Specific binding of [(11)C]raclopride and N-[(3)H]propyl-norapomorphine to dopamine receptors in living mouse striatum: occupancy by endogenous dopamine and guanosine triphosphate-free G protein

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Specific binding of [(11)C]raclopride and N-[(3)H]propyl-norapomorphine to dopamine receptors in living mouse striatum: occupancy by endogenous dopamine and guanosine triphosphate-free G protein. / Cumming, Paul; Wong, Dean F; Gillings, Nicholas; Hilton, John; Scheffel, Ursula; Gjedde, Albert.

In: Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, Vol. 22, No. 5, 2002, p. 596-604.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Cumming, P, Wong, DF, Gillings, N, Hilton, J, Scheffel, U & Gjedde, A 2002, 'Specific binding of [(11)C]raclopride and N-[(3)H]propyl-norapomorphine to dopamine receptors in living mouse striatum: occupancy by endogenous dopamine and guanosine triphosphate-free G protein', Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 596-604. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-200205000-00011

APA

Cumming, P., Wong, D. F., Gillings, N., Hilton, J., Scheffel, U., & Gjedde, A. (2002). Specific binding of [(11)C]raclopride and N-[(3)H]propyl-norapomorphine to dopamine receptors in living mouse striatum: occupancy by endogenous dopamine and guanosine triphosphate-free G protein. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 22(5), 596-604. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-200205000-00011

Vancouver

Cumming P, Wong DF, Gillings N, Hilton J, Scheffel U, Gjedde A. Specific binding of [(11)C]raclopride and N-[(3)H]propyl-norapomorphine to dopamine receptors in living mouse striatum: occupancy by endogenous dopamine and guanosine triphosphate-free G protein. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. 2002;22(5):596-604. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-200205000-00011

Author

Cumming, Paul ; Wong, Dean F ; Gillings, Nicholas ; Hilton, John ; Scheffel, Ursula ; Gjedde, Albert. / Specific binding of [(11)C]raclopride and N-[(3)H]propyl-norapomorphine to dopamine receptors in living mouse striatum: occupancy by endogenous dopamine and guanosine triphosphate-free G protein. In: Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. 2002 ; Vol. 22, No. 5. pp. 596-604.

Bibtex

@article{16f825a0b31511debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "Specific binding of [(11)C]raclopride and N-[(3)H]propyl-norapomorphine to dopamine receptors in living mouse striatum: occupancy by endogenous dopamine and guanosine triphosphate-free G protein",
abstract = "According to the ternary complex model of G-protein linkage to receptors, agonists increase the affinity of the receptors for the G protein. The model predicts that an endogenous agonist's constant of inhibition toward an agonist radioligand is lower than that toward an antagonistic radioligand. The authors hypothesized that competition from endogenous dopamine in striatum of living mice should have a greater effect on the binding of the D2,3 partial agonist N-[3H]propylnorapomorphine than on the binding of the D2,3 antagonist [(11)C]raclopride. The baseline binding potential (pB(0)), defined as the ratio of bound-to-unbound ligand in the absence of competition from endogenous dopamine, was simultaneously measured in mouse striatum for [(11)C]raclopride (pB(0) = 8.5) and N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine (p'B(0) = 5.3). The baseline was established by treatment with alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine and reserpine. Relative to these baseline values in saline-treated mice, the pB of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine decreased 52% whereas the pB of [(11)C]raclopride decreased only 30%, indicating greater sensitivity of the former compound to inhibition by synaptic dopamine. Furthermore, amphetamine decreased the pB of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine to a greater extent (73%) than that of [(11)C]raclopride (43%) relative to the reserpine condition. For both radioligands, the occupancy of the dopamine receptors by endogenous agonist obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics over a wide range of agonist concentrations established by the pharmacologic treatments. The apparent inhibition constant of endogenous dopamine depended on the dopamine occupancy and decreased to a value 1.66 times greater for N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine than for [(11)C]raclopride at its highest occupancies. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that agonist binding is more sensitive than antagonist binding to competition from endogenous dopamine. Therefore, dopamine agonist ligands may be superior to benzamide antagonist ligands for the estimation of dopamine receptor occupancy by endogenous synaptic dopamine. The analysis of the effect of dopamine occupancy on the inhibition of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine binding indicated a limited supply of G protein with a maximum ternary complex fraction of 40% of maximum agonist binding capacity.",
author = "Paul Cumming and Wong, {Dean F} and Nicholas Gillings and John Hilton and Ursula Scheffel and Albert Gjedde",
year = "2002",
doi = "10.1097/00004647-200205000-00011",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "596--604",
journal = "Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism",
issn = "0271-678X",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Specific binding of [(11)C]raclopride and N-[(3)H]propyl-norapomorphine to dopamine receptors in living mouse striatum: occupancy by endogenous dopamine and guanosine triphosphate-free G protein

