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Vol. 289, Issue 2, 886-894, May 1999
Department of Biology, Bates College, Lewiston, Maine
Felbamate is an anticonvulsant used in the treatment of seizures
associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and complex partial seizures
that are refractory to other medications. Its unique clinical profile
is thought to be due to an interaction with
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors,
resulting in decreased excitatory amino acid neurotransmission. To
further characterize the interaction between felbamate and NMDA
receptors, recombinant receptors expressed in Xenopus
oocytes were used to investigate the subtype specificity and mechanism
of action. Felbamate reduced NMDA- and glycine-induced currents most
effectively at NMDA receptors composed of NR1 and NR2B subunits
(IC50 = 0.93 mM), followed by NR1-2C (2.02 mM) and NR1-2A
(8.56 mM) receptors. The NR1-2B-selective interaction was noncompetitive with respect to the coagonists NMDA and glycine and was
not dependent on voltage. Felbamate enhanced the affinity of the NR1-2B
receptor for the agonist NMDA by 3.5-fold, suggesting a similarity in
mechanism to other noncompetitive antagonists such as ifenprodil.
However, a point mutation at position 201 (E201R) of the
2 (mouse
NR2B) subunit that affects receptor sensitivity to ifenprodil,
haloperidol, and protons reduced the affinity of NR1-
2 receptors for
felbamate by only 2-fold. Furthermore, pH had no effect on the affinity
of NR1-2B receptors for felbamate. We suggest that felbamate interacts
with a unique site on the NR2B subunit (or one formed by NR1 plus NR2B)
that interacts allosterically with the NMDA/glutamate binding site.
These results suggest that the unique clinical profile of felbamate is
due in part to an interaction with the NR1-2B subtype of NMDA receptor.
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