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Vol. 287, Issue 2, 448-456, November 1998
CNS Diseases Research (L.W.F., J.P.P., D.S.C., B.L.L.) and
Applied
Biotechnology (R.H.), The DuPont Pharmaceuticals Research Laboratories,
Wilmington, Delaware
The galanin neuropeptide system is widely distributed throughout the
brain and periphery and is thought to play a role in feeding, pain and
reproduction. To evaluate the human galanin receptor 1 as a potential
therapeutic target, we fully characterized its interaction with several
galanin-like peptides. The human galanin receptor 1 receptor was stably
expressed using an episomal system in human embryonic kidney 293E
cells. Saturation isotherms using 125I-human galanin
revealed two distinct populations of receptor affinity states in
membranes and whole cells with picomolar and nanomolar affinities at
the high- and low affinity states, respectively. A scintillation
proximity assay revealed that 125I-human galanin binding in
membranes reached steady-state within 2 to 2.5 hr; however, only 50%
of galanin radiolabel dissociated from the receptors by excess galanin
or guanosine 5'-O-3-thiotriphosphate even after 20 hr. In contrast,
galanin binding in whole cells was completely reversible within 1 hr.
Competition binding assays showed that galanin-like peptides bound with
picomolar affinities in membranes and whole cells. These peptides
behaved as full agonists as determined by the inhibition of
forskolin-stimulated cyclic 3'5'-adenosine monophosphate production and
the stimulation of guanosine
5'-O-(3-[35S]thiotriphosphate binding. The agonist
profile of M40, a representative chimeric peptide, was found not to be
the result of receptor reserve because receptor inactivation by partial
alkylation experiments confirmed its full intrinsic efficacy under
conditions of a "zero" reserve state. These observations suggest
that the antagonist effects in vivo of M40, and perhaps
other chimeric peptides, are not mediated via direct interactions with
the galanin receptor 1 receptor.