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Molecular Pharmacology, Vol 12, 92-100, Copyright © 1976 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

Studies on the Effect of Histrionicotoxin on the Monocellular Electroplax from Electrophorus electricus and on the Binding of [3H]Acetylcholine to Membrane Fragments from Torpedo marmorata

G. KATO 1 and J.-P. CHANGEUX 1

1 Departement de Neurobiologie Moléculaire, Institut Pasteur, Paris 5e, France

The effects of histrionicotoxin (HTX) and dihydroisohistrionicotoxin (DHTX) on the depolarization produced by carbamylcholine on the monocellular electroplax preparation of Electrophorus electricus and on binding of [3H]acetylcholine to membrane fragments rich in acetylcholine receptor protein from Torpedo marmorata are described. HTX and DHTX at concentrations of 1.0 µM reversibly and noncompetitively blocked the steady-state depolarization produced by carbamylcholine on the monocellular electroplax preparation. On the other hand, neither HTX or DHTX blocked the binding of [3H]acetylcholine to membrane fragments rich in acetylcholine receptors, even at concentrations of 500 µM. Rather, both toxins increased the affinity of [3H]acetylcholine for the receptor protein in its membrane environment at concentrations which blocked the carbamylcholine effect on the electroplax. The similarity between the effects of histrionicotoxin and those of certain local anesthetics suggests that at the receptor level histrionicotoxin acts as a powerful local anesthetic.

Note:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank Professors P. Boquet, A. Menez, J. L. Morgat, and P. Fromageot for a generous gift of [3H]agr-toxin, and Mme S. Mougeon for her expert technical assistance in the electrophysiological experiments. We also thank Dr. J. S. Weyman and Mr. P. Decker, Hoffmann-La Roche, Ltd., Montreal, for financial support of the expedition to Colombia, and Drs. J. Gomez and A. Galindo, Bogotà, for their help and cordial hospitality.

Submitted on May 7, 1975




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E. Albuquerque, A. Eldefrawi, M. Eldefrawi, N. Mansour, and M. Tsai
Amantadine: neuromuscular blockade by suppression of ionic conductance of the acetylcholine receptor
Science, February 17, 1978; 199(4330): 788 - 790.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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