1. Academic Validation
  2. Isoguvacine binding, uptake, and release: relation to the GABA system

Isoguvacine binding, uptake, and release: relation to the GABA system

  • J Neurochem. 1983 Jun;40(6):1701-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1983.tb08145.x.
W F White S R Snodgrass
Abstract

Isoguvacine (1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine-4-carboxylic acid) is a GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) agonist with limited conformational flexibility. In these studies we investigated the binding, uptake, and release of [3H] isoguvacine by use of tissue preparations of rat CNS, comparing the results with similar studies of [3H]GABA. The results from these investigations indicate that isoguvacine binds to membrane preparations of rat forebrain with pharmacological characteristics similar to the post-synaptic GABA recognition site; that it is transported into synaptosomal preparations by an uptake system similar to the high-affinity GABA uptake system; and that recently accumulated isoguvacine is released in a Ca2+-dependent manner and by heteroexchange with external GABA. The ability of isoguvacine and gamma-hydroxybutyric acid to decrease the K+-stimulated Ca2+-dependent release process was also investigated. The results indicate that isoguvacine interactions have many of the biochemical features of GABA synaptic function, isoguvacine being, however, less potent than GABA.

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