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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 259, Issue 20, 12756-12762, Oct, 1984
AT Malouf, RL Schnaar and JT Coyle
Glutamate is thought to be a major excitatory neurotransmitter in the
central nervous system. To study the glutamate receptor and its regulation
under carefully controlled conditions, the specific binding of
[3H]glutamate was characterized in washed membranes isolated from a
neuroblastoma X retina hybrid cell line, N18-RE-105. [3H]Glutamate bound in
a saturable and reversible fashion with an apparent dissociation constant,
KD, of 650 nM and a maximum binding capacity, Bmax, of 16 pmol/mg of
protein. Pharmacologic characterization of the site indicates that it
closely resembles the Na+-independent binding site for glutamate found on
brain membranes and thought to be an excitatory amino acid neurotransmitter
receptor. Thus, while kainate, N- methyl-DL-aspartate, and nonamino acid
ligands did not displace [3H]glutamate, quisqualate and ibotenate were
potent inhibitors of specific binding. Furthermore, this binding site is
regulated by ions in a manner which resembles that described in the
hippocampus (Baudry, M., and Lynch, G. (1979) Nature (Lond.) 282, 748-750).
Calcium (10 mM) increased the number of binding sites 2.6-fold with no
change in receptor-ligand affinity. Lanthanum (1 mM) was the only other
cation added which enhanced (3-fold) the binding of [3H]glutamate.
Monovalent cations resulted in a decrease in the number of glutamate
binding sites. Incubation of membranes in the presence of chloride ions
caused a marked increased in [3H] glutamate binding, an effect which was
synergistic with that of calcium incubation. Thus, N18-RE-105 cells possess
a binding site for [3H]glutamate pharmacologically similar to an excitatory
neurotransmitter binding site in brain and which exhibits regulatory
properties resembling those previously described in hippocampal membranes,
providing an excellent model for mechanistic studies.
Characterization of a glutamic acid neurotransmitter binding site on neuroblastoma hybrid cells
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