These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Muscarinic responses and binding in a murine neuroblastoma clone (N1E-115). Selective loss with subculturing of the low-affinity agonist site mediating cyclic GMP formation.
    Author: McKinney M, Stenstrom S, Richelson E.
    Journal: Mol Pharmacol; 1984 Sep; 26(2):156-63. PubMed ID: 6148690.
    Abstract:
    Cells of the murine neuroblastoma clone N1E-115 possess muscarinic receptors that influence the intracellular level of cyclic nucleotides. The stimulation of [3H]cyclic GMP levels occurs only with intact cells and has an EC50 near the "low-affinity" agonist equilibrium dissociation constant (KL) determined by radioligand binding assays. The inhibition of prostaglandin E1-stimulated [3H]cyclic AMP formation has an EC50 close to the value for the "high-affinity" agonist equilibrium dissociation constant (KH). During sequential subculturing in medium supplemented with newborn bovine serum, the inhibition of [3H]cyclic AMP was maintained, but the [3H]cyclic GMP response declined dramatically, and after 7 subculturings it was essentially absent. The time course for [3H]cyclic GMP formation in a late subculture with an 88% loss of the response was identical with the time course in early subcultures. A normal [3H]cyclic GMP response to bradykinin and histamine was demonstrated to be present in cells that had lost the [3H]cyclic GMP response to carbachol. The EC50 and KD values for the two muscarinic responses and binding sites increased 3- to 4-fold after several subculturings. A 90% loss of low-affinity binding sites was closely correlated with a similar loss of the [3H]cyclic GMP response. High-affinity binding sites did not decline significantly in concentration until the 11th subculture, where the total number of muscarinic sites was only 6% of the earliest subculture. In all subcultures, however, the ability of the muscarinic receptor to decrease [3H]cyclic AMP levels was maintained. These data, which show that the subculturing of N1E-115 cells in medium supplemented with newborn calf serum results in a selective loss of one muscarinic function, strongly support the hypothesis that these cells contain two separate muscarinic receptor-effector systems. One receptor subtype or conformation has a low affinity for the agonist and mediates cyclic GMP formation. The other receptor subtype or conformation has a higher affinity for the agonist and mediates an inhibition of prostaglandin E1-stimulated cyclic AMP formation.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]