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1.
The gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABA(A)) receptor is a pentameric ligand-gated ion channel responsible for fast synaptic inhibition in the brain. Phosphorylation of the GABA(A) receptor by serine/threonine protein kinases, at residues located in the intracellular loop between the third and fourth transmembrane domains of each subunit, can dynamically modulate receptor trafficking and function. In this study, we have assessed the effect that Ca(2+)-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase-II (CaMK-II) has on GABA(A) receptors. The intracellular application of preactivated CaMK-II failed to modulate the function of alphabeta and alphabetagamma subunit GABA(A) receptors heterologously expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK)293 cells. However, application of similarly preactivated alpha-CaMK-II significantly potentiated the amplitudes of whole-cell GABA currents recorded from rat cultured cerebellar granule neurons and from recombinant GABA(A) receptors expressed in neuroblastoma, NG108-15, cells. The modulation by alpha-CaMK-II of current amplitude depended upon the subunit composition of GABA(A) receptors. alpha-CaMK-II potentiated GABA currents recorded from alpha1beta3 and alpha1beta3gamma2 GABA(A) receptors, but was unable to functionally modulate beta2 subunit-containing receptors. Similar results were obtained from beta2 -/- mouse cerebellar granule cell cultures and from rat granule cell cultures overexpressing recombinant alpha1beta2 or alpha1beta3 GABA(A) receptors. alpha-CaMK-II had a greater effect on the modulation of GABA responses mediated by alpha1beta3gamma2 compared with alpha1beta3 receptors, indicating a possible role for the gamma2 subunit in CaMK-II-mediated phosphorylation. In conclusion, CaMK-II can upregulate the function of GABA(A) receptors expressed in neurons or a neuronal cell line that is dependent on the beta subunit co-assembled into the receptor complex.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The regional and cellular localisation of gamma-aminobutyric acid(A) (GABA(A)) receptors was investigated in the human basal ganglia using receptor autoradiography and immunohistochemical staining for five GABA(A) receptor subunits (alpha(1), alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2, 3), and gamma(2)) and other neurochemical markers. The results demonstrated that GABA(A) receptors in the striatum showed considerable subunit heterogeneity in their regional distribution and cellular localisation. High densities of GABA(A) receptors in the striosome compartment contained the alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2, 3), and gamma(2) subunits, and lower densities of receptors in the matrix compartment contained the alpha(1), alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits. Also, six different types of neurons were identified in the striatum on the basis of GABA(A) receptor subunit configuration, cellular and dendritic morphology, and chemical neuroanatomy. Three types of alpha(1) subunit immunoreactive neurons were identified: type 1, the most numerous (60%), were medium-sized aspiny neurons that were immunoreactive for parvalbumin and alpha(1), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits; type 2 (38%) were medium-sized to large aspiny neurons immunoreactive for calretinin and alpha(1), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits; and type 3 (2%) were large sparsely spiny neurons immunoreactive for alpha(1), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits. Type 4 neurons were calbindin-positive and immunoreactive for alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits. The remaining neurons were immunoreactive for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and alpha(3) subunit (type 5) or were neuropeptide Y-positive with no GABA(A) receptor subunit immunoreactivity (type 6). The globus pallidus contained three types of neurons: types 1 and 2 were large neurons and were immunoreactive for alpha(1), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits and for parvalbumin alone (type 1) or for both parvalbumin and calretinin (type 2); type 3 neurons were medium-sized and immunoreactive for calretinin and alpha(1), beta(2, 3), and gamma(2) subunits. These results show that the subunit composition of GABA(A) receptors displays considerable regional and cellular variation in the human striatum but are more homogeneous in the globus pallidus.  相似文献   

