PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Preety Shabajee-Alibay AU - Anne Bonnaud AU - Benoit Malpaux AU - Philippe Delagrange AU - Valérie Audinot AU - Said Yous AU - Jean A. Boutin AU - Jean-Philippe Stephan AU - Jérôme Leprince AU - Celine Legros TI - A putative new melatonin binding site in sheep brain, MTx: preliminary observations and characteristics AID - 10.1124/jpet.121.000785 DP - 2021 Jan 01 TA - Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics PG - JPET-AR-2021-000785 4099 - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/early/2021/10/27/jpet.121.000785.short 4100 - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/early/2021/10/27/jpet.121.000785.full AB - In mammals, MT1 and MT2 melatonin receptors are high affinity G protein-coupled receptors and are thought to be involved in the integration of the melatonin signaling throughout the brain and periphery. In the present study, we describe a new melatonin binding site, named MTx, with a peculiar pharmacological profile. This site had a low affinity for 2-[125I]-melatonin in saturation assays in hypothalamus and retina (pKD = 9.13 {plus minus} 0.05, Bmax = 1.12 {plus minus} 0.11 fmol/mg protein and pKD = 8.81 {plus minus} 0.50, Bmax = 7.65 {plus minus} 2.64 fmol/mg protein, respectively) and a very high affinity, in competition assays, for melatonin (pKi = 13.08 {plus minus} 0.18), and other endogenous compounds. Using autoradiography, we showed a preferential localization of the MTx in periventricular areas of the sheep brain, with a density 3 to 8 times higher than those observed for ovine MT1. In addition, using a set of well-characterized ligands, we showed that this site did not correspond to any of the following receptors: MT1, MT2, MT3, D1, D2, noradrenergic, nor 5-HT2. Based on its affinity for melatonin, MTx did not seem to be implicated in the integration of cerebral melatonin concentration variations since they were saturating for MTx. Nevertheless, it remained of prime importance because of its periventricular distribution, in close contact with the CSF, and its peculiar pharmacological profile responding to both melatoninergic and serotoninergic compounds. Significance Statement Herein a putative new melatonin binding site is described in sheep brain parts in close contact with the 3rd ventricle. The characteristics of the pharmacological profile of this site is different from anything previously reported in the literature. The present work forms the basis of future full pharmacological characterization.