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Title: Interaction of [3H](-)-SKF-10,047 with brain sigma receptors: characterization and autoradiographic visualization. Author: Zukin SR, Tempel A, Gardner EL, Zukin RS. Journal: J Neurochem; 1986 Apr; 46(4):1032-41. PubMed ID: 3005501. Abstract: The sigma opiates differ from other opiates in their stimulatory and psychotomimetic actions. The sigma opiate [3H](-)-SKF-10,047 has been used to characterize sigma receptors in rat nervous tissue. Binding of [3H](-)-SKF-10,047 to rat brain membranes was of high affinity, saturable, and reversible. Scatchard analysis revealed the apparent interaction of this drug with two distinct binding sites characterized by affinities of 0.03 and 75 nM (5 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.4, at 4 degrees C). Competition analyses involving rank order determinations for a series of opiates and other drugs indicate that the high-affinity binding site is the mu opiate receptor. The lower-affinity site (revealed after suppression of mu and delta receptor binding) has been identified as the sigma opiate/phencyclidine receptor. In vitro autoradiography has been used to visualize neuroanatomical patterns of receptors labeled using [3H](-)-SKF-10,047 in the presence of normorphine and [D-Ala2,D-Leu5]enkephalin to block mu and delta interactions, respectively. Labeling patterns differ markedly from those for mu, delta, or kappa receptors. The highest densities (determined by quantitative autoradiography) are found in the medial portion of the nucleus accumbens, amygdaloid nucleus, hippocampal formation, central gray, locus coeruleus, and the parabrachial nuclei. Receptors in these structures could account for the stimulatory, mood-altering, and analgesic properties of the sigma opiates. Although not the most selective sigma opiate ligand, [3H](-)-SKF-10,047 binds to sigma opiate receptors in brain, and this interaction can be readily distinguished from its interactions with other classes of brain opiate receptors.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]