Abstract

We studied the binding of the calcium antagonist neurotoxin [ 125I]-omega conotoxin (GVIA) in age-matched human brains from normal, Alzheimer's disease and non-Alzheimer's dementia patients. Crude preparations of plasmalemmal membranes from frontal cortex were utilized. Saturation isotherms were subjected to Scatchard analysis to determine maximal binding capacity (B max) and binding affinity (K d). In all brain samples tested, [ 125I]-GVIA binding was homogenous to a single class of high affinity binding sites. Scatchard analysis of saturation isotherms gave the following estimates for normal brains (mean ± S.D., n = 7): B max = .630 ± .200 pmol/mg and K d = .177 ± .054 nM. No significant change was observed in the K d or B max estimates for [ 125I]-omega conotoxin binding in Alzheimer's disease or non-Alzheimer's dementia brains when compared to normal brains. Although these findings do not rule out the existence of localized changes in calcium channel receptor binding in the frontal cortex of Alzheimer's disease patients, the results do suggest that the neuronal voltage sensitive calcium channel may be unaltered in Alzheimer's disease.

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