[Studying specific effects of nootropic drugs on glutamate receptors in the rat brain].
Firstova. Iu Iu IuIu; Vasil'eva. E V EV; Kovalev. G I GI
Key Findings
- Semax moderately competes with a ligand for mGlu receptor sites (IC50 ≈ 33 µM).
- Nooglutil strongly blocks AMPA receptors (IC50 ≈ 6.4 µM) while noopept does so much weaker (IC50 ≈ 80 µM).
- Dimebon shows moderate competition at NMDA receptor channel sites (IC50 ≈ 59 µM).
- Piracetam, phenotropil, meclofenoxate, and pantocalcine showed no measurable effect on glutamate receptor binding.
Practical Outcomes
- Semax may influence metabotropic glutamate signaling, but the effective concentration is far above typical therapeutic levels, so it doesn’t currently suggest a new dosing strategy. For biohackers, the result is a modest mechanistic insight rather than a direct, actionable protocol.
Summary
The study shows that the peptide drug semax can bind to metabotropic glutamate receptors in rat brain tissue at micromolar levels, indicating a possible direct effect on these brain receptors, but the concentrations needed are much higher than what’s usually achieved with normal dosing, so the finding is mostly of scientific interest rather than a clear guide for everyday use.
Abstract
The influence of nootropic drugs of different groups (piracetam, phenotropil, nooglutil, noopept, semax, meclofenoxate, pantocalcine, and dimebon) on the binding of the corresponding ligands to AMPA, NMDA, and mGlu receptors of rat brain has been studied by the method of radio-ligand binding in vitro. It is established that nooglutil exhibits pharmacologically significant competition with a selective agonist of AMPA receptors ([G-3H]Ro 48-8587) for the receptor binding sites (with IC50 = 6.4 +/- 0.2 microM), while the competition of noopept for these receptor binding sites was lower by an order of magnitude (IC50 = 80 +/- 5.6 microM). The heptapeptide drug semax was moderately competitive with [G-3H]LY 354740 for mGlu receptor sites (IC50 = 33 +/- 2.4 microM). Dimebon moderately influenced the specific binding of the ligand of NMDA receptor channel ([G-3H]MK-801) at IC50 = 59 +/- 3.6 microM. Nootropic drugs of the pyrrolidone group (piracetam, phenotropil) as well as meclofenoxate, pantocalcine (pantogam) in a broad rage of concentrations (10(-4)-10(-10) M) did not affect the binding of the corresponding ligands to glutamate receptors (IC50 100 pM). Thus, the direct neurochemical investigation was used for the first time to qualitatively characterize the specific binding sites for nooglutil and (to a lower extent) noopept on AMPA receptors, for semax on metabotropic glutamate receptors, and for dimebon on the channel region of NMDA receptors. The results are indicative of a selective action of some nootropes on the glutamate family.
Study Information
pubmed
2011