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Evidence against a separate high affinity binding site on the P2X3 receptor.

Authors :
Karoly, Robert
Mike, Arpad
Gerevich, Zoltan
Illes, Peter
Vizi, E. Sylvester
Source :
BMC Pharmacology; 2007 Supplement 2, Vol. 7, Special section p1-1, 1p
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

It has been proposed that P2X<subscript>3</subscript> receptors possess a unique mechanism of agonist-induced conformational transitions. Recovery from ATP-induced desensitization was found to be very slow; during this period a special agonist binding site was supposed to be formed which should bind the agonist with high affinity and promote desensitization without activation. The authors supposed that this high affinity binding site is absent from non-activated receptors. The theory was supported by an unexpected outcome of an experiment in which a low concentration of agonist was applied at different phases during recovery from desensitization. The inhibition by a low concentration of agonist was stronger when it was applied during the early phase of recovery when more desensitized receptors were present. The authors used different agonists for initial desensitization and for prolonged perfusion at low concentration. We repeated the experiment on HEK 293 cells expressing human P2X<subscript>3</subscript> receptors with the same results. However, when we used the same agonist at both concentrations the inhibition was stronger when the low concentration was applied during the late phase. Simulations revealed that formation of high affinity binding sites does not require any unique mechanism and can be readily described by an allosteric mechanism. Furthermore, they predict that the unexpected phenomenon can only occur when a rapidly dissociating drug is replaced by a slowly dissociating drug on the receptor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712210
Volume :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Pharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35702538
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2210-7-S2-A38