined by the comparative method will generally be correct but this is not the case for the inactivation method; (iv) in general, the comparative method for agonist quantification appears to produce more reliable information for the purposes of receptor classification and medicinal chemistry than does the receptor inactivation method.  相似文献   

2.
Substances eliciting, at very high concentrations, a lower maximal response of a particular biological system than a defined standard, are defined as partial agonists. The convention rests on the definition of a standard substance that achieves a 'full' maximal response; partial agonism being, therefore, relative. Various mechanisms lie behind this phenomenon: 1. Receptor-related mechanisms: the agonist-receptor complex exists in several conformational states from which only one, or only a few, activate the cell signaling pathway. This may occur when the receptor itself, or the agonist, exists in multiple states (e.g., in the form of enantiomers or stereoisomers), or when the agonist-receptor complex changes its conformation (receptor switch: two-state model of receptor activation). Furthermore, a steric hindrance by a 'wrong-way binding' of a part of the agonist's molecules may prevent the full 'correct' occupancy of receptors. 2. Mechanisms based on the efficacy of the stimulus-response coupling. The efficacy is then proportional to the sum of probabilities that receptors in individual states activate the cell-signaling pathway. Doses (concentrations) eliciting the half maximal response (EC50), or similar response sensitivity parameters, are not included in the definition of partial agonism. However, tight correlations exist between maximal response and EC50 in many, but not all, generic groups of agonistically acting substances. These relationships are frequently linear; intercepts and slopes of these 'E, KE plots' are characteristic for individual, putative mechanisms. Dose-response curves of partial agonists are akin to those obtained for a response to a full agonist after a stepwise partial inactivation of receptors by an irreversible inhibitor. Also, the E, KE plots obtained in these instances are similar to those of partial agonists. The receptor reserve, rather vaguely defined in early reports, is therefore closely linked to the phenomenon of partial agonism.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract: Mechanisms of agonist action at the G protein-coupled D2(short) dopamine receptor expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells have been investigated. Agonist binding was assayed in the presence and absence of GTP (100 µM). Data in the absence of GTP were fitted best by a two-site model (apomorphine, dopamine, 10,11-dihydroxy-N-n-propylnorapomorphine hydrochloride, and quinpirole) or a one-site model [bromocriptine, dihydroergocristine, and (?)-3-(3-hydroxyphenyl)-N-propylpiperidine hydrochloride], whereas in the presence of GTP a one-site model was the best fit for all compounds. Agonist binding parameters were used to provide a measure of the ability of the agonist to stabilise the ternary complex of agonist/receptor/G protein. Agonist stimulation of [35S]guanosine 5′-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) ([35S]-GTPγS) binding for a range of agonist concentrations was measured and the EC50 and maximal effects determined. The initial rates of [35S]GTPγS binding induced by maximally stimulating agonist concentrations were also recorded. Simultaneous inhibition of agonist-stimulated [35S]GTPγS binding and receptor occupancy by spiperone was determined. Agonist inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation was determined for a range of agonist concentrations and the EC50 and maximal inhibition recorded. The data on the maximal agonist responses showed that it was possible to detect a spectrum of agonist efficacy (partial and full agonism) in both functional assays. The data on the apparent potencies of agonists to elicit the functional responses showed that different extents of amplification of response were seen for different agonists in both assays. The maximal activity data have been compared with the stabilisation of the agonist/receptor/G protein ternary complex as measured in binding assays.  相似文献   

4.
In this work, we ask whether the simultaneous movement of agonist and antagonist among surface receptors (i.e. continually associating and dissociating from individual receptors according to specified kinetics) has any unexpected consequences for G-protein activation and receptor desensitization. A Monte Carlo model framework is used to track the diffusion and reaction of individual receptors, allowing the requirement for receptors and G-proteins or receptors and kinases to find each other by diffusion (collision coupling) to be implemented explicitly. We find that at constant agonist occupancy the effect of an antagonist on both G-protein activation and the ratio of G-protein activation to receptor desensitization can be modulated by varying the antagonist dissociation kinetics. The explanation for this effect is that antagonist dissociation kinetics influence the ability of agonists to access particular receptors and thus reach G-proteins and kinases near those receptors. Relevant parameter ranges for observation of these effects are identified. These results are useful for understanding experimental and therapeutic situations when both agonist and antagonist are present, and in addition may offer new insights into insurmountable antagonism.  相似文献   