4.
GABA(A) receptors can be constructed from a range of differing subunit isoforms: alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon. Expression studies have revealed that production of GABA-gated channels is achieved after coexpression of alpha and beta subunits. The expression of a gamma subunit isoform is essential to confer benzodiazepine sensitivity on the expressed receptor. However, how the specificity of subunit interactions is controlled during receptor assembly remains unknown. Here we demonstrate that residues 58-67 within alpha subunit isoforms are important in the assembly of receptors comprised of alphabeta and alphabetagamma subunits. Deletion of these residues from the alpha1 or alpha6 subunits results in retention of either alpha subunit isoform in the endoplasmic reticulum on coexpression with the beta3, or beta3 and gamma2 subunits. Immunoprecipitation revealed that residues 58-67 mediated oligomerization of the alpha1 and beta3 subunits, but were without affect on the production of alpha/gamma complexes. Within this domain, glutamine 67 was of central importance in mediating the production of functional alpha1beta3 receptors. Mutation of this residue resulted in a drastic decrease in the cell surface expression of alpha1beta3 receptors and the resulting expression of beta3 homomers. Sucrose density gradient centrifugation revealed that this residue was important for the production of a 9S alpha1beta3 complex representing functional GABA(A) receptors. Therefore, our studies detail residues that specify GABA(A) receptor alphabeta subunit interactions. This domain, which is conserved in all alpha subunit isoforms, will therefore play a critical role in the assembly of GABA(A) receptors composed of alphabeta and alphabetagamma subunits.  相似文献   

5.
Inhibitory synapses with large and gephyrin-rich postsynaptic receptor areas are likely indicative of higher synaptic strength. We investigated the presynaptic inhibitory neurotransmitter content (GABA, glycine, or both) and the presence and subunit composition of GABA(A) and glycine postsynaptic receptors in one example of gephyrin-rich synapses to determine neurochemical characteristics that could also contribute to enhance synaptic strength. Hence, we analyzed subunit receptor expression in gephyrin patches located on Renshaw cells, a type of spinal interneuron that receives powerful excitatory and inhibitory inputs and displays many large gephyrin patches on its surface. GABA(A) and glycine receptors were almost always colocalized inside Renshaw cell gephyrin clusters. According to the subunit-immunoreactivities detected, the composition of GABA(A) receptors was inferred to be either alpha(3)beta((2or3))gamma(2), alpha(5)beta((2or3))gamma(2), alpha(3)alpha(5)beta((2or3))gamma(2) or a combination of these. The types of neurotransmitters contained inside boutons presynaptic to Renshaw cell gephyrin patches were also investigated. The majority (60-75%) of terminals presynaptic to Renshaw cell gephyrin patches contained immunocytochemical markers for GABA as well as glycine, but a proportion contained markers only for glycine. Significantly, 40% of GABA(A) receptor clusters were opposed to presynaptic boutons that contained only glycinergic markers. We postulate that GABA and glycine corelease, and the presence of alpha3-containing GABA(A) receptors can enhance the postsynaptic current and contribute to strengthen inhibitory input on Renshaw cells. In addition, a certain degree of imprecision in the localization of postsynaptic GABA(A) receptors in regard to GABA release sites onto adult Renshaw cells was also found.  相似文献   

6.
Electrophysiological studies have demonstrated that gamma-aminobutyric acid receptors type A (GABA(A)) mediate important information processing in the retinas of salamander and other vertebrates. The pharmacology and physiology of GABA(A) receptors depend on their subunit composition. We studied the localization of GABA(A) receptor subunit isoforms alpha(1), alpha(3), beta(1), beta(2/3) (antibody BD-17 and 62-3G1), gamma(1), and gamma(2) in salamander retina with immunocytochemical methods. All three beta-subunit antibodies labeled similarly in the outer retina, especially the inner segments and synaptic terminals of rod photoreceptors (identified with protein kinase C). Somatic labeling was observed in cell bodies of some horizontal cells, bipolar cells, amacrine cells, and cells in the ganglion cell layer (GCL). Puncta were present throughout the inner plexiform layer (IPL) for beta(1) and 62-3G1, but not for BD-17. alpha(1)-immunoreactivity (IR) stained a population of presumed OFF rod-dominated bipolar cells, including dendrites, soma, and axon terminals in the distal IPL. A subtype of GABAergic amacrine cell also expressed alpha(1)-IR, with puncta sparsely distributed at the distal and proximal margins of the IPL. Both the OPL and IPL were labeled throughout for alpha(3)-IR, as opposed to the narrow distribution of alpha(1)-IR in the IPL, suggesting that the two alpha-subunits are localized at different synaptic sites. Punctate gamma(1)-IR was observed in the OPL and IPL, whereas gamma(2) was most prominent in cone photoreceptors (identified with calbindin), including the terminal telodendria, in cell bodies of some horizontal cells, amacrine cells, cells in the GCL, and less intensely in the IPL. In addition, several subunits were present in Müller cells. The differential labeling suggests the existence of GABA(A) receptor subtypes with different subunit compositions that mediate multiple GABAergic functions in salamander retina.  相似文献   

