Abstract

Photoaffinity labeling of the D2-dopamine receptor in plasma membrane preparations of various tissues from several mammalian species was performed using the recently developed D2-dopaminergic antagonist probe [125I]N-(p-azidophenethyl)spiperone ([125I]N3-NAPS). In tissues containing D2-receptors such as the corpus striatum from rat, dog, calf, hamster, guinea pig, and rabbit as well as the anterior pituitary of rat, bovine, and hamster, the probe covalently labels a peptide of Mr = 94,000. Specificity of the labeling is typically D2-dopaminergic in character. The covalent labeling is blocked by (+)-butaclamol but not by the inactive (-)isomer. Agonists block incorporation with the order of potency: N-n-propylnorapomorphine greater than apomorphine greater than dopamine. The D2-selective antagonist spiperone blocks labeling of the Mr = 94,000 peptide whereas the D1-selective antagonist SCH-23390 is ineffective. Thus, these results indicate that the ligand binding subunit of the D2-dopamine receptor resides on a Mr = 94,000 peptide in these various tissues from several species. Under conditions where proteolysis is not stringently controlled, peptides of lower Mr (32-38,000) are labeled at the expense of the Mr = 94,000 peptide. The most efficient protease inhibitor tested in these systems was EDTA, suggesting that the generation of these lower Mr receptor fragments might be the result of a metal-dependent proteolysis in the membrane preparations. In the rat neurointermediate lobe, a tissue containing D2-receptors, [125I]N3-NAPS specifically labels a major peptide of Mr approximately equal to 120,000 in addition to the Mr = 94,000 peptide.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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