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XB-ART-10525
J Neurosci Methods 2000 Jun 30;991-2:91-100. doi: 10.1016/s0165-0270(00)00219-3.
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Pharmacology of recombinant human GABA(A) receptor subtypes measured using a novel pH-based high-throughput functional efficacy assay.

Simpson PB , Woollacott AJ , Pillai GV , Maubach KA , Hadingham KL , Martin K , Choudhury HI , Seabrook GR .


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To facilitate the discovery of novel compounds that modulate human GABA(A) receptor function, we have developed a high throughput functional assay using a fluorescence imaging system. L(tk-) cells expressing combinations of human GABA(A) receptor subunits were incubated with the pH-sensitive dye 2',7'bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5-(and 6)-carboxyfluorescein, then washed and placed in a 96-well real-time fluorescence plate reader. In buffer adjusted to pH 6.9 there was a robust and persisting acidification response to addition of GABA, which was antagonised by the GABA(A) receptor antagonist bicuculline. The concentration-response relationship for GABA was modulated by allosteric ligands, including benzodiazepine (BZ) site agonists and inverse agonists. The effects of BZ site ligands on the pH response to GABA for receptors containing alpha1beta3gamma2, alpha3beta3gamma2 or alpha5beta3gamma2 subunits were well correlated with results from electrophysiological studies on the same receptor subunit combinations expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Most modulatory compounds tested were found to be relatively unselective across the three subunit combinations tested; however, some showed subtype-dependent efficacy, such as diazepam, which had highest agonist effects on the alpha3beta3gamma2 subtype, substantial but lesser agonism on alpha1beta3gamma2 and still substantial but the least agonism on alpha5beta3gamma2. This indicates that the alpha subunit within the recombinant receptor expressed in L(tk-) cells can affect the efficacy of the response to some BZ compounds. Inhibitors of Na(+)/Cl(-) cotransport, anion/anion exchange and the gastric type of H(+)/K(+) ATPase potently inhibited GABA-evoked acidification, indicating that multiple transporters are involved in the GABA-evoked pH change. This novel fluorescence-based high throughput functional assay allows the rapid characterization of allosteric ligands acting on human GABA(A) receptors.

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