Mechanism of imipramine inhibition of platelet 5-hydroxytryptamine transport
- PMID: 438209
Mechanism of imipramine inhibition of platelet 5-hydroxytryptamine transport
Abstract
Plasma membrane vesicles isolated from porcine blood platelets take up approximately 8 to 15 pmol of [3H]imipramine per mg of membrane protein. This apparent binding requires Na+ in the external medium and is reversed by 5-hydroxytryptamine and fluoxetine. The apparent KD for imipramine uptake is 23 nM, which agrees well with the KI for competitive inhibition of 5-hydroxytryptamine transport by imipramine. In contrast to 5-hydroxytryptamine transport, imipramine uptake is not dependent on transmembrane Na+ and K+ gradients and is insensitive to ionophores such as nigericin and gramicidin which dissipate these gradients. Although 5-hydroxytryptamine rapidly and competitively displaces imipramine from membrane vesicles, imipramine does not cause 5-hydroxytryptamine efflux and inhibits 5-hydroxytryptamine exchange. These results are consistent with the proposal that imipramine binds to the substrate site of the 5-hydroxytryptamine transporter but cannot be transported.
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