5.
Radioligand binding studies have previously identified a high affinity, magnesium-dependent, guanine nucleotide-sensitive binding site for corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) in mouse spleen. In order to determine the functional nature of these CRF binding sites, we examined the effects of CRF on adenylate cyclase activity in mouse spleen homogenates. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity was dependent on time, tissue protein concentration, and guanine nucleotides. CRF-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity was evident in the presence of guanosine-5'-triphosphate (GTP) and its precursor guanosine-5'-diphosphate (GDP) but was not detected in the presence of the hydrolysis-resistant GTP analogs, guanyl-5'-imidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p] and guanosine-5'-gamma-thiotriphosphate (GTP-gamma-S). The rank order of potency for CRF analogs and fragments in stimulating adenylate cyclase activity was comparable to their affinities for CRF binding sites in mouse spleen homogenates. The putative receptor antagonist, alpha helical ovine CRF(9-41), did not stimulate adenylate cyclase activity but did attenuate the stimulation by various concentrations of rat/human CRF. In summary, these data demonstrate the functional nature of CRF receptors in mouse spleen as evidenced by CRF stimulation of cAMP production and suggest that this peptide may play a physiological role in regulating immune function.  相似文献   

6.
The Neuropeptide FF (NPFF) system is known to modulate the effects of opioids in vivo and in vitro. In the present study, we have investigated the effect of NPFF agonists on the coupling of the Mu-opioid (MOP) receptor to G-proteins in a model of SH-SY5Y cells transfected with NPFF2 receptor, in which the neuronal anti-opioid activity of NPFF was previously reproduced. Activation of G-proteins was monitored by [35S]GTPγS binding assay and analysis of G-protein subunits associated with MOP receptors was performed by Western blotting after immunoprecipitation of the receptor. The results demonstrate that concentrations of NPFF agonists that produce a cellular anti-opioid effect, did not affect the ability of the opioid agonist DAMGO to activate G-proteins. However, at saturating concentration of agonist or when expression of receptor was high, opioid and NPFF agonists did not stimulate [35S]GTPγS binding in an additive manner, indicating that both receptors share a common fraction of a G-protein pool. In addition, stimulation of NPFF receptors in living cells modified the G-protein environment of MOP receptor by favoring its interaction with αs, αi2 and β subunits. This change in G-protein coupling to MOP receptor might participate in the mechanism by which NPFF agonists reduce the inhibitory activity of opioids.  相似文献   

7.
Cyclonucleotides with fixed glycosidic bond linkages were investigated as possible ligands for purinoceptors in PC12 cells. P2Y2-purinoceptors were not activated by the ATP analogue, 8,2'-thioanhydroadenosine-5'-triphosphate (4) and only weakly by the UTP analogue, 2,2' -anhydrouridine-5'-triphosphate (6). However, both analogues were agonists for P2X2-purinoceptors although the potencies were approximately 30-fold less than that of the parent nucleotides.  相似文献   

8.
Mechanisms of agonist and inverse agonist action at the serotonin 5-HT1A receptor have been studied using the modulation of guanosine 5'-O-(3-[35S]thiotriphosphate) ([35S]GTPgammaS) binding in membranes of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells expressing the receptor (CHO-5-HTA1A cells). A range of agonists increased [35S]GTPgammaS binding with different potencies and to different maximal extents, whereas two compounds, methiothepin and spiperone, inhibited both agonist-stimulated and basal [5S]GTPgammaS binding, thus exhibiting inverse agonism. Potencies of agonists to stimulate [35S]GTPgammaS binding in membranes from CHO-5-HT1A cells were reduced by adding increasing concentrations of GDP to assays, whereas changes in sodium ion concentration did not affect agonist potency. The maximal effect of the agonists was increased by increasing sodium ion concentrations. The affinities of agonists in ligand binding assays were unaffected by changes in sodium ion concentration. Increasing GDP in the assays of the inverse agonists increased potency for spiperone to inhibit [35S]GTPgammaS binding and had no effect for methiothepin, in agreement with the sensitivity of these compounds to guanine nucleotides in ligand binding assays. Potencies for these inverse agonists were unaffected by changes in sodium ion concentration. These data were simulated using the extended ternary complex model. These simulations showed that the data obtained with agonists were consistent with these compounds achieving agonism by stabilising the ternary complex. For inverse agonists, the simulations showed that the mechanism for spiperone may be to stabilise forms of the receptor uncoupled from G proteins. Methiothepin, however, probably does not alter the equilibrium distribution of different receptor species; rather, this inverse agonist may stabilise an inactive form of the receptor that can still couple to G protein.  相似文献   