7.
Facial nerve axotomy is a good model for studying neuronal plasticity and regeneration in the peripheral nervous system. In the present study, we investigated the effect of axotomy on the different subunits of GABA(A) and GABA(B) receptors of facial motoneurons. The facial nerve trunk was unilaterally sectioned and operated rats were sacrificed at 1, 3, 8, 30, and 60 days later. mRNAs coding for alpha1, beta2, and gamma2 of GABA(A) receptors and for GABA(1B) and GABA(B2) receptors were down-regulated by axotomy. This decrease began as soon as 1 or 3 days after axotomy, and the minimum was 8 days post-lesion; the mRNA levels remained lower than normal at day post-lesion 60. The abundance of mRNAs coding for the three other alpha2, beta1, and beta3 facial subunits of GABA(A) receptors and for the pre-synaptic GABA(B1A) subunit remained unchanged during the period 1-8 days post-lesion. Immunohistochemistry using specific antibodies against alpha1, gamma2 subunits of GABA(A) and against GABA(B2) subunits confirmed this down-regulation. Colchicine treatment and blockade of action potential by tetrodotoxin significantly decreased GABA(A)alpha1 immunoreactivity in the axotomized facial nucleus after 7 days. Finally, muscle destruction by cardiotoxin or facial palsy induced by botulinum toxin failed to change GABA(A)alpha1 subunit expression. Our data demonstrate that axotomy strongly reduced the amounts of alpha1, beta2, and gamma2 subunits of GABA(A) receptors and B(1B) and B(2) subunits of GABA(B) receptors in the axotomized facial motoneurons. The loss of GABA(A)alpha1 subunit was most probably induced by both the loss of trophic factors transported from the periphery and a positive injury signal. It also seems to be dependent on activity disruption.  相似文献   

8.
To facilitate the discovery of novel compounds that modulate human GABA(A) receptor function, we have developed a high throughput functional assay using a fluorescence imaging system. L(tk-) cells expressing combinations of human GABA(A) receptor subunits were incubated with the pH-sensitive dye 2',7'bis-(2-carboxyethyl)-5-(and 6)-carboxyfluorescein, then washed and placed in a 96-well real-time fluorescence plate reader. In buffer adjusted to pH 6.9 there was a robust and persisting acidification response to addition of GABA, which was antagonised by the GABA(A) receptor antagonist bicuculline. The concentration-response relationship for GABA was modulated by allosteric ligands, including benzodiazepine (BZ) site agonists and inverse agonists. The effects of BZ site ligands on the pH response to GABA for receptors containing alpha1beta3gamma2, alpha3beta3gamma2 or alpha5beta3gamma2 subunits were well correlated with results from electrophysiological studies on the same receptor subunit combinations expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Most modulatory compounds tested were found to be relatively unselective across the three subunit combinations tested; however, some showed subtype-dependent efficacy, such as diazepam, which had highest agonist effects on the alpha3beta3gamma2 subtype, substantial but lesser agonism on alpha1beta3gamma2 and still substantial but the least agonism on alpha5beta3gamma2. This indicates that the alpha subunit within the recombinant receptor expressed in L(tk-) cells can affect the efficacy of the response to some BZ compounds. Inhibitors of Na(+)/Cl(-) cotransport, anion/anion exchange and the gastric type of H(+)/K(+) ATPase potently inhibited GABA-evoked acidification, indicating that multiple transporters are involved in the GABA-evoked pH change. This novel fluorescence-based high throughput functional assay allows the rapid characterization of allosteric ligands acting on human GABA(A) receptors.  相似文献   

