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1.
Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (M1-M5) play important roles in the modulation of many key functions of the central and peripheral nervous system. To explore the physiological roles of the two Gi-coupled muscarinic receptors, we disrupted the M2 and M4 receptor genes in mice by using a gene targeting strategy. Pharmacological and behavioral analysis of the resulting mutant mice showed that the M2 receptor subtype is critically involved in mediating three of the most striking central muscarinic effects, tremor, hypothermia, and analgesia. These studies also indicated that M4 receptors are not critically involved in these central muscarinic responses. However, M4 receptor-deficient mice showed an increase in basal locomotor activity and greatly enhanced locomotor responses following drug-induced activation of D1 dopamine receptors. This observation is consistent with the concept that M4 receptors exert inhibitory control over D1 receptor-mediated locomotor stimulation, probably at the level of striatal projection neurons where the two receptors are known to be coexpressed. These findings emphasize the usefulness of gene targeting approaches to shed light on the physiological and pathophysiological roles of the individual muscarinic receptor subtypes.  相似文献   

2.
Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors mediate transmission of an extracellular signal represented by released acetylcholine to neuronal or effector cells. There are five subtypes of closely homologous muscarinic receptors which are coupled by means of heterotrimeric G-proteins to a variety of signaling pathways resulting in a multitude of target cell effects. Endogenous agonist acetylcholine does not discriminate among individual subtypes and due to the close homology of the orthosteric binding site the same holds true for most of exogenous agonists. In addition to the classical binding site muscarinic receptors have one or more allosteric binding sites at extracellular domains. Binding of allosteric modulators induces conformational changes in the receptor that result in subtype-specific changes in orthosteric binding site affinity for both muscarinic agonists and antagonists. This overview summarizes our recent experimental effort in investigating certain aspects of M2 muscarinic receptor functioning concerning i) the molecular determinants that contribute to the binding of allosteric modulators, ii) G-protein coupling specificity and subsequent cellular responses and iii) possible functional assays that exploit the unique properties of allosteric modulators for characterization of muscarinic receptor subtypes in intact tissue. A detailed knowledge of allosteric properties of muscarinic receptors is required to permit drug design that will modulate signal transmission strength of specific muscarinic receptor subtypes. Furthermore, allosteric modulation of signal transmission strength is determined by cooperativity rather than concentration of allosteric modulator and thus reduces the danger of overdose.  相似文献   

3.
Muscarinic acetylcholine M1 receptors play an important role in synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus and cortex. Potentiation of NMDA receptors as a consequence of muscarinic acetylcholine M1 receptor activation is a crucial event mediating the cholinergic modulation of synaptic plasticity, which is a cellular mechanism for learning and memory. In Alzheimer's disease, the cholinergic input to the hippocampus and cortex is severely degenerated, and agonists or positive allosteric modulators of M1 receptors are therefore thought to be of potential use to treat the deficits in cognitive functions in Alzheimer's disease. In this study we developed a simple system in which muscarinic modulation of NMDA receptors can be studied in vitro. Human M1 receptors and NR1/2B NMDA receptors were co-expressed in Xenopus oocytes and various muscarinic agonists were assessed for their modulatory effects on NMDA receptor-mediated responses. As expected, NMDA receptor-mediated responses were potentiated by oxotremorine-M, oxotremorine or xanomeline when the drugs were applied between subsequent NMDA responses, an effect which was fully blocked by the muscarinic receptor antagonist atropine. However, in oocytes expressing NR1/2B NMDA receptors but not muscarinic M1 receptors, oxotremorine-M co-applied with NMDA also resulted in a potentiation of NMDA currents and this effect was not blocked by atropine, demonstrating that oxotremorine-M is able to directly potentiate NMDA receptors. Oxotremorine, which is a close analogue of oxotremorine-M, and xanomeline, a chemically distinct muscarinic agonist, did not potentiate NMDA receptors by this direct mechanism. Comparing the chemical structures of the three different muscarinic agonists used in this study suggests that the tri-methyl ammonium moiety present in oxotremorine-M is important for the compound's interaction with NMDA receptors.  相似文献   

