Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1983820 | The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2010 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
The interaction of ibogaine and phencyclidine (PCP) with human (h) α3β4-nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in different conformational states was determined by functional and structural approaches including, radioligand binding assays, Ca2+ influx detections, and thermodynamic and kinetics measurements. The results established that (a) ibogaine inhibits (±)-epibatidine-induced Ca2+ influx in hα3β4 AChRs with â¼9-fold higher potency than that for PCP, (b) [3H]ibogaine binds to a single site in the hα3β4 AChR ion channel with relatively high affinity (Kd = 0.46 ± 0.06 μM), and ibogaine inhibits [3H]ibogaine binding to the desensitized hα3β4 AChR with slightly higher affinity compared to the resting AChR. This is explained by a slower dissociation rate from the desensitized ion channel compared to the resting ion channel, and (c) PCP inhibits [3H]ibogaine binding to the hα3β4 AChR, suggesting overlapping sites. The experimental results correlate with the docking simulations suggesting that ibogaine and PCP interact with a binding domain located between the serine (position 6â²) and valine/phenylalanine (position 13â²) rings. This interaction is mediated mainly by van der Waals contacts, which is in agreement with the observed enthalpic contribution determined by non-linear chromatography. However, the calculated entropic contribution also indicates local conformational changes. Collectively our data suggest that ibogaine and PCP bind to overlapping sites located between the serine and valine/phenylalanine rings, to finally block the AChR ion channel, and in the case of ibogaine, to probably maintain the AChR in the desensitized state for longer time.
Keywords
DMEMagonist concentration that produces 50% AChR activationκ-bungarotoxinIC50PCP[3H]TCPEC50FLIPRPMSFAChRNCAkoffBSADulbecco's modified Eagle Mediumbovine serum albuminNoncompetitive antagonistsNoncompetitive antagonistIbogaineAssociation constantassociation rate constantdissociation rate constantDissociation constantRoom temperatureConformational statesFluorescent Imaging Plate ReaderHill coefficientPhencyclidinephenylmethylsulfonyl fluorideinhibition constantkonnicotinic acetylcholine receptornicotinic acetylcholine receptors
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Authors
Hugo R. Arias, Avraham Rosenberg, Katarzyna M. Targowska-Duda, Dominik Feuerbach, Xiao Juan Yuan, Krzysztof Jozwiak, Ruin Moaddel, Irving W. Wainer,