Abstract

Cage convulsant t-butyl bicyclophosphoro[35S]thionate binding activity in rat brain membrane homogenates was solubilized with the zwitterionic detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)-dimethylammonio]propane sulfonate (Chaps) and shown to co-purify with the benzodiazepine--gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor complex on gel filtration and affinity chromatography. Whereas convulsant binding activity, but not GABA and benzodiazepine receptor binding, was eliminated by solubilization in other detergents like sodium deoxycholate or Triton X-100, or by addition of Triton X-100 to the extracts solubilized in the zwitterionic detergent, convulsant activity was not irreversibly lost or selectively unstable, but could be restored by exchanging the protein back into the detergent Chaps. The GABA-benzodiazepine receptor activity solubilized in Chaps alone, containing convulsant activity, and a sample in Chaps supplemented with Triton X-100 and lacking convulsant activity, did not differ in size as measured by gel filtration column chromatography or by radiation inactivation target size analysis. This suggests that convulsant binding activity does not require any additional protein subunits or other macromolecules nor any unique aggregation state relative to GABA and benzodiazepine receptor binding, and that all three activities reside on the same protein complex. As in intact brain, the target size for convulsant binding activity was 3-5 times that of benzodiazepine binding activity, suggesting that an oligomeric protein structure of the receptor complex with intact strong subunit interactions present in the native membrane environment is needed for convulsant activity, and that this and other properties are more preserved in Chaps than in other detergents.

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