9.
It has been proposed that a portion of the biologic actions of vasodilator prostaglandins occurs via an interaction with specific adenylate cyclase-linked receptors. This hypothesis was explored further in the renal microvasculature by examining the effects of PGI2, PGE1, and PGE2 on rabbit preglomerular microvascular adenylate cyclase. A membrane preparation derived from freshly isolated rabbit renal preglomerular microvessels was used in these studies. NaF, forskolin, or 5'-guanylyl imidodiphosphate were found to be effective in increasing adenylate cyclase activity in the absence of exogenous guanosine-5'-triphosphate. A dose-dependent stimulation of adenylate cyclase was also observed with guanosine-5'-triphosphate. PGE1, PGE2, and PGI2 produced a dose-dependent stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity only in the presence of guanosine-5'-triphosphate suggesting that this nucleotide is essential for prostaglandin-induced stimulation of the enzyme. PGI2 exhibited a time-dependent increase in adenylate cyclase activity and this increased activity reached a plateau at 20-25 min. When PGE1 and PGE2 were added together, no additive effect on adenylate cyclase stimulation was noted whereas PGI2 and PGE2 when added together produced an additive stimulatory effect. When viewed together, these data suggest the presence of separate PGI2 and PGE adenylate cyclase-linked receptors in rabbit renal preglomerular microvessels. These findings also suggest that in the renal microvasculature, cyclic AMP may be a second messenger mediating the vasodilatory effects of both PGI2 and PGE2.  相似文献   

10.
Ajoene, (E,Z)-4,5,9-trithiadodeca-1,6,11-triene 9-oxide, is a potent antiplatelet compound isolated from alcoholic extracts of garlic. In vitro, ajoene reversibly inhibits platelet aggregation as well as the release reaction induced by all known agonists. In this paper we show that ajoene has a unique locus of action, that is not shared by any other known antiplatelet compound. For example, ajoene inhibits agonist-induced exposure of fibrinogen receptors, as well as intracellular responses such as activation of protein kinase C and the increase in cytoplasmic free calcium induced by receptor-dependent agonists (collagen, ADP, PAF, low-dose thrombin). On the other hand, with agonists that can by-pass (at least partially) the receptor-transductor-effector sequence, such as high-dose thrombin, PMA, NaF, only the exposure of fibrinogen receptors is blocked by ajoene. Binding of fibrinogen to chymotrypsin-treated platelets is only slightly inhibited by ajoene. The results reported here also show that: (a) ajoene does not act as a calcium chelator, does not impair the initial agonist-receptor interaction and does not influence the basal levels of intracellular inhibitors of platelet activation such as cyclic GMP; (b) the locus of action of ajoene is a yet unknown molecular step that links, in the case of physiological agonists, specific agonist-receptor complexes to the sequence of the signal transduction system on the plasma membrane of platelets. In the case of non-physiological, receptor-independent agonists (PMA, NaF), we can only speculate on the hypothesis that they somehow mimic the effect of the agonist-receptor complexes on the signal transduction system; and (c) the exposure of fibrinogen receptors is not a direct consequence of other intracellular processes. These observations clearly show, for the first time, that the exposure of fibrinogen receptors is a membrane event proximally and obligatorily coupled to the occupancy of other membrane receptors by their agonists without any intervention by the cytoplasmic biochemical processes. Additional results support the involvement of G-proteins in these early events of platelet activation. Furthermore, a role of the beta tau subunits of G-proteins in the exposure of fibrinogen receptors is proposed.  相似文献   

