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1.
Nicotine increases the number of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) in brain. This study investigated the effects of chronic nicotine treatment on nAChRs expressed in primary cultured neurons. In particular, we studied the chronic effects of nicotine exposure on the total density, surface expression and turnover rate of heteromeric nAChRs. The receptor density was measured by [12?I]epibatidine ([12?I]EB) binding. Untreated and nicotine-treated neurons were compared from several regions of embryonic (E19) rat brain. Twelve days of treatment with 10 μM nicotine produced a twofold up-regulation of nAChRs. Biotinylation and whole-cell binding studies indicated that up-regulation resulted from an increase in the number of cell surface receptors as well as intracellular receptors. nAChR subunit composition in cortical and hippocampal neurons was assessed by immunoprecipitation with subunit-selective antibodies. These neurons contain predominantly α4, β2 and α5 subunits, but α2, α3, α6 and β4 subunits were also detected. Chronic nicotine exposure yielded a twofold increase in the β2-containing receptors and a smaller up-regulation in the α4-containing nAChRs. To explore the mechanisms of up-regulation we investigated the effects of nicotine on the receptor turnover rate. We found that the turnover rate of surface receptors was > 2 weeks and chronic nicotine exposure had no effect on this rate.  相似文献   

2.
Desensitization induced by chronic nicotine exposure has been hypothesized to trigger the up-regulation of the alpha4beta2 neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) in the central nervous system. We studied the effect of acute and chronic nicotine exposure on the desensitization and up-regulation of different alpha4beta2 subunit ratios (1alpha:4beta, 2alpha:3beta, and 4alpha:1beta) expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The presence of alpha4 subunit in the oocyte plasmatic membrane increased linearly with the amount of alpha4 mRNA injected. nAChR function and expression were assessed during acute and after chronic nicotine exposure using a two-electrode voltage clamp and whole-mount immunofluorescence assay along with confocal imaging for the detection of the alpha4 subunit. The 2alpha4:3beta2 subunit ratio displayed the highest ACh sensitivity. Nicotine dose-response curves for the 1alpha4:4beta2 and 2alpha4:3beta2 subunit ratios displayed a biphasic behavior at concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 300 microm. A biphasic curve for 4alpha4:1beta2 was obtained at nicotine concentrations higher than 300 microm. The 1alpha4:4beta2 subunit ratio exhibited the lowest ACh- and nicotine-induced macroscopic current, whereas 4alpha4:1beta2 presented the largest currents at all agonist concentrations tested. Desensitization by acute nicotine exposure was more evident as the ratio of beta2:alpha4 subunits increased. All three alpha4beta2 subunit ratios displayed a reduced state of activation after chronic nicotine exposure. Chronic nicotine-induced up-regulation was obvious only for the 2alpha4: 3beta2 subunit ratio. Our data suggest that the subunit ratio of alpha4beta2 determines the functional state of activation, desensitization, and up-regulation of this neuronal nAChR. We propose that independent structural sites regulate alpha4beta2 receptor activation and desensitization.  相似文献   

3.
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are ligand‐gated ion channels expressed in many insect structures, such as mushroom bodies, in which they play a central role. We have recently demonstrated using electrophysiological recordings that different native nicotinic receptors are expressed in cockroach mushroom bodies Kenyon cells. In the present study, we demonstrated that eight genes coding for cockroach nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunits are expressed in the mushroom bodies. Quantitative real‐time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) experiments demonstrated that β1 subunit was the most expressed in the mushroom bodies. Moreover, antisense oligonucleotides performed against β1 subunit revealed that inhibition of β1 expression strongly decreases nicotine‐induced currents amplitudes. Moreover, co‐application with 0.5 μM α‐bungarotoxin completely inhibited nicotine currents whereas 10 μM d‐tubocurarine had a partial effect demonstrating that β1‐containing neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subtypes could be sensitive to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist α‐bungarotoxin.  相似文献   

