Tricyclic antidepressant drugs inhibit [3H]imipramine binding to the rat brain cortex in a competitive manner, giving linear Hofstee plots and Hill coefficients of approximately 1.0. Serotonin, the only neurotransmitter to inhibit [3H]imipramine binding, does so in a complex manner, exhibiting a Hill coefficient of 0.40-0.50. Nontricyclic inhibitors of serotonin uptake such as fluoxetine, paroxetine, norzimelidine, and citalopram inhibit [3H]imipramine binding in the same complex manner as serotonin. These results are interpreted as suggesting that [3H]imipramine binds to a site associated with the serotonin uptake system but different from either the substrate recognition site for serotonin or the site of action of the nontricyclic inhibitors of neuronal uptake of serotonin.
High-affinity specific [3H]imipramine binding has been demonstrated in the brain and platelets of various species including man. Electrolytic lesions of the rat dorsal raphe, which resulted in a significant decrease in the endogenous levels of serotonin produced a reduction in the density of [3H]imipramine binding sites in the hypothalamus and cortex. The affinity constants were unchanged. These results suggest that [3H]imipramine binding sites are located on serotonin nerve terminals.
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