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1.
Since the discovery of the major excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters and their receptors in the brain, many have deliberated over their likely structures and how these may relate to function. This was initially satisfied by the determination of the first amino acid sequences of the Cys-loop receptors that recognized acetylcholine, serotonin, GABA, and glycine, followed later by similar determinations for the glutamate receptors, comprising non-NMDA and NMDA subtypes. The last decade has seen a rapid advance resulting in the first structures of Cys-loop receptors, related bacterial and molluscan homologs, and glutamate receptors, determined down to atomic resolution. This now provides a basis for determining not just the complete structures of these important receptor classes, but also for understanding how various domains and residues interact during agonist binding, receptor activation, and channel opening, including allosteric modulation. This article reviews our current understanding of these mechanisms for the Cys-loop and glutamate receptor families.To understand how neurons communicate with each other requires a fundamental understanding of neurotransmitter receptor structure and function. Neurotransmitter-gated ion channels, also known as ionotropic receptors, are responsible for fast synaptic transmission. They decode chemical signals into electrical responses, thereby transmitting information from one neuron to another. Their suitability for this important task relies on their ability to respond very rapidly to the transient release of neurotransmitter to affect cell excitability.In the central nervous system (CNS), fast synaptic transmission results in two main effects: neuronal excitation and inhibition. For excitation, the principal neurotransmitter involved is glutamate, which interacts with ionotropic (integral ion channel) and metabotropic (second-messenger signaling) receptors. The ionotropic glutamate receptors are permeable to cations, which directly cause excitation. Acetylcholine and serotonin can also activate specific cation-selective ionotropic receptors to affect neuronal excitation. For controlling cell excitability, inhibition is important, and this is mediated by the neurotransmitters GABA and glycine, causing an increased flux of anions. GABA predominates as the major inhibitory transmitter throughout the CNS, whereas glycine is of greater importance in the spinal cord and brainstem. They both activate specific receptors—for GABA, there are ionotropic and metabotropic receptors, whereas for glycine, only ionotropic receptors are known to date.Together with acetylcholine- and serotonin-gated channels, GABA and glycine ionotropic receptors form the superfamily of Cys-loop receptors, which differs in many aspects from the superfamily of ionotropic glutamate receptors. Over the last two decades, our knowledge of the structure and function of ionotropic receptors has grown rapidly. In this article, we summarize our current understanding of the molecular operation of these receptors and how we can now begin to interpret the role of receptor structure in agonist binding, channel activation, and allosteric modulation of Cys-loop and glutamate receptor families. Further details on the regulation and trafficking of neurotransmitter receptors in synaptic structure and plasticity can be found in accompanying articles.  相似文献   

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3.
Glutamate receptors have been identified on the peripheral terminals of both primary sensory afferents and sympathetic post-ganglionic neurons, and activation of these receptors produces peripheral sensitization and enhances nociception. Adenosine is an endogenous agent that has a regulatory effect on pain. In brain and spinal cord, adenosine release can be promoted by excitatory amino acids. In the present study, we used in vivo microdialysis to determine whether glutamate also can release adenosine in peripheral tissues. Rats were anesthetized with pentobarbital and microdialysis probes were implanted into the subcutaneous tissue of the plantar aspect of the rat hind paw. Subcutaneous injection of glutamate (50 microL, 0.3-100 micromol) evoked a short-lasting adenosine release immediately following drug injection. Co-administration of either the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, dizocipine maleate (MK-801, 1 nmol) or the non-NMDA receptor antagonist, 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline (CNQX, 10 nmol) with glutamate blocked such release, suggesting an involvement of peripheral ionotropic glutamate receptors in this response. Systemic pre-treatment with capsaicin, a neurotoxin selective for unmyelinated sensory afferents, significantly reduced glutamate-evoked peripheral adenosine release, but release was not affected by systemic pre-treatment with 6-hydroxydopamine, a neurotoxin selective for sympathetic nerve efferents. Neither MK-801 nor CNQX blocked 5% formalin-evoked adenosine release, suggesting adenosine release by formalin is not secondary to ionotropic glutamate receptor activation. We conclude that administration of glutamate evokes peripheral adenosine release, and that peripheral ionotropic glutamate receptors on unmyelinated sensory afferents are involved in such release. The released adenosine may provide a negative feedback control on nociception.  相似文献   