9.
The cDNA library screening strategy was used to identify the genes encoding for GABA(A) receptor subunits in the rat hippocampus during development. With this technique, genes encoding eleven GABA(A) receptor subunits were identified. The alpha5 subunit was by far the most highly expressed, followed by the gamma2, alpha2 and alpha4 subunits respectively. The expression of the beta2, alpha1, gamma1, beta1 and beta3 subunits was moderate, although that of the alpha3 and delta subunits was weak. In situ hybridization experiments, using digoxigenin-labeled cRNA probes, confirmed that the delta subunit was expressed in the neonatal as well as in the adult hippocampus, and is likely to form functional receptors in association with other subunits of the GABA(A) receptor. When the more sensitive RT-PCR approach was used, the gamma3 subunit was also detected, suggesting that this subunit is present in the hippocampus during development but at low levels of expression. The insertion of the delta subunit into functional GABA(A) receptors may enhance the efficacy of GABA in the immediate postnatal period when this amino acid is still exerting a depolarizing and excitatory action.  相似文献   

10.
Mitral and tufted cells of the olfactory bulb receive strong gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-ergic input and express GABA(A) receptors containing the alpha1 or alpha3 subunit. The distribution of these subunits was investigated in rats via multiple immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy, by using gephyrin as a marker of GABAergic synapses. A prominent immunoreactivity was detected throughout the external plexiform layer (EPL) and glomerular layer (GL). However, although staining for the alpha1 subunit was uniform throughout the EPL, that of the alpha3 subunit was most intense in the outer one-third of this layer. All mitral cells were positive for the alpha1 subunit. In contrast, the alpha3 subunit was restricted to a subpopulation of mitral cells, many of which also expressed calretinin. Likewise, external tufted cells could be subdivided into distinct groups, either singly labeled for the alpha1 or alpha3 subunit or doubly labeled. At the subcellular level, staining for the alpha1 and alpha3 subunits was punctate, forming clusters partially colocalized with gephyrin. However, many alpha1- and alpha3-positive clusters lacked gephyrin, suggesting the existence of either nonsynaptic GABA(A) receptor clusters or synaptic receptors not associated with gephyrin. Quantitative analysis of colocalization among the three markers in the inner EPL, outer EPL, and GL revealed considerable heterogeneity, suggestive of a differential organization of GABA(A) receptor subtypes in the apical and basal dendrites of mitral and tufted cells. Together these results reveal a complex subunit organization of GABA(A) receptors in the olfactory bulb and suggest that mitral and tufted cells participate in different synaptic circuits controlled by distinct GABA(A) receptor subtypes.  相似文献   

11.
The first mutations of the GABA(A) receptor channel linked to familial epilepsy in humans were reported in the gamma2L subunit. When expressed in Xenopus oocytes, the gamma2 subunit R43Q mutation abolished current enhancement by the benzodiazepine, diazepam, and the gamma2 subunit K289M mutation decreased current amplitudes. In this study, single channel recording and concentration jump techniques were used to evaluate the effects of these mutations on GABA(A) receptor currents from receptors expressed in human embryonic kidney cells. When co-expressed with alpha1 and beta3 subunits, the mutated gamma2 subunits did not alter current activation rates or rates or extent of desensitization during prolonged (400 ms) GABA application (1 mM). Deactivation following brief (5 ms) or prolonged (400 ms) GABA application was accelerated for the K289M, but not the R43Q mutation. Single channel analysis showed shorter mean open duration, suggesting that the faster deactivation was likely caused by altered gating efficacy. Interestingly, the R43Q mutation did not alter diazepam potentiation. However, significantly smaller current amplitudes were observed that were not explained by decreased single channel conductance or open time, suggesting this mutation resulted in reduced surface expression of functional receptors. These two gamma mutations likely produce disinhibition and familial epilepsy by distinct mechanisms, suggesting that maintenance of normal neuronal inhibition depends on both the peak amplitude of IPSCs and their time course.  相似文献   