11.
In the receptor-transducer model of pharmacological agonism, rejection of the traditional assumption that receptor molecules are in vast excess of transducer molecules permits the receptors to become distributed among unbound, bound and complexed states. Under these conditions, agonist affinities are liable to be overestimated when the method of irreversible receptor antagonism is used. Graphical tests have been developed to detect distribution, and these were applied to experimental data from the interaction between 5-HT and phenoxybenzamine on aortic tissue. Significant receptor distribution was not detected by the method. However, in the model it was assumed that there was a linear relation between the concentration of ternary complex and pharmacological effect. If this relation was replaced with a saturable one the effect of receptor distribution would be masked. The implications for pharmacologists and medicinal chemists are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
A modified one site model of the bioreceptor have been used to estimate quantitatively the phenomenon of the full agonism. Threshold phenomenon, spare receptors and linear dependence of the biological effect on concentration of complex agonist-receptor has been determinate by the general correlation equations. The equations of one site model provides a good fit to the experimental curves "dose-response" for the full agonists and allows to calculate the value of space receptors. The model includes occupancy Clark's theory and law "all or nothing". The interaction of acetylcholine and aklyltrimethylammonium salts with muscarinic acetylholine receptors is analysed as an example of use of this equation.  相似文献   

13.
H M Wong  M J Sole  J W Wells 《Biochemistry》1986,25(22):6995-7008
N-[3H]Methylscopolamine has been used to characterize muscarinic receptors in crude homogenates prepared from hearts of Syrian golden hamsters. The Hill coefficient is one for specific binding of the radioligand itself and for its inhibition by muscarinic antagonists; markedly lower values are obtained for its inhibition by muscarinic agonists. The binding patterns of agonists have been analyzed in terms of a mixture of sites differing in affinity for the drug and reveal the following. All agonists discern at least two classes of receptor in atrial and ventricular homogenates. The number of classes and the relative size of each differ for different agonists in the same region and for the same agonist in different regions. Atrial and ventricular affinities are in good agreement for some agonists but differ for others. Guanylyl imidodiphosphate (GMP-PNP) is without effect on the specific binding of the radioligand but alters the binding of carbachol via an apparent redistribution of receptors from one class to another; the apparent affinity at either class remains unchanged. Carbachol reveals two classes of sites in ventricular preparations, and the nucleotide mediates an interconversion from higher to lower affinity; three classes are revealed in atrial preparations, and the nucleotide eliminates the sites of highest affinity with a concomitant increase in the number of sites of lowest affinity. Taken together, the data are incompatible with the notion of different, noninterconverting sites; rather, there appear to be several possible states of affinity such that the equilibrium distribution of receptors among the various states is determined by the tissue, by the agonist, and by neurohumoral modulators such as guanylyl nucleotides. The effects of agonists and GMP-PNP cannot be rationalized in terms of a ternary complex model in which the low Hill coefficients arise from a spontaneous equilibrium between receptor (R) and G protein (G) and in which agonists bind preferentially to the RG complex.  相似文献   

14.
To understand how deviations from simple binary occupancy affect measures of efficacy, the generalized stimulus function developed in Part I was used to examine the actions of drugs in systems where occupation of the receptor was modeled using a two-state, ternary complex, or combination of mechanisms.Amplification of drug responses can occur during formation of an active agonist-receptor complex, during generation of the initial stimulus, and during signal transduction. Expressions were derived to characterize the separate contributions of these three phases. Ideally, comparison of relative intrinsic efficacy measures differences in the ability of the agonists to convert active complex into an active stimulus. In practice, differences in the ability of the drugs to form the stimulus-generating complex may also contribute to the efficacy ratio and must be taken into consideration. Failure to adequately account for differences in occupancy can result in overestimation of the efficacy ratio. The magnitude of the difference between true and experimental measures of intrinsic efficacy may be affected by G protein concentration, by the affinity between the G protein and receptor, and (in some models) by the receptor activation constant. Provided that the dissociation constant between the G protein and receptor is of the same order of magnitude as, or lower than the receptor concentration, however, experimental estimates should provide reasonably accurate estimates of the true efficacy ratio.In agreement with previously published experimental data, total G protein level was found capable of influencing agonist maximal response, Emax, and EC50 values in all four ternary complex models. The magnitude of the changes in Emax and EC50 appear to be dependent upon the efficacy of the agonist as well as characteristics of the post-receptor stimulus sequence.Additionally, the concentration-response relations for all four ternary complex models could be reduced to a modified operational format in which the apparent dissociation constant Kapp replaced the true KA, and an apparent operational efficacy, tauapp, replaced tau. tauapp can be estimated experimentally from measurements of the Kapp and EC50, while the operational maximum, Em, may be found from the calculated tauapp and the measured Emax of the response curve. These findings support the use of direct operational model-fitting in a variety of systems, regardless of the mechanisms underlying occupancy.Values of Kapp calculated using the exact formula for [ARG] displayed an anomalous rise or discontinuity where the concentrations of total G protein equaled that of the receptor protein. This discontinuity is not observed in the estimates based on approximations to [ARG], and may explain practical difficulties in evaluating the dissociation constant under these conditions.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

