Literature DB >> 8035194

Photoaffinity labeling of the cerebral sulfonylurea receptor using a novel radioiodinated azidoglibenclamide analogue.

M Schwanstecher1, S Löser, F Chudziak, C Bachmann, U Panten.   

Abstract

In previous studies evidence has been presented by photoaffinity labeling that a polypeptide of 145-150 kDa represents the cerebral sulfonylurea receptor. However, covalent incorporation of [3H]glibenclamide or a 125I-labeled glibenclamide analogue into the sulfonylurea receptor required high amounts of photoenergy and took place with low yield of photoinsertion. To provide a probe with increased photoreactivity a 4-azido-5-iodosalicyloyl analogue of glibenclamide was synthesized. Binding experiments revealed specific and reversible high-affinity binding of this novel probe to the particulate (KD = 0.13 nM) and solubilized (KD = 0.56 nM) sulfonylurea receptor from cerebral cortex. The novel probe showed > 100-fold higher sensitivity to irradiation at 356 nm than glibenclamide. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed specific photoincorporation into a cerebral protein of 175 kDa and indicated an efficiency of photoincorporation of 9%. From dissociation binding curves following irradiation photoincorporation was estimated as 28% of specifically bound ligand. Photoincorporation into the 175-kDa protein following saturation binding of the novel probe to particulate sites from cerebral cortex indicated a KD value of 0.38 nM. Inhibition of photoincorporation into this protein by glibenclamide, glipizide, and tolbutamide revealed KD values for these sulfonylureas of 0.06 nM, 1.6 nM, and 1.2 microM, respectively. These results show that the novel photoaffinity ligand can be used as a probe for detection and characterization of the sulfonylurea receptor and suggest that a 175-kDa protein represents the cerebral sulfonylurea receptor.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8035194     DOI: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.1994.63020698.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurochem        ISSN: 0022-3042            Impact factor:   5.372


  5 in total

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3.  Two neonatal diabetes mutations on transmembrane helix 15 of SUR1 increase affinity for ATP and ADP at nucleotide binding domain 2.

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4.  Newly expressed SUR1-regulated NC(Ca-ATP) channel mediates cerebral edema after ischemic stroke.

Authors:  J Marc Simard; Mingkui Chen; Kirill V Tarasov; Sergei Bhatta; Svetlana Ivanova; Ludmila Melnitchenko; Natalya Tsymbalyuk; G Alexander West; Volodymyr Gerzanich
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2006-03-19       Impact factor: 53.440

Review 5.  Pharmacological rescue of trafficking-impaired ATP-sensitive potassium channels.

Authors:  Gregory M Martin; Pei-Chun Chen; Prasanna Devaraneni; Show-Ling Shyng
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  5 in total

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