47 resultados para Nmda Receptor-channel


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Background and purpose: Voltage-dependent block by Mg2+ is a cardinal feature of NMDA receptors which acts as a coincidence detector to prevent the receptor from over-activation. Inhibition of NMDA receptor currents by 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) indicated that 5-HT, similar to Mg2+, binds within the membrane electric field. In the present study, we assessed whether point mutations of critical asparagine residues located within the selectivity filter of NR1 and NR2A subunits of NMDA receptor-channel affect voltage-dependent block by 5-HT. Experimental approach: The mode of action of 5-HT and Mg2+ on wild-type and mutated NMDA receptor-channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes was investigated using the two-electrode voltage clamp recording technique. Key results: The mutation within the NR1 subunit NR1(N0S or N0Q) strongly reduced the voltage dependent block by 5-HT and increased the IC50. The corresponding mutations within the NR2 subunits NR2A(N0Q or N + 1Q) reduced the block by 5-HT to a lesser extent. This is in contrast to the block produced by external Mg2+ where a substitution at the NR2A(N0) and NR2A(N + 1) sites but not at the NR1(N0) site significantly reduced Mg2+ block. Conclusion and implications: The block of NMDA receptor-channels by 5-HT depends on the NR1-subunit asparagine residue and to a lesser extent on the NR2A-subunit asparagine residues. These data suggest that the interaction of 5-HT with functionally important residues in a narrow constriction of the pore of the NMDA receptor-channel provides a significant barrier to ionic fluxes through the open channel due to energetic factors governed by chemical properties of the binding site and the electric field.

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1 The effect of 5-HT and related indolealkylamines on heteromeric recombinant NMDA receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes was investigated using the two-electrode voltage-clamp recording technique. 2 In the absence of external Mg2+ ions, 5-HT inhibited NMDA receptor-mediated currents in a concentration-dependent manner. The inhibitory effect of 5-HT was independent of the NR1a and NR2 subunit combination. 3 The inhibition of glutamate-evoked currents by 5-HT was use- and voltage-dependent. The voltage sensitivity of inhibition for NR1a+NR2 subunit combinations by 5-HT was similar, exhibiting an e-fold change per similar to20 mV, indicating that 5-HT binds to a site deep within the membrane electric field. 4 The inhibition of the open NMDA receptor by external Mg2+ and 5-HT was not additive, suggesting competition between Mg2+ and 5-HT for a binding site in the NMDA receptor channel. The concentration-dependence curves for 5-HT and 5-methoxytryptamine (5-MeOT) inhibition of NMDA receptor-mediated currents are shifted to the right in the presence of external Mg2+. 5 The related indolealkylamines inhibited glutamate-evoked currents with the following order of inhibitory potency: 5-MeOT = 5-methyltryptamine > tryptamine > 7-methyltryptamine > 5-HTmuch greater than tryptophan melatonin. 6 Taken together, these data suggest that 5-HT and related compounds can attenuate glutamate-mediated excitatory synaptic responses and may provide a basis for drug treatment of excitoxic neurodegeneration.

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Previous work had shown that the ratio of NMDA receptor NR1 subunit mRNA transcripts containing an N-terminal splice cassette to those that do not is markedly lower in regions of the Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain that are susceptible to pathological damage, compared with spared regions in the same cases or homotropic regions in controls. To elucidate the origins of this difference in proportionate expression, we measured the absolute levels of each of the eight NR1 transcripts by quantitative internally standardized RT-PCR assay. Expression of transcripts with the cassette was strongly attenuated in susceptible regions of Alzheimer's brain, whereas expression of non-cassette transcripts differed little from that in controls. The expression of other NR1 splice variants was not associated with pathology relevant to disease status, although some combinations of splice cassettes were well maintained in AD cases. The population profile of NR1 transcripts in occipital cortex differed from the profiles in other brain regions studied. Western analysis confirmed that the expression of protein isoforms containing the N-terminal peptide was very low in susceptible areas of the Alzheimer's brain. Cells that express NR1 subunits with the N-terminal cassette may be selectively vulnerable to toxicity in AD.

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protein modulation of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor ( nAChR) channels in rat intrinsic cardiac ganglia was examined using dialyzed whole-cell and excised membrane patch-recording configurations. Cell dialysis with GTP gamma S increased the agonist affinity of nAChRs, resulting in a potentiation of nicotine-evoked whole-cell currents at low concentrations. ACh- and nicotine-evoked current amplitudes were increased approximately twofold in the presence of GTP gamma S. In inside-out membrane patches, the open probability (NPo) of nAChR-mediated unitary currents was reversibly increased fourfold after bath application of 0.2mM GTP gamma S relative to control but was unchanged in the presence of GDP gamma S. The modulation of nAChR-mediated whole- cell currents was agonist specific; currents evoked by the cholinergic agonists ACh, nicotine, and 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium iodide, but not cytisine or choline, were potentiated in the presence of GTP gamma S. The direct interaction between G-protein subunits and nAChRs was examined by bath application of either G(o)alpha or G beta gamma subunits to inside-out membrane patches and in glutathione S-transferase pull-down and coimmunoprecipitation experiments. Bath application of 50 nM G beta gamma increased the open probability of ACh- activated single-channel currents fivefold, whereas G(o)alpha( 50 nM) produced no significant increase in NPo. Neuronal nAChR subunits alpha 3-alpha 5 and alpha 2 exhibited a positive interaction with G(o)alpha and G beta gamma, whereas beta 4 and alpha 7 failed to interact with either of the G-protein subunits. These results provide evidence for a direct interaction between nAChR and G-protein subunits, underlying the increased open probability of ACh-activated single-channel currents and potentiation of nAChR-mediated whole-cell currents in parasympathetic neurons of rat intrinsic cardiac ganglia.

