PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - David C. Perry AU - Martha I. Dávila-Garcı́a AU - Craig A. Stockmeier AU - Kenneth J. Kellar TI - Increased Nicotinic Receptors in Brains from Smokers: Membrane Binding and Autoradiography Studies DP - 1999 Jun 01 TA - Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics PG - 1545--1552 VI - 289 IP - 3 4099 - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/289/3/1545.short 4100 - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/289/3/1545.full SO - J Pharmacol Exp Ther1999 Jun 01; 289 AB - Chronic administration of nicotine increases the density of neuronal cholinergic nicotinic receptors in cells and in rodent brain, and similar increases have been reported in brains from human smokers. To further examine this phenomenon, we measured nicotinic receptor binding sites in brain regions from matched populations of smokers and nonsmokers. We first measured binding of [3H](±)epibatidine ([3H]EB) and [3H]cytisine in homogenate preparations from samples of prefrontal and temporal cerebral cortex. Binding of each radioligand was significantly higher (250–300%) in both cortical regions from brains of smokers. Frozen sections from each of the cerebral cortical regions and the hippocampus were used for autoradiographic analysis of [3H]EB binding. In cerebral cortex, binding was most dense in layer VI in the prefrontal cortex and layers IV and VI in the temporal cortex. Densitometric analysis of [3H]EB binding sites revealed marked increases of 300 to 400% of control in all cortical regions examined from smokers’ brains. Binding in the hippocampal formation was heterogeneously distributed, with dense areas of binding sites seen in the parasubiculum, subiculum, and molecular layer of the dentate gyrus, and the lacunosum-moleculare layer of the CA1/2. Binding of [3H]EB was significantly higher in all six regions of the hippocampus examined from brains of smokers compared with nonsmokers. These increases ranged from 160% of control in parasubiculum to 290% in the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus. The increase in nicotinic receptors in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus of smokers may modify the central nervous system effects of nicotine and contribute to an altered response of smokers to nicotine. The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics