Abstract

Serotonin1 (5-hydroxytryptamine1, 5-HT1) binding sites have been solubilized from bovine brain cortex using a mixture of 0.1% Nonidet P-40 and 0.3% digitonin in a low-salt buffer containing 0.1% ascorbic acid. The affinity of [3H]5-HT for the soluble cortical binding sites (2.1 nM) is identical to its affinity at membrane-bound binding sites (2.1 nM). [3H]8-Hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)tetralin ([3H]DPAT), a selective 5-HT1a radioligand, also binds to soluble cortical binding sites with high affinity (1.8 nM) comparable with its affinity in the crude membranes (1.7 nM). A significant correlation exists in the rank order potency of serotonergic agents for [3H]5-HT binding and for [3H]DPAT binding to crude and soluble membranes. The density of [3H]DPAT binding sites relative to the [3H]5-HT sites in the solubilized cortical membranes (35%) corresponds well with the proportion of 5-HT1a sites in the crude membranes determined by spiperone displacement (33%), suggesting that both the 5-HT1a and 5-HT1b binding sites have been cosolubilized. [3H]5-HT binding in the soluble preparations was inhibited by GTP, suggesting that a receptor complex may have been solubilized. [3H]Spiperone-specific binding was not detectable in this preparation, suggesting that 5-HT2 sites were not cosolubilized.

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