Abstract

The effect of temperature on the binding of [3H]-N-[1-(2-thienyl)cyclohexyl]piperidine [( 3H]TCP) to the ion channel of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors was studied in washed rat brain-cortex membranes. Raising the temperature from 5 to 33 degrees C resulted in a significant increase in the association rates of [3H]TCP binding measured in the presence of 1 microM glutamate and 1 microM glycine, but was less effective in the absence of the added agonists. No such effects of temperature on the dissociation rates of [3H]TCP-receptor complexes were observed. In the absence of agonists, neither the association nor the dissociation binding components varied with temperature, suggesting a diffusion-controlled limitation of access of the ligand to its site within the nonactivated NMDA receptor. No evidence was found for a temperature-dependent change in the density of [3H]TCP binding sites or for heterogeneity of [3H]TCP binding sites associated with the NMDA receptor, even though when approaching equilibrium the binding kinetics in the presence of glutamate and glycine deviated from an ordinary bimolecular reaction scheme. The data were fitted instead to a two-exponent binding function, comprising the sum of a fast and a slow binding component. Their corresponding time constants exhibited an increase with temperature, and the increase of each one was correlated significantly with the corresponding decrease in the equilibrium binding constant; however, there was no temperature-related change in the relative proportions of the two components, with the fast binding component (alpha) accounting for 50-70% of the site population.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call