Abstract
Binding of [3H]nipecotic acid, a proposed marker for GABAergic neurons, was investigated in postmortem human brain by use of a centrifugation assay. Binding was displaceable, apparently saturable, and to a single site, with typical KD and Bmax values of 1.85 microM and 124.2 pmol/mg of protein in the hippocampus. Regional distribution studies indicated a heterogeneous population of [3H]nipecotic acid binding sites with highest concentrations in the lateral globus pallidus. Putamen tissue from four cases of Huntington's disease showed a marked reduction in [3H]nipecotic acid binding. Binding correlated with both age and postmortem delay in the hippocampus. There was an effect of agonal state in which prolonged illness before death apparently caused a reduction in binding. Our results indicate that [3H]nipecotic acid may be used successfully as a marker for neuronal GABAergic uptake sites in human brain, but that the effects of variables such as age, postmortem delay, and agonal state must always be taken into account.
Published Version
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