Publication | Open Access
Specific Binding of Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide to Brain Membranes from the Guinea Pig
120
Citations
26
References
1978
Year
Guinea Pig BrainSocial SciencesGastrointestinal Peptide HormoneTracer MoleculeHypothalamic PeptideNeurochemistryMolecular PhysiologyMolecular NeuroscienceBiochemistryNeuropharmacologyNervous SystemEndocrinologyBrain MembranesPharmacologyVasoactive Intestinal PeptideNeurophysiologyPhysiologyNeuropeptide ReceptorNeuroscienceMedicineGuinea PigNeuropeptides
1 The interaction of the vasoactive intestinal peptide family of hormones with synaptic membranes from guinea pig brain was examined using 125I-labeled vasoactive intestinal peptide as a tracer molecule. Binding of this peptide was rapid and temperature-dependent, as well as reversible and saturable. Scatchard plots were compatible with the existence of two classes of binding sites, the first class with an apparent Kd of 36 nM and a low binding capacity (4 pmol vasoactive intestinal peptide/mg membrane protein) and a second class of binding sites with a lower affinity (apparent Kd of 285 nM) and a higher capacity (20 pmol vasoactive intestinal peptide/mg membrane protein). 2 The specificity of binding sites for vasoactive intestinal peptide was established from the fact that binding of the 125I-labeled peptide was inhibited by the unlabeled peptide and by higher concentrations of unlabeled secretin but not by the parent hormone glucagon or by the neuropeptides somatiostatin, bombesin, C-terminal octapeptide of pancreozymin, Leu-enkephalin, and substance P. 3 Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+ and EDTA reduced the amount of 125I-labeled vasoactive intestinal peptide bound at equilibrium. The monovalent and divalent cations decreased the binding rate constant, whereas EDTA increased the dissociation rate constant of binding. 4 Nucleoside triphosphates and diphosphates decreased binding of the 125I-labeled peptide at equilibrium and increased the rate constant of dissociation of membrane-bound vasoactive intestinal peptide. Guanyl nucleotides were the most potent and in this class of nucleotides GTP was 6-fold more potent than guanosine 5′-[β,γ-imido]triphosphate.
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