Substances eliciting, at very high concentrations, a lower maximal response of a particular biological system than a defined standard, are defined as partial agonists. The convention rests on the definition of a standard substance that achieves a ‘full’ maximal response; partial agonism being, therefore, relative. Various mechanisms lie behind this phenomenon: 1. Receptor-related mechanisms: the agonist-receptor complex exists in several conformational states from which only one, or only a few, activate the cell signaling pathway. This may occur when the receptor itself, or the agonist, exists in multiple states (e.g., in the form of enantiomers or stereoisomers), or when the agonist-receptor complex changes its conformation (receptor switch: two-state model of receptor activation). Furthermore, a steric hindrance by a ‘wrong-way binding’ of a part of the agonist's molecules may prevent the full ‘correct’ occupancy of receptors. 2. Mechanisms based on the efficacy of the stimulus-response coupling. The efficacy is then proportional to the sum of probabilities that receptors in individual states activate the cell-signaling pathway. Doses (concentrations) eliciting the half maximal response (EC50), or similar response sensitivity parameters, are not included in the definition of partial agonism. However, tight correlations exist between maximal response and EC50 in many, but not all, generic groups of agonistically acting substances. These relationships are frequently linear; intercepts and slopes of these ‘E, KE plots’ are characteristic for individual, putative mechanisms. Dose-response curves of partial agonists are akin to those obtained for a response to a full agonist after a stepwise partial inactivation of receptors by an irreversible inhibitor. Also, the E, KE plots obtained in these instances are similar to those of partial agonists. The receptor reserve, rather vaguely defined in early reports, is therefore closely linked to the phenomenon of partial agonism.  相似文献   

16.
《Life sciences》1996,59(8):659-668
Cannabinoid receptors belong to the class of G-protein-coupled receptors which inhibit adenylyl cyclase. Coupling of receptors to G-proteins can be assessed by the ability of agonists to stimulate guanosine-5′-O-(3-[35S]thio)triphosphate ([35S]GTPγS) binding in the presence of excess GDP. The present study examined the effect of cannabinoid agonists on [35S]GTPγS binding in rat brain membranes. Assays were conducted with 0.05 nM [35S]GTPγS, incubated with rat cerebellar membranes, 1–30 μM GDP and the cannabinoid agonist WIN 55212-2. Results showed that the ability of WIN 55212-2 to stimulate [35S]GTPγS binding increased with increasing concentrations of GDP, with 10–30 μM GDP providing approximately 150–200% stimulation by the cannabinoid agonist. The pharmacology of cannabinoid agonist stimulation of [35S]GTPγS binding paralleled that of previously reported receptor binding and adenylyl cyclase assays, and agonist stimulation of [35S]GTPγS binding was blocked by the cannabinoid antagonist SR141716A. Brain regional studies revealed widespread stimulation of [35S]GTPγS binding by WIN 55212-2 in a number of brain areas, consistent with in vitro [35S]GTPγS autoradiography. These results demonstrate that [35S]GTPγS binding in the presence of excess GDP is an effective measure of cannabinoid receptor coupling to G-proteins in brain membranes.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: Specific binding of [3H]granisetron was examined to serotonin 5-HT3 receptors in synaptosomal membranes of rat cerebral cortex between 1 and 37°C. Displacing potencies were determined for 5-HT3 antagonists (granisetron, ondansetron, tropisetron, and d -tubocurarine) and agonists (5-hydroxytryptamine, 2-methyl-5-hydroxytryptamine, phenylbiguanide, m -chlorophenylbiguanide, and SR 57227A). Displacing potencies of the agonists decreased with decreasing temperature. In contrast, displacing potencies of all antagonists increased with decreasing temperature, whereas those of tropisetron and d -tubocurarine passed a maximum. Scatchard analysis of [3H]granisetron binding resulted in K D values lower than the IC50 values of granisetron and a decreasing number of binding sites at higher temperatures. It can be reconciled with temperature-dependent agonist and antagonist states of 5-HT3 receptors. A semiquantitative thermodynamic analysis was based on displacing potencies. The distinct patterns for the signs of entropy, enthalpy, and heat capacity changes on binding can be reconciled with ionic interactions for agonists and hydrophobic interactions for antagonists. The distinctive differences in these thermodynamic parameters exceed those for GABAA and glycine receptor-ionophore complexes.  相似文献   