4.
Chronic exposure to (-)nicotine has been widely reported to up-regulate nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on neurons and induce long-term inactivation as a possible cause. Nicotinic receptors containing alpha 7 subunits are among the most abundant in brain and influence diverse cellular events. Whole-cell patch clamp recording from embryonic rat cortical neurons in culture was used to identify responses from alpha 7-containing receptors. Immunochemical staining for glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) indicated that both GABAergic and non-GABAergic neurons expressed the receptors. Exposure to micromolar concentrations of nicotine for 1-4 days caused up-regulation of the receptors as measured by [alpha-(125)I]-bungarotoxin binding. Carbachol produced the same up-regulation, and cell counts demonstrated that neuronal survival was unchanged. The up-regulation was accompanied by an increased whole-cell response; no evidence was found for long-lasting inactivation. Autonomic alpha 7-containing receptors also avoided long-lasting inactivation, even though the receptors were down-regulated by nicotine. Blocking protein synthesis or protein glycosylation prevented receptor up-regulation on cortical neurons, suggesting that new synthesis was required. No evidence was found for a pre-existing intracellular pool that supplied receptors to the surface. The results indicate that alpha 7-containing receptors differ from other receptor subtypes in their regulation by nicotine and demonstrate further that long-lasting inactivation is not an obligatory requirement for up-regulation in this case.  相似文献   

5.
We have determined the subunit stoichiometry of chicken neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes by quantitation of the amount of radioactivity in individual subunits of [35S] methionine-labeled receptors. The chicken neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor appears to be a pentamer of two alpha 4 acetylcholine-binding subunits and three beta 2 structural subunits. We also show that these expressed receptors bind L-[3H]nicotine with high affinity, are transported to the surface of the oocyte outer membrane, and cosediment on sucrose gradients with acetylcholine receptors isolated from chicken brain. Using this unique and generally applicable method of determining subunit stoichiometry of receptors expressed in oocytes, we obtained the expected (alpha 1) 2 beta 1 gamma delta stoichiometry for muscle-type acetylcholine receptors assembled from coexpression of either Torpedo alpha 1 or human alpha 1 subunits, with Torpedo beta 1, gamma, and delta subunits.  相似文献   

6.
The TE671 human medulloblastoma cell line expresses a variety of characteristics of human neurons. Among these characteristics is the expression of membrane-bound high-affinity binding sites for alpha-bungarotoxin, which is a potent antagonist of functional nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on these cells. These toxin binding sites represent a class of nicotinic receptor isotypes present in mammalian brain. Treatment of TE671 cells during proliferative growth phase with nicotine or carbamylcholine, but not with muscarine or d-tubocurarine, induced up to a five-fold increase in the density of radiolabeled toxin binding sites in crude membrane fractions. This effect was blocked by co-incubation with the nicotinic antagonists d-tubocurarine and decamethonium, but not by mecamylamine or by muscarinic antagonists. Following a 10-13 h lag phase upon removal of agonist, recovery of the up-regulated sites to control values occurred within an additional 10-20 h. These studies indicate that the expression of functional nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on TE671 cells is subject to regulation by nicotinic agonists. Studies of the murine CNS have consistently indicated nicotine-induced up-regulation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, thereby supporting the identification of the toxin binding site on these cells as the functional nicotinic receptor. Although a mechanism for this effect is not apparent, nicotine-induced receptor blockade does not appear to be involved.  相似文献   

