In competition binding assays to determine drug activity, one measures the displacement of a standard compound by the drug to be tested from the receptor. For example, to test if the drug is a dopamine transporter ligand, one measures the displacement of the standard ligand WIN 35428 from DAT preparations. You first incubate the brain preparations containing DAT with the standard WIN ligand for a certain time (say 120 mins) and then you add your test drug and measure how much radioactivity is released ie how much WIN has been displaced from the transporter. By varying the concentration of your test compound you then determine its Ki.
Now my question is: In the specific case of transporters done this way, does that not make the test drug a releaser rather than a reuptake inhibitor. First letting the standard drug binds to the receptor by incubating for 120mins and then adding the drug to be tested. So assuming WIN 35428 binds to the same site as the Dopamine substrate, would that not make compounds tested in this way releasers rather than reputake inhibitors? Because in the case of transporters, this makes a huge difference in terms of the resulting psychopharmacological response whether the drug is acting by blocking the binding of the neurotrasmitter to its transporter in the frirst place or releasing already bound neurotransmitter: your take on this.
Now my question is: In the specific case of transporters done this way, does that not make the test drug a releaser rather than a reuptake inhibitor. First letting the standard drug binds to the receptor by incubating for 120mins and then adding the drug to be tested. So assuming WIN 35428 binds to the same site as the Dopamine substrate, would that not make compounds tested in this way releasers rather than reputake inhibitors? Because in the case of transporters, this makes a huge difference in terms of the resulting psychopharmacological response whether the drug is acting by blocking the binding of the neurotrasmitter to its transporter in the frirst place or releasing already bound neurotransmitter: your take on this.
