Evidence for the sequential formation of two complexes between an uptake inhibitor, GBR 12783 [1-[2-(diphenylmethoxy)ethyl]-4-(3-phenyl-2-propenyl)piperazine], and the neuronal transporter of dopamine
Jc. Do-rego et al., Evidence for the sequential formation of two complexes between an uptake inhibitor, GBR 12783 [1-[2-(diphenylmethoxy)ethyl]-4-(3-phenyl-2-propenyl)piperazine], and the neuronal transporter of dopamine, J NEUROCHEM, 72(1), 1999, pp. 396-404
Incubation of a crude synaptosomal fraction from rat striatum with GBR 1278
3 at 37 degrees C produced an inhibition of the specific uptake of [H-3]dop
amine that increased with time. The inhibition increased when GBR 12783 was
present during preincubation and incubation (IC50 = 1.85 +/- 0.1 nM) inste
ad of incubation alone (IC50 = 25 +/- 3.5 nM). Time-course studies of uptak
e inhibition demonstrated that a first collision transporter-inhibitor comp
lex (TI) was formed immediately after addition of GBR 12783 so that the ini
tial uptake velocity (V-0) decreased for increasing concentrations of inhib
itor (K-i greater than or equal to 20 nM). TI slowly isomerized to a more s
table complex TI* (K-i* less than or equal to 5 nM) with a value of t(1/2)
= 20-270 s. Fits of data to model 2 in which the steady-state uptake (V-S)
is set to zero were generally preferred, suggesting that formation of TI* c
ould tend to irreversibility, as a consequence of a very low reverse isomer
ization, As expected, k, V-0, and V-S tended to steady-state values in an a
symptotic manner for high concentrations of GBR 12783, GBR 12783 at 2.5 nM
produced a mixed inhibition of the uptake, with an increase in K-M and a de
crease in V-max; these effects were improved for 10 nM GBR 12783 and at 20
degrees C. These results are discussed in relation to previous data concern
ing [H-3]GBR 12783 binding. The present work gives the first experimental d
emonstration that dopamine uptake blockers can act according to a two-step
mechanism of inhibition; this is of great interest, because these inhibitor
s can oppose the effects of cocaine or amphetamine on the transporter accor
ding to a reaction that is partly nondependent on the concentration of the
abused agent.