7.
The primary target for nicotine in the brain is the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR). It has been well documented that nAChRs respond to chronic nicotine exposure by up-regulation of receptor numbers, which may underlie some aspects of nicotine addiction. In order to investigate the mechanism of nicotine-induced nAChR up-regulation, we have developed a cell culture system to assess membrane trafficking and nicotine-induced up-regulation of surface-expressed alpha(4)beta(2) nAChRs. Previous reports have implicated stabilization of the nAChRs at the plasma membrane as the potential mechanism of up-regulation. We have found that whereas nicotine exposure results in up-regulation of surface receptors in our system, it does not alter surface receptor internalization from the plasma membrane, postendocytic trafficking, or lysosomal degradation. Instead, we find that transport of nAChRs through the secretory pathway to the plasma membrane is required for nicotine-induced up-regulation of surface receptors. Therefore, nicotine appears to regulate surface receptor levels at a step prior to initial insertion in the plasma membrane rather than by altering their endocytic trafficking or degradation rates as had been previously suggested.  相似文献   

8.
Insect nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) play a central role in mediating neuronal synaptic transmission and are the target sites for the increasingly important group of neonicotinoid insecticides. Six nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) subunits (four alpha-type and two beta-type) have been cloned previously from the model insect species Drosophila melanogaster. Despite extensive efforts, it has not been possible to generate functional recombinant nAChRs by heterologous expression of any combination of these six subunits. It has, however, been possible to express functional hybrid receptors when Drosophila alpha subunits are co-expressed with vertebrate beta subunits. This has led to the assumption that successful heterologous expression might require an, as yet, uncloned beta-type insect subunit. Examination of the recently completed Drosophila genomic sequence data has identified a novel putative nAChR beta-type subunit. Here we report the molecular cloning, heterologous expression and characterization of this putative Drosophila nAChR subunit (Dbeta3). Phylogenetic comparisons with other ligand-gated ion channel subunit sequences support its classification as a nAChR subunit but show it to be a distantly related member of this neurotransmitter receptor subunit family. Evidence that the Dbeta3 subunit is able to coassemble with other Drosophila nAChR subunits and contribute to recombinant nAChRs has been obtained by both radioligand binding and coimmunoprecipitation studies in transfected Drosophila S2 cells.  相似文献   

9.
α4β2 Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors play an important role in the reward pathways for nicotine. We investigated whether receptor up-regulation of α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors involves expression changes for non-receptor genes. In a microarray analysis, 10 μM nicotine altered expression of 41 genes at 0.25, 1, 8 and 24 h in hα4β2 SH-EP1 cells. The maximum number of gene changes occurred at 8 h, around the initial increase in 3[H]-cytisine binding. Quantitative RT-PCR corroborated gene induction of endoplasmic reticulum proteins CRELD2, PDIA6, and HERPUD1, and suppression of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-6. Nicotine suppresses IL-1β and IL-6 expression at least in part by inhibiting NFκB activation. Antagonists dihydro-β-erythroidine and mecamylamine blocked these nicotine-induced changes showing that receptor activation is required. Antagonists alone or in combination with nicotine suppressed CRELD2 message while increasing α4β2 binding. Additionally, small interfering RNA knockdown of CRELD2 increased basal α4β2 receptor expression, and antagonists decreased CRELD2 expression even in the absence of α4β2 receptors. These data suggest that endoplasmic reticulum proteins such as CRELD2 can regulate α4β2 expression, and may explain antagonist actions in nicotine-induced receptor up-regulation. Further, the unexpected finding that nicotine suppresses inflammatory cytokines suggests that nicotinic α4β2 receptor activation promotes anti-inflammatory effects similar to α7 receptor activation.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Recent evidence suggests that in addition to alpha4beta2 and alpha3-containing nicotinic receptors, alpha6-containing receptors are present in midbrain dopaminergic neurons and involved in the nicotine reward pathway. Using heterologous expression, we found that alpha6beta2, like alpha3beta2 and alpha4beta2 receptors, formed high affinity epibatidine binding complexes that are pentameric, trafficked to the cell surface, and produced acetylcholine-evoked currents. Chronic nicotine exposure up-regulated alpha6beta2 receptors with differences in up-regulation time course and concentration dependence compared with alpha4beta2 receptors, the predominant high affinity nicotine binding site in brain. The alpha6beta2 receptor up-regulation required higher nicotine concentrations than for alpha4beta2 but lower than for alpha3beta2 receptors. The alpha6beta2 up-regulation occurred 10-fold faster than for alpha4beta2 and slightly faster than for alpha3beta2. Our data suggest that nicotinic receptor up-regulation is subtype-specific such that alpha6-containing receptors up-regulate in response to transient, high nicotine exposures, whereas sustained, low nicotine exposures up-regulate alpha4beta2 receptors.  相似文献   