4.
Most animal models of obesity and hyperinsulinemia are associated with increased vagal cholinergic activity. The M3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor subtype is widely expressed in the brain and peripheral tissues and plays a key role in mediating the physiological effects of vagal activation. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the absence of M3 receptors in mice might protect against various forms of experimentally or genetically induced obesity and obesity-associated metabolic deficits. In all cases, the lack of M3 receptors greatly ameliorated impairments in glucose homeostasis and insulin sensitivity but had less robust effects on overall adiposity. Under all experimental conditions tested, M3 receptor-deficient mice showed a significant elevation in basal and total energy expenditure, most likely due to enhanced central sympathetic outflow and increased rate of fatty-acid oxidation. These findings suggest that the M3 receptor may represent a potential pharmacologic target for the treatment of obesity and associated metabolic disorders.  相似文献   

5.
Until recently, little was known about the possible physiological functions of the M(5) muscarinic acetylcholine receptor subtype, the last member of the muscarinic receptor family (M(1)-M(5)) to be cloned. To learn more about the potential physiological roles of this receptor subtype, we generated and analyzed M(5) receptor-deficient mice (M5 -/- mice). Strikingly, acetylcholine, a potent dilator of most vascular beds, virtually lost the ability to dilate cerebral arteries and arterioles in M5 -/- mice, suggesting that endothelial M(5) receptors mediate this activity in wild-type mice. This effect was specific for cerebral blood vessels, since acetylcholine-mediated dilation of extra-cerebral arteries remained fully intact in M5 -/- mice. In addition, in vitro neurotransmitter release experiments indicated that M(5) receptors located on dopaminergic nerve terminals play a role in facilitating muscarinic agonist-induced dopamine release in the striatum, consistent with the observation that the dopaminergic neurons innervating the striatum almost exclusively express the M(5) receptor subtype. We also found that the rewarding effects of morphine, the prototypical opiate analgesic, were substantially reduced in M5 -/- mice, as measured in the conditioned place preference paradigm. Furthermore, both the somatic and affective components of naloxone-induced morphine withdrawal symptoms were significantly attenuated in M5 -/- mice. It is likely that these behavioral deficits are caused by the lack of mesolimbic M(5) receptors, activation of which is known to stimulate dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens. These results convincingly demonstrate that the M(5) muscarinic receptor is involved in modulating several important pharmacological and behavioral functions. These findings may lead to novel therapeutic strategies for the treatment of drug addiction and certain cerebrovascular disorders.  相似文献   

6.
The biological mechanisms involved in initiating, coordinating, and ultimately terminating cell-cell adhesion in the stratified epithelium are not well understood at present. This study was designed to elucidate the roles of the muscarinic M3, the nicotinic alpha3, and the mixed muscarinic-nicotinic alpha9 acetylcholine receptors in physiologic control of keratinocyte adhesion. Both muscarinic and nicotinic antagonists caused keratinocyte detachment and reversibly increased the permeability of keratinocyte monolayers, indicative of the involvement of both muscarinic and nicotinic pathways in the cholinergic control of keratinocyte adhesion. Since phosphorylation of adhesion proteins plays an important role in rapid assembly and disassembly of intercellular junctions, we measured muscarinic and nicotinic effects on phosphorylation of keratinocyte adhesion molecules. The phosphorylation levels of E-cadherin, beta-catenin, and gamma-catenin increased following pharmacological blockage of muscarinic receptors. Long-term blocking of alpha3, alpha9, and M3 receptor signaling pathways with antisense oligonucleotides resulted in cell-cell detachment and changes in the expression levels of E-cadherin, beta-catenin, and gamma-catenin in cultured human keratinocytes. Simultaneous inhibition of several receptor subtypes with a mixture of antisense oligonucleotides produced intensified abnormalities with cell adhesion. Moreover, altered cell-cell adhesion was found in the stratified epithelium of alpha3, alpha9, and M3 receptor knockout mice. Keratinocytes from these mice exhibited abnormal expression of adhesion molecules at both the protein and the mRNA levels. Thus, our data indicate that the alpha3, alpha9, and M3 acetylcholine receptors play key roles in regulating in a synergistic mode keratinocyte adhesion, most probably by modulating cadherin and catenin levels and activities. These findings may aid in the development of novel methods useful for the treatment of skin adhesion diseases and tumor metastasis.  相似文献   