12.
Detailed knowledge of the anatomical distribution of different GABA(A) receptor subunits is crucial for understanding the physiological actions of GABA in individual brain areas and for developing drugs acting through the individual GABA receptor subtypes. Since the amygdala is a key brain structure in the processing of emotional information with distinct functions in each nucleus, GABA(A) receptors in the amygdala are an important target of treatment for emotional disorders. In this study, we analyzed by quantitative RT-PCR the expression levels of all GABA(A) receptor subunits in distinct nuclei of the amygdala, the central (Ce) and the lateral/basolateral (LA/BLA) amygdala. We found the strongest expression of the gamma(2) subunit mRNA in both the Ce and LA/BLA, modest expressions of alpha(1), alpha(2) and alpha(3) mRNAs in the LA/BLA and alpha(2) and gamma(1) mRNAs in the Ce, and weak expressions of alpha(6), rho(2) and rho(3) mRNAs in both regions. We further revealed the significantly different expressions of alpha(1), alpha(3), alpha(5), gamma(1), gamma(2), delta, epsilon and theta subunit mRNAs in the Ce and LA/BLA. Differences in the expression levels of GABA(A) receptor subunits suggest different sensitivity to a variety of drugs including benzodiazepines and anesthetics in amygdala nuclei with distinct functions.  相似文献   

13.
Ishii H  Kang Y 《Neuroreport》2002,13(17):2265-2269
We studied the molecular basis of GABA(A) receptor (GABA(A)R) expressed in the rat mesencephalic trigeminal (Vmes) sensory neuron using the immunohistochemical and single-cell RT-PCR methods. Using anti-GABA(A)R alpha2 subunit antibody, abundant GABA(A)Rs were visualized in Vmes neurons. A single-cell RT-PCR clarified that GABA(A)Rs expressed in Vmes neurons were predominantly composed of alpha2, alpha5, beta1, gamma1 and gamma2 subunits. Novel splicing variants in both alpha5 and beta1 were found invariably, and they lacked multiple amino acid sequence in the extracellular N-terminal portion. Known functional roles of both beta and gamma subunits in regulating the expression at the cell surface suggest that the unique subunit composition of GABA(A)Rs may be involved in the characteristics of GABA(A) response in Vmes neurons.  相似文献   

14.
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) plays a central role in regulating development and function of the reproductive axis, and its secretion is known to be influenced by glutamate and GABA. In the present study, we used gene microarrays and RT-PCR to compare the expression profiles of glutamate and GABA receptor subunits in three immortalized GnRH cell lines: GT1-1, GT1-7, and Gn10. All of these cell lines expressed the AMPA glutamate receptor subunit genes GluR2 and GluR4, but only the GT1-1 and GT1-7 cells expressed the kainate glutamate receptor subunit gene KA2. Additionally, GluRdelta2, a subunit that can form heteromeric receptors with kainate and AMPA subunits, was present in GT1-1 and Gn10 cells but not in GT1-7 cells. Genes encoding the GABA(A) receptor alpha3, beta2, beta3, epsilon, and pi subunits, as well as the GABA(B) receptor 1 subunit, were evident in all three cell lines. However, the gene encoding the expression of GABA(A) receptor gamma subunit was noticeably absent. Taken together, these data demonstrate comprehensive screening of neurotransmitter receptor genes in a controlled neuronal culture system, and reveal novel features.  相似文献   