12.
A new subunit, beta 2, of the neuronal nicotinic receptor family has been identified. This subunit has the structural features of a non-agonist-binding subunit. We provide evidence that beta 2 can substitute for the muscle beta 1 subunit to form a functional nicotinic receptor in Xenopus oocytes. Expression studies performed in oocytes have demonstrated that three different neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors can be formed by the pairwise injection of beta 2 mRNA and each of the neuronal alpha subunit mRNAs. The beta 2 gene is expressed in PC12 cells and in areas of the central nervous system where the alpha 2, alpha 3, and alpha 4 genes are expressed. These results lead us to propose that the nervous system expresses diverse forms of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors by combining beta 2 subunits with different agonist-binding alpha subunits.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: One of the problems faced when using heterologous expression systems to study receptors is that the pharmacological and physiological properties of expressed receptors often differ from those of native receptors. In the case of neuronal nicotinic receptors, one or two subunit cDNAs are sufficient for expression of functional receptors in Xenopus oocytes. However, the stoichiometries of nicotinic receptors in neurons are not known and expression patterns of mRNA coding for different nicotinic receptor subunits often overlap. Consequently, one explanation for the discrepancy between properties of native versus heterologously expressed nicotinic receptors is that more than two types of subunit are necessary for correctly functioning receptors. The Xenopus oocyte expression system was used to test the hypothesis that more than two types of subunit can coassemble; specifically, can two different β subunits assemble with an α subunit forming a receptor with unique pharmacological properties? We expressed combinations of cDNA coding for α3, β2, and β4 subunits. β2 and β4, in pairwise combination with α3, are differentially sensitive to cytisine and neuronal bungarotoxin (nBTX). α3β4 receptors are activated by cytisine and are not blocked by low concentrations of nBTX; acetylcholine-evoked currents through α3β2 receptors are blocked by both cytisine and low concentrations of nBTX. Coinjection of cDNA coding for α3, β2, and β4 into oocytes resulted in receptors that were activated by cytisine and blocked by nBTX, thus demonstrating inclusion of both β2 and β4 subunits in functional receptors.  相似文献   

14.
Immunohistochemical studies have previously shown that both the chick brain and chick ciliary ganglion neurons contain a component which shares antigenic determinants with the main immunogenic region of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor from electric organ and skeletal muscle. Here we describe the purification and initial characterization of this putative neuronal acetylcholine receptor. The component was purified by monoclonal antibody affinity chromatography. The solubilized component sediments on sucrose gradients as a species slightly larger than Torpedo acetylcholine receptor monomers. It was affinity labeled with bromo[3H]acetylcholine. Labeling was prevented by carbachol, but not by alpha-bungarotoxin. Two subunits could be detected in the affinity-purified component, apparent molecular weights 48 000 and 59 000. The 48 000 molecular weight subunit was bound both by a monoclonal antibody directed against the main immunogenic region of electric organ and skeletal muscle acetylcholine receptor and by antisera raised against the alpha subunit of Torpedo receptor. Evidence suggests that there are two alpha subunits in the brain component. Antisera from rats immunized with the purified brain component exhibited little or no cross-reactivity with Torpedo electric organ or chick muscle acetylcholine receptor. One antiserum did, however, specifically bind to all four subunits of Torpedo receptor. Experiments to be described elsewhere (J. Stollberg et al., unpublished results) show that antisera to the purified brain component specifically inhibit the electrophysiological function of acetylcholine receptors in chick ciliary ganglion neurons without inhibiting the function of acetylcholine receptors in chick muscle cells. All of these properties suggest that this component is a neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor with limited structural homology to muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.  相似文献   