7.
Effect of some selective agonists and antagonists of cholinergic M receptor subtypes on rectal temperature was investigated in rats at an ambient temperature of 25 degrees +/- 2 degrees C. Centrally administered acetylcholine (ACh) induced transient hypothermia, whereas the muscarinic M1 receptor agonists, arecholine (ip) and McN-A-343 (McN) (icv), induced sustained and dose-related hypothermia. However, the nonspecific muscarinic receptor agonist, oxotremorine, and physostigmine, induced hypothermia at a lower dose and hyperthermia, accompanied by tremors, at higher doses. The muscarinic M2 receptor agonist, carbachol (icv) also produced a dose-related dual effect, hyperthermia and hypothermia being induced by the lower and higher doses, respectively. The M1 receptor antagonists, scopolamine (ip) and pirenzepine (icv), induced hyperthermia, whereas the M2 receptor antagonists, gallamine (icv) and AF-DX 116 (AFDX) (ip), produced hypothermia. The hypothermic effects of ACh. arecholine, McN, physostigmine, oxotremorine and carbachol were attenuated by scopolamine and pirenzepine. However, although scopolamine also inhibited the hyperthermic and tremorogenic effects of the higher dose of oxotremorine, it had a synergistic effect with the hyperthermia-inducing higher dose of physostigmine. AFDX attenuated the hyperthermic effect of the lower dose of carbachol, indicating that it was M2 receptor-mediated. Hemicholinium, an ACh synthesis inhibitor, had a transient hypothermic effect followed by slight hyperthermia. However, it markedly antagonized the hypothermic effects of gallamine and AFDX, indicating that their effects were dependent upon the availability of neuronal ACh. The results indicate that cholinergic hypothermia is a function of central muscarinic M1 receptors, with the M2 receptors serving as automodulators.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
As a decrease in cholinergic neurons has been observed in Alzheimer's Disease (AD), therapeutic approaches to AD include inhibition of acetylcholinesterase to increase acetylcholine levels. Evidence suggests that acetylcholine release in the CNS is modulated by negative feedback via presynaptic M2 receptors, blockade of which should provide another means of increasing acetylcholine release. Structure-activity studies of [4-(phenylsulfonyl)phenyl]methylpiperazines led to the synthesis of 4-cyclohexyl-alpha-[4-[[4-methoxyphenyl]sulfinyl]-phenyl]-1-piperazin eacetonitrile. This compound, SCH 57790, binds to cloned human M2 receptors expressed in CHO cells with an affinity of 2.78 nM; the affinity at M1 receptors is 40-fold lower. SCH 57790 is an antagonist at M2 receptors expressed in CHO cells, as the compound blocks the inhibition of adenylyl cyclase activity mediated by the muscarinic agonist oxotremorine. This compound should be useful in assessing the potential of M2 receptor blockade for enhancement of cognition.  相似文献   

9.
Cold/menthol-activated TRPM8 (transient receptor potential channel melastatin member 8) is primarily expressed in sensory neurons, where it constitutes the principal receptor of environmental innocuous cold. TRPM8 has been shown to be regulated by multiple influences such as phosphorylation, pH, Ca(2+), and lipid messengers. One such messenger is arachidonic acid (AA), which has been shown to inhibit TRPM8 channel activity. However, the physiological pathways mediating the inhibitory effect of AA on TRPM8 still remain unknown. Here, we demonstrate that TRPM8 is regulated via M3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor-coupled signaling cascade based on the activation of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) and cPLA2-catalyzed derivation of AA. Stimulation of M3 receptors heterologously co-expressed with TRPM8 in HEK-293 cells by nonselective muscarinic agonist, oxotremorine methiodide (Oxo-M), caused inhibition of TRPM8-mediated membrane current, which could be mimicked by AA and antagonized by pharmacological or siRNA-mediated cPLA2 silencing. Our results demonstrate the intracellular functional link between M3 receptor and TRPM8 channel via cPLA2/AA and suggest a novel physiological mechanism of arachidonate-mediated regulation of TRPM8 channel activity through muscarinic receptors. We also summarize the existing TRPM8 regulations and discuss their physiological and pathological significance.  相似文献   

