Pressure reversal of the action of octanol on postsynaptic membranes from Torpedo

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Abstract

Octanol increases the binding of [3H]‐acetylcholine to the desensitized state of the nicotinic receptor in postsynaptic membranes prepared from Torpedo californica. This increase in binding results from an increase in the affinity of [3H]‐acetylcholine for its receptor without any change in the number of sites or the shape of the acetylcholine binding curve. High pressures of helium (300 atm) decrease [3H]‐acetylcholine binding by a mechanism that changes only the affinity of acetylcholine binding. Helium pressure reverses the effect of octanol on the affinity of [3H]‐acetylcholine for its receptor. This pressure reversal of the action of octanol at a postsynaptic membrane is consistent either with pressure counteracting an octanol‐induced membrane expansion or with independent mechanisms for the actions of octanol and pressure. The data do not conform with a mechanism in which pressure displaces octanol from a binding site on the receptor protein. 1984 British Pharmacological Society

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APA

Braswell, L. M., Miller, K. W., & Sauter, J. ‐F. (1984). Pressure reversal of the action of octanol on postsynaptic membranes from Torpedo. British Journal of Pharmacology, 83(1), 305–311. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.1984.tb10147.x

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