4.
The role of glutamate receptors in synaptic transmission and excitotoxicity in the nervous system is well established. Recent evidence has emerged that glutamatergic mechanisms also exist in a wide variety of non-neuronal cells. In the case of thymocytes and lymphocytes, several types of glutamate receptor are expressed which can induce functional changes. This review focuses on the cellular function of NMDA-activated ionotropic and groups I and III metabotropic glutamate receptors in lymphocytes. Levels of exogenous and endogenous circulatory agonists and antagonists for lymphocyte glutamate receptors, notably homocysteine metabolites, are markedly increased in certain disease states and may be involved in disorders of the immune system. In addition to glutamate and aspartate, these compounds are active at glutamate receptors and increase the excitotoxic effects of glutamate in both neurons and lymphocytes. Increased levels of compounds acting at glutamate receptors may be risk factors for organ damage, for example in both heart and kidney disease. We conclude that glutamate is involved in signaling in immunocompetent cells and that the expression of both ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptors may have regulatory functions in immunocompetent cells, as well as in the nervous system. In addition, glutamate may serve as a signaling agent between the immune and nervous systems.  相似文献   

5.
Elevated extracellular glutamate levels can increase malondialdehyde production in the brains of anesthetized rats. Thus, we investigated whether ionotropic glutamate receptors are involved in glutamate-induced malondialdehyde production. A microdialysis probe was implanted in the brain cortex of anesthetized rats. The malondialdehyde level in microdialysates was analyzed using an HPLC system. Three different ionotropic glutamate receptor agonists were used. At a concentration of 1.5 mM alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid hydrobromide (AMPA, a selective AMPA receptor agonist) induced a dramatic increase in extracellular malondialdehyde production (as much as 14-fold relative to the basal value). N-Methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA, a selective NMDA receptor agonist) also induced an increase in extracellular malondialdehyde production; however, the increase was not as much as that observed in the perfusion of AMPA receptor agonist. Kainic acid (a selective kainate receptor agonist) did not significantly increase malondialdehyde production. When co-perfused with L-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate (PDC; 31.4 mM), a glutamate uptake transport inhibitor that can increase the extracellular glutamate levels, AMPA receptor antagonist [1-(4-aminophenyl)4-methyl-7,8-methylenedioxy-5H-2,3-benzodiazepine hydrochloride, 1.0 mM] can significantly reduce PDC-induced malondialdehyde production. Although NMDA receptor antagonist [(5R,10S)-(+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten-5,10-imine hydrogen maleate, MK801] also can decrease the PDC-induced malondialdehyde production, it was not as effective as the AMPA receptor antagonist. These results suggest that ionotropic receptors are involved in the glutamate-induced increase in malondialdehdye production. Specifically, AMPA receptor seems to be predominant in the glutamate-induced malondialdehdye production in anesthetized rat brain cortex.  相似文献   

6.
To enable studies to elucidate the detailed biological function of dysiherbaine and neodysiherbaine A, potent and subunit-selective agonists for ionotropic glutamate receptors, the derivative with a hydroxymethyl substituent at the C10 position has been developed. Preliminary biological evaluation of the analogue showed that a C10 hydroxymethyl substituent produced significant alterations in binding affinities for the ionotropic glutamate receptor subtypes.  相似文献   

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Sensory input from peripheral nerves to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord is mediated by a variety of agents released by the central terminals of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. These include, but are not limited to, amino acids, especially glutamate, peptides and purines. The unraveling of the mechanisms of synaptic transmission by central terminals of DRG neurons has to take into account various ways in which the message from the periphery can be modulated at the level of the first central synapse. These include postsynaptic and presynaptic mechanisms. Homomeric and heteromeric complexes of receptor subunits for the different transmitters released by DRG neurons and interneurons, clustered at the postsynaptic site of central synapses, can be expressed in different combinations and their rate of insertion into the postsynaptic membrane is activity-regulated. Inhibitory mechanisms are an important part of central modulation, especially via presynaptic inhibition, currently believed to involve GABA released by inhibitory intrinsic neurons. Recent work has established the occurrence of another way by which sensory input can be modulated, i.e. the expression of presynaptic ionotropic and metabotropic receptors in central terminals of DRG neurons. Microscopic evidence for the expression, in these terminals, of various subunits of ionotropic glutamate receptors documents the selective expression of glutamate receptors in functionally different DRG afferents. Electrophysiological and pharmacological data suggest that activation of presynaptic ionotropic glutamate receptors in central terminals of DRG neurons may result in inhibition of release of glutamate by the same terminals. Glutamate activating presynaptic receptors may spill over from the same or adjacent synapses, or may be released by processes of astroglial cells surrounding synaptic terminals. The wide expression of presynaptic ionotropic glutamate receptors, especially in superficial laminae of the dorsal horn, where Adelta- and C fibers terminate, provides an additional or alternative mechanism, besides GABA-mediated presynaptic inhibition, for the modulation of glutamate release by these fibers. Since, however, presynaptic ionotropic glutamate receptors are also expressed in terminals of GABAergic intrinsic interneurons, a decrease of GABA release resulting from activation of these receptors in the same laminae, may also play a role in central sensitization and hyperalgesia.  相似文献   