10.
Hegde SS  Eglen RM 《Life sciences》1999,64(6-7):419-428
Normal physiological voiding as well as generation of abnormal bladder contractions in diseased states is critically dependent on acetylcholine-induced stimulation of contractile muscarinic receptors on the smooth muscle (detrusor) of the urinary bladder. Muscarinic receptor antagonists are efficacious in treating the symptoms of bladder hyperactivity, such as urge incontinence, although the usefulness of available drugs is limited by undesirable side-effects. Detrusor smooth muscle is endowed principally with M2 and M3 muscarinic receptors with the former predominating in number. M3 muscarinic receptors, coupled to stimulation of phosphoinositide turnover, mediate the direct contractile effects of acetylcholine in the detrusor. Emerging evidence suggests that M2 muscarinic receptors, via inhibition of adenylyl cyclase, cause smooth muscle contraction indirectly by inhibiting sympathetically (beta-adrenoceptor)-mediated relaxation. In certain diseased states, M2 receptors may also contribute to direct smooth muscle contraction. Other contractile mechanisms involving M2 muscarinic receptors, such as activation of a non-specific cationic channel and inactivation of potassium channels, may also be operative in the bladder and requires further investigation. From a therapeutic standpoint, combined blockade of M2 and M3 muscarinic receptors would seem to be ideal since this approach would evoke complete inhibition of cholinergically-evoked smooth muscle contractions. However, if either the M2 or M3 receptor assumes a greater pathophysiological role in disease states, then selective antagonism of only one of the two receptors may be the more rational approach. The ultimate therapeutic strategy is also influenced by the extent to which pre-junctional M1 facilitatory and M2 inhibitory muscarinic receptors regulate acetylcholine release and also which subtypes mediate the undesirable effects of muscarinic receptor blockade such as dry mouth. Finally, the consequence of muscarinic receptor blockade in the central nervous system on the micturition reflex, an issue which is poorly studied and seldom taken into consideration, should not be ignored.  相似文献   

11.
The M(3) muscarinic acetylcholine (ACh) receptor (M(3) mAChR) is expressed in many central and peripheral tissues. It is a prototypic member of the superfamily of G protein-coupled receptors and preferentially activates G proteins of the G(q) family. Recent studies involving the use of newly generated mAChR mutant mice have revealed that the M(3) mAChR plays a key role in regulating many important metabolic functions. Phenotypic analyses of mutant mice that either selectively lacked or overexpressed M(3) receptors in pancreatic beta -cells indicated that beta -cell M(3) mAChRs are essential for maintaining proper insulin release and glucose homeostasis. The experimental data also suggested that strategies aimed at enhancing signaling through beta -cell M(3) mAChRs might be beneficial for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Recent studies with whole body M(3) mAChR knockout mice showed that the absence of M(3) receptors protected mice against various forms of experimentally or genetically induced obesity and obesity-associated metabolic deficits. Under all experimental conditions tested, M(3) receptor-deficient mice showed greatly ameliorated impairments in glucose homeostasis and insulin sensitivity, reduced food intake, and a significant elevation in basal and total energy expenditure, most likely due to increased central sympathetic outflow and increased rate of fatty acid oxidation. These findings are of potential interest for the development of novel therapeutic approaches for the treatment of obesity and associated metabolic disorders.  相似文献   

12.
Fryer AD  Adamko DJ  Yost BL  Jacoby DB 《Life sciences》1999,64(6-7):449-455
In the lungs, acetylcholine released from the parasympathetic nerves stimulates M3 muscarinic receptors on airway smooth muscle inducing contraction and bronchoconstriction. The amount of acetylcholine released from these nerves is limited locally by neuronal M2 muscarinic receptors. These neuronal receptors are dysfunctional in asthma and in animal models of asthma. Decreased M2 muscarinic receptor function results in increased release of acetylcholine and in airway hyperreactivity. Inflammation has long been associated with hyperreactivity and the role of inflammatory cells in loss of neuronal M2 receptor function has been examined. There are several different mechanisms for loss of neuronal M2 receptor function. These include blockade by endogenous antagonists such as eosinophil major basic protein, decreased expression of M2 receptors following infection with viruses or exposure to pro inflammatory cytokines such as gamma interferon. Finally, the affinity of acetylcholine for these receptors can be decreased by exposure to neuraminidase.  相似文献   

