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The essential oil from Tagetes minuta L. modulates the binding of [ 3 H]flunitrazepam to crude membranes from chick brain
Author(s) -
García Daniel A.,
Perillo María A.,
Zygadlo Julio A.,
Martijena Irene D.
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
lipids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.601
H-Index - 120
eISSN - 1558-9307
pISSN - 0024-4201
DOI - 10.1007/bf02536610
Subject(s) - membrane , chemistry , dissociation constant , allosteric regulation , flunitrazepam , chromatography , stereochemistry , biophysics , biochemistry , benzodiazepine , biology , enzyme , receptor
The hypothesis that the essential oil from Tagetes minuta L. can interact with biological membranes was investigated by assessing its ability of perturbing the binding of a benzodiazepine [flunitrazepam (FNTZ)] to crude membranes from chick brains. The essential oil from T. minuta L. inhibited [ 3 H]FNTZ specific binding to chick brain membranes. These values were obtained from the analysis of the saturation curve for the kinetic parameters: dissociation equilibrium constant (K d )=2.47±0.32 nM, maximal binding (B max )=556±5 fmoles/mg protein, and Hill coefficient (n)=1.00±0.07 in the absence, and K d =6.73±1.4 nM, B max =583±69 fmoles/mg protein, and n=1.02±0.08 in the presence of 29 μg/mL of essential oil. The essential oil could self‐aggregate with a critical micellar concentration (CMC) of 60 μg/mL. The marked increase in [ 3 H]FNTZ nonspecific binding starting at 60 μg of essence per mL was due to that phenomenon and revealed the ability of self‐aggregated structures to interact with membranes. [ 3 H]FNTZ specific binding decrement as a function of essence concentration cannot be ascribed merely to oil's micelles ability of trapping the lipophilic radioligand molecules, because the discontinuous behavior that characterizes a monomer‐aggregate phase transition was not shown. Oil's components might behave as competitive inhibitors or allosteric modulators of FNTZ specific binding. However, their ability to increase FNTZ nonspecific binding at concentrations below oil's CMC suggests that this effect may be due to oil's partitioning into the lipid bilayer. This latter phenomenon would induce an increment in membrane fluidity and a change on FNTZ binding site toward a lower affinity conformation. Therefore, the essential oil components can interact with brain membranes either as monomers, by partitioning into the lipid bilayer, or as self‐aggregated structures, through an adsorption to the membrane surface.