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10.
The vanilloid receptor VR1 (TRPV1) is a temperature- and capsaicin-sensitive cation channel expressed by a class of primary afferents involved in nociception. To confirm the hypothesis that VR1-positive primary afferents are glutamatergic and contact spinal neurons that express the main classes of ionotropic glutamate receptors, we performed multiple immunofluorescent staining for VR1 and the glutamate transporter VGLUT2 (a specific marker for glutamatergic transmission) or AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits. VR1-positive cells in the dorsal root ganglion and boutons of their central afferent fibers in the dorsal horn expressed VGLUT2, and the latter contacted AMPA- or NMDA receptor-positive perikarya. Based on our previous observations of preferential targeting of VR1-positive primary afferents to spinal neurons that express the neurokinin receptor NK1 (Hwang et al., 2003), we further quantified the frequency of termination of VR1-positive afferents onto NK1-positive neurons co-expressing glutamate receptors. A larger fraction of NK1/NMDA receptors-positive than NK1/AMPA receptors-positive sites were contacted by VR1-positive boutons. We conclude that VR1-positive primary afferents in the rat use glutamate as neurotransmitter and contact postsynaptic sites that co-express NK1 and ionotropic glutamate receptors.  相似文献   

11.
Three major subtypes of glutamate receptors that are coupled to cation channels--N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), kainate, and alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate (AMPA) receptors--are known as ionotropic receptors in the mammalian CNS. Recently, an additional subtype that is coupled to GTP binding proteins and stimulates (or inhibits) metabolism of phosphoinositides has been proposed as a metabotropic receptor. Incubation of dispersed hippocampal cells from adult rats with glutamate or NMDA decreased forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP (cAMP) accumulation; half-maximal effects were obtained with 5.6 +/- 2.2 and 6.4 +/- 2.3 microM, respectively. Kainate and quisqualate were less potent. The effect of glutamate was antagonized by 2,3-diaminopropionate and 2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate, NMDA/glutamate receptor antagonists, but not by 0.5 microM Joro spider toxin, a specific blocker of the AMPA receptor. The inhibitory effect of glutamate on cAMP formation was not blocked by 2 microM tetrodotoxin or by the absence of Ca2+. In hippocampal membranes, glutamate, similar to carbachol, inhibited adenylate cyclase activity in a GTP-dependent manner. These findings suggest that the glutamate inhibition of adenylate cyclase is direct and is not due to a result of the release of other neurotransmitters. The effect of glutamate on cAMP accumulation was observed in an assay medium containing 0.7 mM MgCl2, which is known to inhibit both ionotropic NMDA receptor/channels in the hippocampus and metabotropic NMDA receptors in the cerebellum. The inhibitory effect of glutamate was abolished by pertussis toxin treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
In the mammalian central nervous system, the majority of fast excitatory synaptic transmission is mediated by glutamate acting on AMPA-type ionotropic glutamate receptors. The abundance of AMPA receptors at the synapse can be modulated through receptor trafficking, which dynamically regulates many fundamental brain functions, including learning and memory. Reversible posttranslational modifications, including phosphorylation, palmitoylation and ubiquitination of AMPA receptor subunits are important regulatory mechanisms for controlling synaptic AMPA receptor expression and function. In this review, we highlight recent advances in the study of AMPA receptor posttranslational modifications and discuss how these modifications regulate AMPA receptor trafficking and function at synapses.  相似文献   

13.
Kainate receptors (KARs) are members of the glutamate receptor family, which also includes two other ionotropic subtypes, i.e. NMDA- and AMPA-type receptors, and types I, II and III metabotropic glutamate receptors. KARs mediate synaptic transmission postynaptically through their ionotropic capacity, while presynaptically, they modulate the release of both GABA and glutamate through operationally diverse modus operandi. At hippocampal mossy fiber (MF)-CA3 synapses, KARs have a biphasic effect on glutamate release, such that, depending on the extent of their activation, a facilitation or depression of glutamate release can be observed. This modulation is posited to contribute to important roles of KARs in short- and long-term plasticity. Elucidation of the modes of action of KARs in their depression and facilitation of glutamate release is beginning to gather impetus. Here we will focus on the cellular mechanisms involved in the modulation of glutamate release by presynaptic KAR activation at MF-CA3 synapses, a field that has seen significant progress in recent years.  相似文献   

