GABA(A) receptor sites in the developing human foetus


Autoria(s): Andersen, DL; Eckert, AL; Tsai, VWW; Burke, CJ; Tannenberg, AEG; Dodd, PR
Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

GABA(A) receptor sites were characterised in cerebral cortex tissue samples from deceased neurologically normal infants who had come to autopsy during the third trimester of pregnancy. Pharmacological parameters were obtained from homogenate binding studies which utilised the 'central-type' benzodiazepine ligands [H-3]diazepam and [H-3]flunitrazepam, and from the GABA activation of [H-3]diazepam binding. It was found that the two radioligands behaved differently during development. The affinity of [H-3]flunitrazepam for its binding site did not vary significantly between preparations, whereas the [H-3]diazepam K-D showed marked regional and developmental variations: infant tissues showed a distinctly lower affinity than adults for this ligand. The density of [H-3]flunitrazepam binding sites increased similar to35% during the third trimester to reach adult levels by term, whereas [H-3]diazepam binding capacity declined slightly but steadily throughout development. The GABA activation of [H-3]diazepam binding was less efficient early in the trimester, in that the affinity of the agonist was significantly lower, though it rose to adult levels by term. The strength of the enhancement response increased to adult levels over the same time-frame. The results strongly suggest that the subunit composition of cortical GABA(A) sites changes significantly during this important developmental stage. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:62021

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier

Palavras-Chave #Developmental Biology #Neurosciences #Inhibitory Neurotransmission #Gaba-mediated #Cerebral Cortex #Amino Acid Transmitter #Brain Development #Human #Benzodiazepine Receptors #Human-brain #Binding Sites #Subunit #Rat #Encephalopathy #Transmitter #Alcoholism #Expression #Glutamate #C1 #270107 Cell Neurochemistry #320502 Basic Pharmacology #320702 Central Nervous System #730104 Nervous system and disorders #730203 Health related to ageing
Tipo

Journal Article