Gabazine (SR-95531) is a drug that acts as an antagonist at GABAAreceptors. It is used in scientific research and has no role in medicine, as it would be expected to produce convulsions if used in humans.[1]
Gabazine binds to the GABA recognition site of the receptor-channel complex and acts as an allosteric inhibitor of channel opening.[2] The net effect is to reduce GABA-mediated synaptic inhibition by inhibiting chloride flux across the cell membrane, and thus inhibiting neuronal hyperpolarization. While phasic (synaptic) inhibition is gabazine-sensitive, tonic (extrasynaptic) inhibition is relatively gabazine-insensitive.[3]
Gabazine has been found to bind to and antagonize α4βδ subunit-containing GABAA receptors, which may represent the GHB receptor.[4]
^Behrens CJ, van den Boom LP, Heinemann U (April 2007). "Effects of the GABA(A) receptor antagonists bicuculline and gabazine on stimulus-induced sharp wave-ripple complexes in adult rat hippocampus in vitro". The European Journal of Neuroscience. 25 (7): 2170–2181. doi:10.1111/j.1460-9568.2007.05462.x. PMID17419756. S2CID85328190.