14.
Both tyrosine phosphorylation and calpain-mediated truncation of ionotropic glutamate receptors are important mechanisms for synaptic plasticity. Previous work from our laboratory has shown that calpain activation results in truncation of the C-terminal domains of several glutamate receptor subunits. To test whether and how tyrosine phosphorylation of glutamate ionotropic receptor subunits modulates calpain susceptibility, synaptic membranes were phosphorylated by Fyn or Src, two members of the Src family tyrosine kinases. Tyrosine phosphorylation of synaptic membranes by Src significantly reduced calpain-mediated truncation of both NR2A and NR2B subunits of NMDA receptors, but not of GluR1 subunits of AMPA receptors. In contrast, phosphorylation with Fyn significantly protected calpain-mediated truncation of GluR1 subunits of AMPA receptors, but enhanced calpain-mediated truncation of NR2A subunits of NMDA receptors. Similar results were observed with NR2A and NR2B C-terminal domain fusion proteins phosphorylated by Fyn or Src before incubation with calpain and calcium. In addition, phosphorylation of NR2A and NR2B C-terminal fusion proteins by Fyn or Src enhanced their binding to spectrin and PSD-95. Thus, tyrosine phosphorylation impairs or facilitates calpain-mediated truncation of glutamate receptor subunits, depending on which tyrosine kinase is activated. Such mechanisms could serve to regulate receptor integrity and location, in addition to modulating channel properties.  相似文献   

15.
We previously reported that pre- and postsynaptic 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) receptors effectively control glutamatergic transmission in adult rat cerebellum. To investigate where 5-HT acts in the glutamate ionotropic receptors/nitric oxide/guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) pathway, in the present study 5-HT modulation of the cGMP response to the nitric oxide donor S-nitroso-penicillamine (SNAP) was studied in adult rat cerebellar slices. While cGMP elevation produced by high-micromolar SNAP was insensitive to 5-HT, 1 microM SNAP, expected to release nitric oxide in the low-nanomolar concentration range, elicited cGMP production and endogenous glutamate release both of which could be prevented by activating presynaptic 5-HT1D receptors. Released nitric oxide appeared responsible for cGMP production and glutamate release evoked by 1 microM SNAP, as both the effects were mimicked by the structurally unrelated nitric oxide donor 2-(N,N-diethylamino)-diazenolate-2-oxide (0.1 microM). Dependency of the 1 microM SNAP-evoked release of glutamate on external Ca2+, sensitivity to presynaptic release-regulating receptors and dependency on ionotropic glutamate receptor functioning, suggest that nitric oxide stimulates exocytotic-like, activity-dependent glutamate release. Activation of ionotropic glutamate receptors/nitric oxide synthase/guanylyl cyclase pathway by endogenously released glutamate was involved in the cGMP response to 1 microM SNAP, as blockade of NMDA/non-NMDA receptors, nitric oxide synthase or guanylyl cyclase, abolished the cGMP response. To conclude, in adult rat cerebellar slices low-nanomolar exogenous nitric oxide could facilitate glutamate exocytotic-like release possibly from parallel fibers that subsequently activated the glutamate ionotropic receptors/nitric oxide/cGMP pathway. Presynaptic 5-HT1D receptors could regulate the nitric oxide-evoked release of glutamate and subsequent cGMP production.  相似文献   

