An autoradiographic study of dextromethorphan high-affinity binding sites in rat brain: Sodium-dependency and colocalization with paroxetine

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Abstract

1. The distribution and some pharmacological properties of centrally located dextromethorphan high-affinity binding sites were investigated by in vitro autoradiography. 2. Sodium chloride (50 mM) induced a 7 to 12 fold increase in dextromethorphan binding to rat brain in all areas tested. The effect of sodium was concentration-dependent with a higher dose (120 mM) exerting a smaller effect on binding. 3. [3H]-dextromethorphan binding in the presence of sodium was inhibited in the presence of the anticonvulsant phenytoin at a concentration of 100 μM, while the σ ligand(+)-3-(-3-hydroxyphenyl)-N(1-propyl)pipendine ((+)-PPP) had no effect on the binding, suggesting an interaction with the DM2 site. 4. The distribution of the sodium-dependent binding identified in this study correlated significantly with the distribution of the selective 5-HT uptake inhibitor [3H]-paroxetine, and paroxetine and dextromethorphan mutually displaced their binding at concentrations in the low nanomolar range. 5. These data show that dextromethorphan and paroxetine share a sodium-dependent high affinity binding site in rat brain, and suggest that dextromethorphan might interact, in the presence of sodium, with the 5-HT uptake mechanism in rat brain.

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Meoni, P., Tortella, F. C., & Bowery, N. G. (1997). An autoradiographic study of dextromethorphan high-affinity binding sites in rat brain: Sodium-dependency and colocalization with paroxetine. British Journal of Pharmacology, 120(7), 1255–1262. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0701043

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