15.
The delta subunit is a novel subunit of the pentameric gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)(A) receptor that conveys special pharmacological and functional properties to recombinant receptors and may be particularly important in mediating tonic inhibition. Mice that lack the delta subunit have been produced by gene-targeting technology, and these mice were studied with immunohistochemical and immunoblot methods to determine whether changes in GABA(A) receptors were limited to deletion of the delta subunit or whether alterations in other GABA(A) receptor subunits were also present in the delta subunit knockout (delta-/-) mice. Immunohistochemical studies of wild-type mice confirmed the restricted distribution of the delta subunit in the forebrain. Regions with moderate to high levels of delta subunit expression included thalamic relay nuclei, caudate-putamen, molecular layer of the dentate gyrus, and outer layers of the cerebral cortex. Virtually no delta subunit labeling was evident in adjacent regions, such as the thalamic reticular nucleus, hypothalamus, and globus pallidus. Comparisons of the expression of other subunits in delta-/- and wild-type mice demonstrated substantial changes in the alpha4 and gamma2 subunits of the GABA(A) receptor in the delta-/- mice. gamma2 Subunit expression was increased, whereas alpha4 subunit expression was decreased in delta-/- mice. Importantly, alterations of both the alpha4 and the gamma2 subunits were confined primarily to brain regions that normally expressed the delta subunit. This suggests that the additional subunit changes are directly linked to loss of the delta subunit and could reflect local changes in subunit composition and function of GABA(A) receptors in delta-/- mice.  相似文献   

16.
Expression of GABA(A) receptor (GABA(A)R) alpha(1), alpha(2), beta(2), gamma(1), gamma(2L) and gamma(2S) subunit mRNA was examined in three cell classes in the central nucleus of the rat inferior colliculus (CNIC). GABA(A)R alpha(1) and gamma(2L) subunit mRNA expression was greatest in large cells (over 25 microm long diameter), intermediate in medium sized cells (15 to 25 microm long diameter) and lowest in small cells (10 to 15 microm long diameter). GABA(A)R gamma(2S) and alpha(2) subunits had the opposite pattern, highest in the small cells, intermediate in medium cells and lowest in large cells. GABA(A)R beta(2) was significantly lower in small cells than the two other classes, while differences between large and medium cells were not significant. GABA(A)R gamma(1) subunit mRNAs expression was not above background in any of the three cell types assessed. The expression of GABA(A)R subunits suggests that cell classes in the rat CNIC may differ in their response to GABA and GABAergic drugs.  相似文献   

17.
Targeted deletion of the alpha1 subunit gene results in a profound loss of gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABA(A)) receptors in adult mouse brain but has only moderate behavioral consequences. Mutant mice exhibit several adaptations in GABA(A) receptor subunit expression, as measured by Western blotting. By using immunohistochemistry, we investigated here whether these adaptations serve to replace the missing alpha1 subunit or represent compensatory changes in neurons that normally express these subunits. We focused on cerebellum and thalamus and distinguished postsynaptic GABA(A) receptor clusters by their colocalization with gephyrin. In the molecular layer of the cerebellum, alpha1 subunit clusters colocalized with gephyrin disappeared from Purkinje cell dendrites of mutant mice, whereas alpha3 subunit/gephyrin clusters, presumably located on dendrites of Golgi interneurons, increased sevenfold, suggesting profound network reorganization in the absence of the alpha1 subunit. In thalamus, a prominent increase in alpha3 and alpha4 subunit immunoreactivity was evident, but without change in regional distribution. In the ventrobasal complex, which contains primarily postsynaptic alpha1- and extrasynaptic alpha4-GABA(A) receptors, the loss of alpha1 subunit was accompanied by disruption of gamma2 subunit and gephyrin clustering, in spite of the increased alpha4 subunit expression. However, in the reticular nucleus, which lacks alpha1-GABA(A) receptors in wild-type mice, postsynaptic alpha3/gamma2/gephyrin clusters were unaffected. These results demonstrate that adaptive responses in the brain of alpha1(0/0) mice involve reorganization of GABAergic circuits and not merely replacement of the missing alpha1 subunit by another receptor subtype. In addition, clustering of gephyrin at synaptic sites in cerebellum and thalamus appears to be dependent on expression of a GABA(A) receptor subtype localized postsynaptically.  相似文献   