18.
The unique properties of agonist binding to the frog erythrocyte beta-adrenergic receptor include the existence of two affinity forms of the receptor. The proportion and relative affinity of these two states of the receptor for ligands varies with the intrinsic activity of the agonist and the presence of guanine nucleotides. The simplest model for hormone-receptor interactions which can explain and reproduce the experimental data involves the interaction of the receptor R with an additional membrane component X, leading to the agonist-promoted formation of a high affinity ternary complex HRX. Computer modeling of agonist binding data with a ternary complex model indicates that the model can fit the data with high accuracy under conditions where the ligand used is either a full or a partial agonist and where the system is altered by the addition of guanine nucleotide or after treatment with group-specific reagents, e.g. p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. The parameter estimates obtained indicate that the intrinsic activity of the agonist is correlated significantly with the affinity constant L of the component X for the binary complex HR. The major effect of adding guanine nucleotides is to destabilize the ternary complex HRX from which both the hormone H and the component X can dissociate. The modulatory role of nucleotides on the affinity of agonists for the receptor is consistent with the assumption that the component X is the guanine nucleotide binding site. The ternary complex model was also applied successfully to the turkey erythrocyte receptor system. The model provides a general scheme for the activation by agonists of adenylate cyclase-coupled receptor systems and also of other systems where the effector might be different.  相似文献   

19.
3,4-Dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) D2 receptors, solubilized from bovine striatal membranes using a cholic acid-NaCl combination, exhibited the typical pharmacological characteristics of both agonist and antagonist binding. The rank order potency of the agonists and antagonists to displace [3H]spiroperidol binding was the same as that observed with membrane-bound receptors. Computer-assisted analysis of the [3H]spiroperidol/agonist competition curves revealed the retention of high- and low-affinity states of the D2 receptor in the solubilized preparations and the proportions of receptor subpopulations in the two affinity states were similar to those reported in membrane. Guanine nucleotide almost completely converted the high-affinity sites to low-affinity sites for the agonists. The binding of the high-affinity agonist [3H]N-n-propylnorapomorphine ([3H]NPA) was clearly demonstrated in the solubilized preparations for the first time. Addition of guanylyl-imidodiphosphate completely abolished the [3H]NPA binding. When the solubilized receptors were subjected to diethylaminoethyl-Sephacel chromatography, the dopaminergic binding sites eluted in two distinct peaks, showing six- to sevenfold purification of the receptors in the major peak. Binding studies performed on both peaks indicated that the receptor subpopulation present in the first peak may have a larger proportion of high-affinity binding sites than the second peak. The solubilized preparation also showed high-affinity binding of [35S]guanosine-5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate, a result suggesting the presence of guanine nucleotide binding sites, which may interact with the solubilized D2 receptors. These data are consistent with the retention of the D2 receptor-guanine nucleotide regulatory protein complex in the solubilized preparations and should provide a suitable model system to study the receptor-effector interactions.  相似文献   

20.
A series of dinucleoside 5-polyphosphates UpnU (n = 2-7) was synthesized. Their relative potencies as agonists at the G-protein-coupled receptors P2Y1, P2Y2, P2Y4, and P2Y6 were determined by intracellular calcium measurements using fluorescent imaging techniques. The correlation of phosphate chain length to activities at these receptors is discussed.  相似文献   

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