Abstract

In vitro binding assays to measure muscarinic receptor number and affinity were carried out with isolated synaptic plasma membranes from bovine caudate nuclei. Diethyl- p-nitrophenyl phosphate (paraoxon; PX), dichlorvos (DDVP), and tetraethyl pyrophosphate (TEPP) were demonstrated to be weak noncompetitive receptor inactivators. PX, DDVP, and TEPP decreased the number of [ 3H ]quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB) binding sites by 16 to 31% and exhibited no significant effect on the affinity of central muscarinic receptors for QNB ( K d ⋍ 0.3 n m). QNB binding was inhibited by PX at 5 n m, DDVP at 50 n m, and TEPP at 50 n m, concentrations with no effect on acetylcholinesterase activity. Similar measurements with two carbamates, physostigmine and neostigmine (1 n m), showed no effect of neostigmine on QNB binding, while physostigmine both decreased the number of receptors and enhanced their affinity for QNB. The modulation of muscarinic receptors by 5 n m PX was abolished by carbodiimide modification of the membrane preparation. It is suggested that a decrease in the number of muscarinic cholinergic receptors in the brain may underlie some of the neurological and affective disorders observed after chronic exposure of humans to organophosphate insecticides.

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