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We measured the effects of ethanol on glutamate receptor levels in the hippocampus of neonatal Wistar rats using a vapor chamber model. Two control groups were used; a normal suckle group and a maternal separation group. Levels of NMDA receptors were not significantly altered in ethanol-treated animals compared to the normal suckle control group, as shown by [H-3]MK-801 binding and Western blot analysis. However, MK-801 binding and NR1 subunit immunoreactivity were greatly reduced in the hippocampus of separation control animals. Neither ethanol treatment nor maternal separation altered levels of GluR1 or GluR2(4). These results have serious implications for the importance of maternal contact for normal brain development.

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The inherent neurotoxic potential ofthe endogenous excitatory amino acid glutamate, may be causally related to the pathogenesis ofAD neurodegeneration disorders. Neuronal excitotoxicity is conceivably mediated by the N-methyl-D-aspartate-(NMDA)-Ca2+- ionotropic receptor. NMDA receptors exist as multimeric complexes comprising proteins from two families – NR1 and NR2(A-D). The polyamines, spermine and spermidine bind to, and modulate NMDA receptor efficacy via interaction with exon 5, an alternatively-spliced, 21 amino acid, N-terminal cassette. AD associated cognitive impairment may therefore occur via subunitspecific NMDA receptor dysfunction effecting regional selectivity of neuronal degradation.

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Excitotoxicity may have role in neuronal death in many disorders including Alzheimer disease. Sensitivity of a cell to excitotoxicity may depend on its subtype of NMDA receptors. A drug that selectively reduced such overstimulation could limit susceptibility to damage. We examined the pharmacology of NMDA receptor subtypes in response to the agonists glutamate and glycine, the modulator spermine, and the antagonists conantokin-G and its Ala(7) analogue in Xenopus oo¨ cytes. Cells were injected with capped RNA coding for NMDA NR1 and NR2 subunits. Membrane currents induced by rapid application of agonists were recorded under two-electrode voltageclamp. Conantokins were bath-applied to give cumulative concentration responses. Spermine gave slightly different shifts in glutamate affinity when different NR1 splice variants were combined with NR2A subunits. In the presence of spermine, both an increase and a decrease in affinity for glutamate were seen with differing subunit combinations that could not be explained by the absence or presence of the N-terminal 23-amino-acid insert.

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The inherent neurotoxic potential ofthe endogenous excitatory amino acid glutamate, may be causally related to the pathogenesis ofAD neurodegeneration disorders. Neuronal excitotoxicity is conceivably mediated by the N-methyl-D-aspartate-(NMDA)-Ca2+- ionotropic receptor. NMDA receptors exist as multimeric complexes comprising proteins from two families – NR1 and NR2(A-D). The polyamines, spermine and spermidine bind to, and modulate NMDA receptor efficacy via interaction with exon 5, an alternatively-spliced, 21 amino acid, N-terminal cassette. ADassociated cognitive impairment may therefore occur via subunitspecific NMDA receptor dysfunction effecting regional selectivity ofneuronal degradation. Total RNA was prepared from pathologically spared and susceptible regions from AD cases and matched controls. Quantitation was performed using standard curve methodology in which a known amount ofa synthetic ribonucleic acid competitor deletion construct was co-amplified against total RNA. Expression profile analysis oftwo NR1 mRNA subsets has revealed significant differences in NR11XX mRNA levels in cingulate gyrus, P.

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, accounting for 60-70% of cases in subjects over 65 years of age. Several postulates have been put forward that relate AD neuropathology to intellectual and functional impairment. These range from free-radical-induced damage, through cholinergic dysfunction, to beta-amyloid-induced toxicity. However, therapeutic strategies aimed at improving the cognitive symptoms of patients via choline supplementation, cholinergic stimulation or beta-amyloid vaccination, have largely failed. A growing body of evidence suggests that perturbations in systems using the excitatory amino acid L-glutamate (L-Glu) may underlie the pathogenic mechanisms of (e.g.) hypoxia-ischemia, epilepsy, and chronic neurodegenerative disorders such as Huntington's disease and AD. Almost all neurons in the CNS carry the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) subtype of ionotropic L-glutamate receptors, which can mediate post-synaptic Ca2+ influx. Excitotoxicity resulting from excessive activation of NMDA receptors may enhance the localized vulnerability of neurons in a manner consistent with AD neuropathology, as a consequence of an altered regional distribution of NMDA receptor subtypes. This review discusses mechanisms for the involvement of the NMDA receptor complex and its interaction with polyamines in the pathogenesis of AD. NMDA receptor antagonists have potential for the therapeutic amelioration of AD. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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We have previously shown that the expression of NMDA receptor NR1 subunit mRNA splice variants in Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain varies according to regional susceptibility to pathological damage. Here we investigated the expression of the modulatory NR2 subunits of the NMDA receptor using quantitative RT-PCR to assay all NR2 isoforms. Significantly lower expression of NR2A and NR2B transcripts was found in susceptible regions of AD brain, whereas expression of NR2C and NR2D transcripts did not differ from that in controls. Western blot analysis confirmed a lower expression of the NR2A and NR2B isoforms at the protein level. The results suggest that NR2 subunit composition may modulate NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity. NMDA receptor dysfunction might give rise to the regionally selective pattern of neuronal loss that is characteristic of AD.