Monoclonal antibodies, raised against a purified GABAA/benzodiazepine receptor complex from bovine cerebral cortex, have been used to visualize the cellular and subcellular distribution of receptorlike immunoreactivity in the rat CNS, cat spinal cord, and bovine and postmortem human brain. Two different antibodies have been used for these studies; bd-17 recognizes the beta-subunit (Mr 55 kDa) in all the species tested, whereas bd-24 recognizes the alpha-subunit (Mr 50 kDa) of bovine and human but not rat and cat tissues. In bovine and human brain, both antibodies produced very similar staining patterns, indicating a homogeneous receptor composition, at least in the brain areas investigated. The general distribution and density of receptor antigenic sites in all tissues studied were very similar to that of benzodiazepine binding sites radiolabeled with 3H-Ro 15-1788 and of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD)-stained nerve terminals. The results demonstrate a very high receptor density (around neuronal cell bodies and processes or less discretely distributed) in the rat olfactory bulbs, cerebral cortex, ventral pallidum, islands of Calleja, globus pallidus, hippocampus, dentate gyrus, substantia nigra, geniculate nuclei, inferior colliculus, cerebellum, reticular formation, spinal cord, and retina. In contrast, no receptors could be detected in white matter, pineal, pituitary, adrenals, and superior cervical ganglia. Only among the cerebellar layers did we observe a conspicuous difference between the staining intensity and the radiolabeling. In bovine and postmortem human brain, e.g., hippocampus, dentate gyrus, cerebral cortex, and substantia nigra, the same close correlation between the immunohistochemical and radiohistochemical findings was observed. At the electron microscopic level, the immune reaction product in the rat substantia nigra and globus pallidus, for example, was localized to pre- and postsynaptic membranes of axodendritic and axosomatic synapses. Whether the presynaptic labeling represents GABA autoreceptors is discussed. In the near future, the monoclonal antibodies will be used in double-labeling experiments with GAD to identify those GABAergic projections that are modulated by benzodiazepine minor tranquillizers. Furthermore, they could also be used, in studies of postmortem human brain, to diagnose receptor dysfunction possibly associated with CNS disorders such as epilepsy.
The most abundant inhibitory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), exerts its main effects via a GABAA receptor that gates a chloride channel in the subsynaptic membrane. These receptors can contain a modulatory unit, the benzodiazepine receptor, through which ligands of different chemical classes can increase or decrease GABAA receptor function. We have now visualized a GABAA receptor in mammalian brain using monoclonal antibodies. The protein complex recognized by the antibodies contained high- and low-affinity binding sites for GABA as well as binding sites for benzodiazepines, indicative of a GABAA receptor functionally associated with benzodiazepine receptors. As the pattern of brain immunoreactivity corresponds to the autoradiographical distribution of benzodiazepine binding sites, most benzodiazepine receptors seem to be part of GABAA receptors. Two constituent proteins were identified immunologically. Because the monoclonal antibodies cross-react with human brain, they provide a means for elucidating those CNS disorders which may be linked to a dysfunction of a GABAA receptor.
Monoclonal antibodies (mAb) against a yaminobuyric acid/benzodiazepine receptor complex (GABAA/ BZR) were produced by using spleen cells from a mouse immunized with GABAA/BZR purified from bovine cerebral cortex. The mAb, most of which were of the IgG1 isotype could be divided into four groups (I-IV) specifying different antigenic structures. On immunoblots, group I mAb recognized exdusively the Mr 55,000 (3-subunit, while groups II and IV mAb recognized the Mr 50,000 a-subunit of bovine GABAA/BZR.Three of the four groups of mAb (I, m, and IV) crossreacted with both human and rat GABAA/BZR with the same subunit specificity as in bovine brain; the fourth group (II) crossreacted with human but not with the rat receptor. The binding sites for benzodiazepines as well as the high and low affinity GABA sites reside on the same structural complex as shown by immunoprecipitation. Ligand binding to these sites was not inhibited by mAb. Since quantitative immunoprecipitation of GABAA/BZR was achieved with mAb selective for either the a-or (3-subunit, both subunits occur in each individual receptor complex. The pattern of immunoblot staining suggests that the smaller a-subunit is not a processing product of the larger (3-subunit. Both a-and (3-subunits were present in all brain areas and species tested (rat cerebral cortex, cerebellum, and hippocampus; bovine cerebral cortex and cerebellum; human cerebral cortex). This suggests a uniform subunit composition of the receptor throughout the brain in contrast to earlier evidence for a heterogeneous subunit composition based on photoaffmnity labeling.
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