16.
Ionotropic glutamate receptors are widely distributed in the central nervous system and play a major role in excitatory synaptic transmission. All three ionotropic glutamate subfamilies (i.e. AMPA-type, kainate-type, and NMDA-type) assemble as tetramers of four homologous subunits. There is good evidence that both heteromeric AMPA and kainate receptors have a 2:2 subunit stoichiometry and an alternating subunit arrangement. Recent studies based on presumed structural homology have indicated that NMDA receptors adopt the same arrangement. Here, we use atomic force microscopy imaging of receptor-antibody complexes to show that whereas the GluA1/GluA2 AMPA receptor assembles with an alternating (i.e. 1/2/1/2) subunit arrangement, the GluN1/GluN2A NMDA receptor adopts an adjacent (i.e. 1/1/2/2) arrangement. We conclude that the two types of ionotropic glutamate receptor are built in different ways from their constituent subunits. This surprising finding necessitates a reassessment of the assembly of these important receptors.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: The structure of N -acetylaspartylglutamate (NAAG) suggests this neuronal dipeptide as a candidate for interaction with discrete subclasses of ionotropic and metabotropic acidic amino acid receptors. A substantial difficulty in the assay of these interactions is posed by membrane-bound peptidase activity that converts the dipeptide to glutamate and N -acetylaspartate, molecules that will interfere with receptor assays. We have developed two sets of unique receptor assay conditions and applied one standard assay to measure the interactions, under equilibrium binding conditions, of [3H]kainate, [3H]amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid ([3H]AMPA), and [3H]CGS-19755 with the three classes (kainate, quisqualate, and N -methyl- d -aspartate) of ionotropic glutamate receptors, while inhibiting peptidase activity against NAAG. Under these conditions, NAAG exhibits apparent inhibition constants (IC50) of 500, 790, and 8.8 µ M in the kainate, AMPA, and CGS-19755 receptor binding assays, respectively. Glutamate was substantially more effective and less specific in these competition assays, with inhibition constants of 0.36, 1.1, and 0.37 µ M . These data support the hypothesis that, relative to glutamate, NAAG functions as a specific, low potency agonist at N -methyl- d -aspartate subclass of ionotropic acidic amino acid receptors, but the peptide is not likely to activate directly the kainate or quisqualate subclasses of excitatory ionotropic receptors under physiologic conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Inhibitory glutamate receptor channels   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Inhibitory glutamate receptors (IGluRs) are a family of ion channel proteins closely related to ionotropic glycine and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors; They are gated directly by glutamate; the open channel is permeable to chloride and sometimes potassium. Physiologically and pharmacologically, IGluRs most closely resemble GABA receptors; they are picrotoxin-sensitive and sometimes crossdesensitized by GABA. However, the amino acid sequences of cloned IGluRs are most similar to those of glycine receptors. Ibotenic acid, a conformationally restricted glutamate analog closely related to muscimol, activates all IGluRs. Quisqualate is not an IGluR agonist except among pulmonate molluscs and for a unique multiagonist receptor in the crayfishAustropotamobius torrentium. Other excitatory amino acid agonists are generally ineffective. Avermectins have several effects on IGluRs, depending on concentration: potentiation, direct gating, and blockade, both reversible and irreversible. Since IGluRs have only been clearly described in protostomes and pseudocoelomates, these effects may mediate the powerful antihelminthic and insecticidal action of avermectins, while explaining their low toxicity to mammals. IGluRs mediate synaptic inhibition in neurons and are expressed extrajunctionally in striated muscles. The presence of IGluRs in a neuron or muscle is independent of the presence or absence of excitatory glutamate receptors or GABA receptors in the cell. Generally, extrajunctional IGluRs in muscle have a higher sensitivity to glutamate than do neuronal synaptic receptors. Some extrajunctional receptors are sensitive in the range of circulating plasma glutamate levels, suggesting a role for IGluRs in regulating muscle excitability. The divergence of the IGlu/GABA/Gly/ACh receptor superfamily in protostomes could become a powerful model system for adaptive molecular evolution. Physiologically and pharmacologically, protostome receptors are considerably more diverse than their vertebrate counterparts. Antagonist profiles are only loosely correlated with agonist profiles (e.g., curare-sensitive GABA receptors, bicuculline-sensitive AChRs), and pharmacologically identical receptors may be either excitatory or inhibitory, and permeable to different ions. The assumption that agonist sensitivity reliably connotes discrete, homologous receptor families is contraindicated. Protostome ionotropic receptors are highly diverse and straightforward to assay; they provide an excellent system in which to study and integrate fundamental questions in molecular evolution and adaptation.  相似文献   

19.
Emerging evidence suggests a role of dysfunction of glutamatergic neurotransmission and its receptors in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia (SCZ). This study evaluated whether the promoter hypermethylation and RNA expression pattern of GMR2 (glutamate metabotropic receptor), GMR5, GMR8, and GRIA3 (glutamate receptor, ionotropic alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid) are associated with the risk of schizophrenia between schizophrenia patients and healthy controls.  相似文献   

20.
The orphan GluD2 receptor belongs to the ionotropic glutamate receptor family but does not bind glutamate. Ligand-gated GluD2 currents have never been evidenced, and whether GluD2 operates as an ion channel has been a long-standing question. Here, we show that GluD2 gating is triggered by type 1 metabotropic glutamate receptors, both in a heterologous expression system and in Purkinje cells. Thus, GluD2 is not only an adhesion molecule at synapses but also works as a channel. This gating mechanism reveals new properties of glutamate receptors that emerge from their interaction and opens unexpected perspectives regarding synaptic transmission and plasticity.  相似文献   

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