15.
In smoker's brain, rodent brain, and in cultured cells expressing nicotinic receptors, chronic nicotine treatment induces an increase in the total number of high affinity receptors for acetylcholine and nicotine, a process referred to as up-regulation. Up-regulation induced by 1 mm nicotine reaches 6-fold for alpha3beta2 nicotinic receptors transiently expressed in HEK 293 cells, whereas it is much smaller for alpha3beta4 receptors, offering a rationale to investigate the molecular mechanism underlying up-regulation. In this expression system binding sites are mainly intracellular, as shown by [(3)H]epibatidine binding experiments and competition with the impermeant ligand carbamylcholine. Systematic analysis of beta2/beta4 chimeras demonstrates the following. (i) The extracellular domain critically contributes to up-regulation. (ii) Only residues belonging to two beta2 segments, 74-89 and 106-115, confer up-regulation to beta4, mainly by decreasing the amount of binding sites in the absence of nicotine; on an atomic three-dimensional model of the alpha3beta2 receptor these amino acids form a compact microdomain that mainly contributes to the subunit interface and also faces the acetylcholine binding site. (iii) The beta4 microdomain is sufficient to confer to beta2 a beta4-like up-regulation. (iv) This microdomain makes an equivalent contribution to the up-regulation differences between alpha4beta2 and alpha4beta4. We propose that nicotine, by binding to immature oligomers, elicits a conformational reorganization of the microdomain, strengthening the interaction between adjacent subunits and, thus, facilitating maturation processes toward high affinity receptors. This mechanism may be central to nicotine addiction, since alpha4beta2 is the subtype exhibiting the highest degree of up-regulation in the brain.  相似文献   

16.
Molecular studies of the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor family   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on neurons are part of a gene family that includes nicotinic acetylcholine receptors on skeletal muscles and neuronal alpha bungarotoxin-binding proteins that in many species, unlike receptors, do not have an acetylcholine-regulated cation channel. This gene superfamily of ligand-gated receptors also includes receptors for glycine and gamma-aminobutyric acid. Rapid progress on neuronal nicotinic receptors has recently been possible using monoclonal antibodies as probes for receptor proteins and cDNAs as probes for receptor genes. These studies are the primary focus of this review, although other aspects of these receptors are also considered. In birds and mammals, there are subtypes of neuronal nicotinic receptors. All of these receptors differ from nicotinic receptors of muscle pharmacologically (none bind alpha bungarotoxin, and some have very high affinity for nicotine), structurally (having only two types of subunits rather than four), and, in some cases, in functional role (some are located presynaptically). However, there are amino acid sequence homologies between the subunits of these receptors that suggest the location of important functional domains. Sequence homologies also suggest that the subunits of the proteins of this family all evolved from a common ancestral protein subunit. The ligand-gated ion channel characteristic of this superfamily is formed from multiple copies of homologous subunits. Conserved domains responsible for strong stereospecific association of the subunits are probably a fundamental organizing principle of the superfamily. Whereas the structure of muscle-type nicotinic receptors appears to have been established by the time of elasmobranchs and has evolved quite conservatively since then, the evolution of neuronal-type nicotinic receptors appears to be in more rapid flux. Certainly, the studies of these receptors are in rapid flux, with the availability of monoclonal antibody probes for localizing, purifying, and characterizing the proteins, and cDNA probes for determining sequences, localizing mRNAs, expressing functional receptors, and studying genetic regulation. The role of nicotinic receptors in neuromuscular transmission is well understood, but the role of nicotinic receptors in brain function is not. The current deluge of data using antibodies and cDNAs is beginning to come together nicely to describe the structure of these receptors. Soon, these techniques may combine with others to better reveal the functional roles of neuronal nicotinic receptors.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Nicotine receptors in the mammalian brain   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Nicotine is a drug of abuse that presumably exerts its psychoactive effect through its interactions with nicotine binding sites in the central nervous system. Among its potential sites of action are the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and the neuronal alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites. In this review we focus on the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, their diversity, distribution, and functions as nicotine receptors or as mediators of synaptic transmission in the mammalian brain. We find that the complexity characteristic of the gene family encoding the subunits of these receptors is reflected both in the pattern of expression of the genes and in the pharmacological diversity of the expressed receptors.  相似文献   

