Properties and distribution of receptors for pituitary adenylate cyclase activating peptide (PACAP) in rat brain and spinal cord.
Cauvin. A A; Robberecht. P P; De Neef. P P; Gourlet. P P; Vandermeers. A A; Vandermeers-Piret. M C MC; Christophe. J J
Key Findings
- High‑density PACAP receptors are present in many brain regions and the spinal cord.
- Both high‑ and low‑affinity binding sites exist for PACAP‑27 and PACAP‑38, with distinct receptor subtypes (PACAP‑A and PACAP‑B).
- GRF‑1‑29 (at 1 µM) does not displace PACAP binding, indicating it does not interact with PACAP receptors.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers using GRF‑1‑29, this research suggests the peptide is unlikely to affect PACAP‑related pathways, reducing concerns about off‑target brain effects. It reinforces that GRF‑1‑29’s actions are probably limited to growth‑hormone release rather than broader neuromodulation.
Summary
The study maps where PACAP (a brain peptide) binds in the rat brain and spinal cord and shows that GRF‑1‑29 (a growth‑hormone‑releasing peptide) does not compete with PACAP for those receptors, meaning it likely has no direct effect on PACAP signaling at the tested dose.
Abstract
A high density (in the pmol/mg protein range) of specific functional receptors for PACAP (pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide) was observed in membranes from rat brain cortex, olfactory bulb, hypothalamus, hippocampus, striatum, cerebellum, pons and cervico-dorsal spinal cord, using [125I]PACAP-27 (PACAP 1-27). The tracer bound rapidly, specifically and reversibly. Competition binding curves were compatible with the coexistence, in the eight central nervous areas explored, of high and low affinity binding sites for PACAP-27 (Kd of 0.2 nM and 3.0 nM, respectively), and of only one class of binding sites for PACAP-38 (PACAP (1-38), Kd 0.2-0.9 nM). VIP inhibited only partially the binding of [125I]PACAP-27, and PHI, GRF(1-29)NH2 and secretin were ineffective at 1 microM. Chemical [125I]PACAP-27 cross-linking revealed a single specific 64 kDa protein species. In rat brain cortical membranes, saturation and competition experiments, using [125I]PACAP-38 as radioligand, indicated the presence of both high (Kd 0.13 nM) and low (Kd 8-10 nM) affinity binding sites for PACAP-38 and of low affinity (Kd 30 nM) binding sites for PACAP-27. These data taken collectively suggest the coexistence of PACAP-A receptors with a slight preference for PACAP-27 over PACAP-38 and of PACAP-B receptors that recognize PACAP-38 with a high affinity and PACAP-27 with low affinity. Both PACAP-27 and PACAP-38 stimulated adenylate cyclase with similar potency and efficacy. VIP was markedly less potent in this respect and also less efficient, except on cerebellar membranes.
Study Information
pubmed
1991
1991-08-13T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/0167-0115(91)90478-y