18.
Gamma-aminobutyric acid(A) (GABA(A)) receptors (GABA(A)R) are inhibitory heteropentameric chloride ion channels comprising a variety of subunits and are localized at postsynaptic sites within the central nervous system. In this study we present the first detailed immunohistochemical investigation on the regional, cellular, and subcellular localisation of alpha(1), alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits of the GABA(A)R in the human substantia nigra (SN). The SN comprises two major regions, the SN pars compacta (SNc) consisting of dopaminergic projection neurons, and the SN pars reticulata (SNr) consisting of GABAergic parvalbumin-positive projection neurons. The results of our single- and double-labeling studies demonstrate that in the SNr GABA(A) receptors contain alpha(1), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits and are localized in a weblike network over the cell soma, dendrites, and spines of SNr parvalbumin-positive nonpigmented neurons. By contrast, GABA(A)Rs on the SNc dopaminergic pigmented neurons contain predominantly alpha(3) and gamma(2) subunits; however there is GABA(A)R heterogeneity in the SNc, with a small subpopulation (6.5%) of pigmented SNc neurons additionally containing alpha(1) and beta(2,3) GABA(A)R subunits. Also, in the SNr, parvalbumin-positive terminals are adjacent to GABA(A)R on the soma and proximal dendrites of SNr neurons, whereas linear arrangements of substance P-positive terminals are adjacent to GABA(A) receptors on all regions of the dendritic tree. These results show marked GABA(A)R subunit hetereogeneity in the SN, suggesting that GABA exerts quite different effects on pars compacta and pars reticulata neurons in the human SN via GABA(A) receptors of different subunit configurations.  相似文献   

19.
Hevers W  Korpi ER  Lüddens H 《Neuroreport》2000,11(18):4103-4106
Transgenic mice deficient in the alpha6 subunit of the GABA(A) receptor show reduced levels of the delta subunit protein and an altered GABA(A) receptor pharmacology, suggesting selective assembly mechanisms. Delta reduced the binding of [3H]Ro15-4513 or t-butylbicyclophosphoro[35S]thionate and, to a lesser extent, [3H]muscimol to recombinant alpha1beta1gamma2(delta), alpha4beta1gamma2(delta) and alpha6beta1gamma2(delta) receptors, paralleled by diminished GABA-evoked maximal currents in electrophysiological recordings for the latter one. The delta subunit gave rise to a lower EC50 for GABA and a slowed desensitization indicating its assembly in alpha6beta2delta, alpha6beta1gamma2delta and alpha6beta2gamma2delta receptors. The data show that the delta subunits assemble in various functional GABA(A) receptor subtypes in vitro to reduce GABA-evoked maximal currents and ligand binding, but increase the potency for GABA.  相似文献   

20.
Clustering of GABA(A) receptor alpha1, alpha6, beta2, and gamma2 subunit genes on mouse chromosome 11/human chromosome 5 may have functional significance for coordinating expression patterns, but until now there has been no evidence for cross-talk between the genes. However, altering the structure of the alpha6 gene, specifically expressed in the cerebellum, with neomycin gene insertions in two different experiments unexpectedly reduced the expression of the widespread alpha1 and beta2 genes in the forebrain. There were corresponding reductions in the levels of alpha1 and beta2 subunit proteins and in autoradiographic ligand binding densities to GABA(A) receptors in the forebrain of alpha6-/- mice. The gamma2 mRNA level was not changed, nor were beta3 and delta mRNAs. The data suggest that elements in the neo gene may have an influence over long distances in the GABA(A) subunit gene complex on as yet undefined structures coordinating the expression of the alpha1 and beta2 genes.  相似文献   

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