19.
Nicotine increases the permeability of the blood-brain barrier in vivo. This implies a possible role for nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the regulation of cerebral microvascular permeability. Expression of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunits in cerebral microvessels was investigated with immunofluorescence microscopy. Positive immunoreactivity was found for receptor subunits alpha3, alpha5, alpha7, and beta2, but not subunits alpha4, beta3, or beta4. Blood-brain barrier permeability was assessed via in situ brain perfusion with [14C]sucrose. Nicotine increased the rate of sucrose entry into the brain from 0.3 +/- 0.1 to 1.1 +/- 0.2 microl.g(-1).min(-1), as previously described. This nicotine-induced increase in blood-brain barrier permeability was significantly attenuated by both the blood-brain barrier-permeant nicotinic antagonist mecamylamine and the blood-brain barrier-impermeant nicotinic antagonist hexamethonium to 0.5 +/- 0.2 and 0.3 +/- 0.2 microl.g(-1).min(-1), respectively. These data suggest that nicotinic acetylcholine receptors expressed on the cerebral microvascular endothelium mediate nicotine-induced changes in blood-brain barrier permeability.  相似文献   

20.
Effects of long term (72-h) exposure to low concentration (0.1 mum) of nicotine on various types of voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels (VDCCs) and neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nnAChRs) were examined using primary cultures of mouse cerebral cortical neurons. High potassium (30 mm KCl)-stimulated (45)Ca(2+) influx into the neurons increased with increasing the duration of nicotine exposure and its concentrations. The maximal increase of the KCl-stimulated (45)Ca(2+) influx was found 24 h after the initiation of exposure and thereafter maintained up to 72 h. This enhancement of KCl-induced (45)Ca(2+) influx after 72-h exposure to 0.1 mum nicotine was completely abolished by concomitant exposure with mecamylamine, an inhibitor for nnAChRs. Only the component of the KCl-induced (45)Ca(2+) influx observed after long term exposure to nicotine, which was sensitive to nifedipine, an inhibitor of L-type VDCCs, was facilitated, while the (45)Ca(2+) influx through P/Q- and N-type VDCCs showed no changes. Moreover, enhanced immunoreactivity against antibody for the alpha(1C) subunit of L-type VDCCs was recognized, whereas no changes in immunoreactivities against antibodies for alpha(1A) and alpha(1B) subunits of other types of VDCCs were noted. In addition, a Western blot analysis showed an increase of immunoreactivities against antibodies for alpha(1D) and alpha(2)/delta(1), and expression of mRNA for L-type VDCC subunit, alpha(1F), was also enhanced, although beta(4) mRNA expression was not changed. Whole cell patch clamp analysis revealed that the increase of the amplitude of Ba(2+) currents was also recognized in the neurons exposed to nicotine, and nicardipine reduced this increased amplitude to the level of the amplitude detected in nontreated neurons with nicardipine. The up-regulation of alpha(4) and beta(2) subunits, but not the alpha(3) subunit of nnAChRs, was also noted after the nicotine exposure when examining by the Western blot analysis. Taken together, these results indicate that the long term exposure of the neurons to a low concentration of nicotine induces both increased (45)Ca(2+) influx through up-regulated L-type VDCCs and nnAChR up-regulation.  相似文献   

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