AU - Cumming, Paul

AU - Wong, Dean F

AU - Gillings, Nicholas

AU - Hilton, John

AU - Scheffel, Ursula

AU - Gjedde, Albert

PY - 2002

Y1 - 2002

N2 - According to the ternary complex model of G-protein linkage to receptors, agonists increase the affinity of the receptors for the G protein. The model predicts that an endogenous agonist's constant of inhibition toward an agonist radioligand is lower than that toward an antagonistic radioligand. The authors hypothesized that competition from endogenous dopamine in striatum of living mice should have a greater effect on the binding of the D2,3 partial agonist N-[3H]propylnorapomorphine than on the binding of the D2,3 antagonist [(11)C]raclopride. The baseline binding potential (pB(0)), defined as the ratio of bound-to-unbound ligand in the absence of competition from endogenous dopamine, was simultaneously measured in mouse striatum for [(11)C]raclopride (pB(0) = 8.5) and N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine (p'B(0) = 5.3). The baseline was established by treatment with alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine and reserpine. Relative to these baseline values in saline-treated mice, the pB of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine decreased 52% whereas the pB of [(11)C]raclopride decreased only 30%, indicating greater sensitivity of the former compound to inhibition by synaptic dopamine. Furthermore, amphetamine decreased the pB of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine to a greater extent (73%) than that of [(11)C]raclopride (43%) relative to the reserpine condition. For both radioligands, the occupancy of the dopamine receptors by endogenous agonist obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics over a wide range of agonist concentrations established by the pharmacologic treatments. The apparent inhibition constant of endogenous dopamine depended on the dopamine occupancy and decreased to a value 1.66 times greater for N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine than for [(11)C]raclopride at its highest occupancies. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that agonist binding is more sensitive than antagonist binding to competition from endogenous dopamine. Therefore, dopamine agonist ligands may be superior to benzamide antagonist ligands for the estimation of dopamine receptor occupancy by endogenous synaptic dopamine. The analysis of the effect of dopamine occupancy on the inhibition of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine binding indicated a limited supply of G protein with a maximum ternary complex fraction of 40% of maximum agonist binding capacity.

AB - According to the ternary complex model of G-protein linkage to receptors, agonists increase the affinity of the receptors for the G protein. The model predicts that an endogenous agonist's constant of inhibition toward an agonist radioligand is lower than that toward an antagonistic radioligand. The authors hypothesized that competition from endogenous dopamine in striatum of living mice should have a greater effect on the binding of the D2,3 partial agonist N-[3H]propylnorapomorphine than on the binding of the D2,3 antagonist [(11)C]raclopride. The baseline binding potential (pB(0)), defined as the ratio of bound-to-unbound ligand in the absence of competition from endogenous dopamine, was simultaneously measured in mouse striatum for [(11)C]raclopride (pB(0) = 8.5) and N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine (p'B(0) = 5.3). The baseline was established by treatment with alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine and reserpine. Relative to these baseline values in saline-treated mice, the pB of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine decreased 52% whereas the pB of [(11)C]raclopride decreased only 30%, indicating greater sensitivity of the former compound to inhibition by synaptic dopamine. Furthermore, amphetamine decreased the pB of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine to a greater extent (73%) than that of [(11)C]raclopride (43%) relative to the reserpine condition. For both radioligands, the occupancy of the dopamine receptors by endogenous agonist obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics over a wide range of agonist concentrations established by the pharmacologic treatments. The apparent inhibition constant of endogenous dopamine depended on the dopamine occupancy and decreased to a value 1.66 times greater for N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine than for [(11)C]raclopride at its highest occupancies. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that agonist binding is more sensitive than antagonist binding to competition from endogenous dopamine. Therefore, dopamine agonist ligands may be superior to benzamide antagonist ligands for the estimation of dopamine receptor occupancy by endogenous synaptic dopamine. The analysis of the effect of dopamine occupancy on the inhibition of N-[(3)H]propylnorapomorphine binding indicated a limited supply of G protein with a maximum ternary complex fraction of 40% of maximum agonist binding capacity.

U2 - 10.1097/00004647-200205000-00011

DO - 10.1097/00004647-200205000-00011

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 11973432

VL - 22

SP - 596

EP - 604

JO - Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism

JF - Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism

SN - 0271-678X

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 14944448