Abstract

1. The nervous tissue of locusts contains high affinity as well as low affinity binding sites for acetylcholine which display a similar nicotinic pharmacology. 2. Hill plot analysis indicated a non-cooperative binding of acetylcholine. 3. In membrane preparations from locust ganglia and mouse brain the number of binding sites for ACh was about ten fold lower than for BGTX, whereas in membranes from electric tissue both sites occurred in similar concentrations. 4. Drug binding studies suggest that the high affinity binding sites for ACh and BGTX in preparations from insect and mouse are different; whereas in electric tissue both sites are very similar. 5. Precipitation experiments using immobilized BGTX and specific antibodies indicated that in insect nervous tissue as in electric tissue the ACh and BGTX binding sites are located on the same receptor molecule and occupy distinct partially overlapping binding sites, whereas in the vertebrate brain both sites are located on distinct binding proteins.

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