13.
Isolated mouse islets were used to identify the muscarinic receptor subtype present in pancreatic B-cells. We thus compared the inhibitory potencies of atropine (non-specific), of pirenzepine (specific for M1 receptors) and of compound AF-DX 116 (specific for cardiac M2 receptors) on acetylcholine-induced insulin release, 86Rb+ efflux and 45Ca2+ efflux. The three antagonists inhibited all effects of acetylcholine, but EC50 values were markedly different: atropine = 1.5-5 nM, pirenzepine = 0.6-1.7 microM and AF-DX 116 = 1.7-11 microM. The results did not suggest that the various effects of ACh could result from the activation of different subtypes of receptors. It is concluded that muscarinic receptors of pancreatic B-cells belong to an M2 subtype distinct from the cardiac M2 receptors.  相似文献   

14.
Molecular cloning of the genes encoding the muscarinic acetylcholine receptors has shown that receptor subtypes classified on the basis of pharmacological properties are related polypeptides encoded by distinct genes. These studies have also revealed the existence of novel muscarinic receptor subtypes. Functional analysis of each of the subtypes expressed in mammalian cells indicates that the different subtypes activate distinct biochemical pathways, a finding that explains the tissue-specific physiological response elicited by the neurotransmitter, acetylcholine.  相似文献   

15.
Structure-function relationship studies of the m3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor have recently identified a series of threonine and tyrosine residues (all located within the hydrophobic receptor core) that are critically involved in acetylcholine binding (Wess, J., Gdula, D., and Brann, M.R. (1991) EMBO J. 10, 3729-3734). To gain further insight into the functional roles of these amino acids, the agonist binding properties of six rat m3 muscarinic receptor point mutants, in which the critical threonine and tyrosine residues had been individually replaced by alanine and phenylalanine, respectively, were studied in greater detail following their transient expression in COS-7 cells. The binding profiles of a series of acetylcholine derivatives suggest that the altered threonine and tyrosine residues are primarily involved in the interaction of the acetylcholine ester moiety with the receptor protein. The two m3 receptor point mutants, Thr234----Ala and Tyr506----Phe, which showed the most pronounced decreases in acetylcholine binding affinities (approximately 40-60-fold as compared with the wild-type receptor), were stably expressed in CHO cells for further functional analysis. Both mutant receptors were found to be severely impaired in their ability to stimulate agonist-dependent phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis. Consistent with this observation, acetylcholine binding to the two mutant receptors was not significantly affected by addition of the GTP analog Gpp(NH)p (5'-guanylyl imidodiphosphate). Our data suggest that Thr234 and Tyr506 (located within transmembrane domains V and VI, respectively), which are conserved among all muscarinic receptors (m1-m5), may play an important role in agonist-induced muscarinic receptor activation.  相似文献   

16.
Evidence suggests that muscarinic receptors (MAChRs) are involved in various aspects of neuronal and vascular functioning, and that there is selective oxidative stress sensitivity (OSS) among MAChR subtypes. COS-7 cells transfected with M1, M2 and M4 subtypes show greater OSS than the M1 and M3 subtypes, as seen by the decreased ability of cells to extrude or sequester calcium (Ca(2+)) following exposure to dopamine (DA) or A beta 25-35, and depolarization by oxotremorine. We sought to determine which receptor domain may be responsible for the differential vulnerability to OS between 'OS-sensitive' (M1) and 'non-sensitive' (M3) subtypes. Comparison of the amino acid sequences of each receptor has shown that the third cytoplasmic loop (i3 loop) is the domain with the most variability between the two subtypes. Therefore, mutations were made by either deleting or exchanging the i3 loop of M1 and M3 receptors. Experiments revealed that deletions of the i3 loop increased DA sensitivity (a lower percentage of cells showing recovery of [Ca(2+)](i) following depolarization) in both receptors. Chimerics of M1 in which the i3 loop of the M3 was exchanged with the i3 loop of the M1 (M1M3i3) showed that DA sensitivity was reduced (a greater percentage of cells showing increases in calcium clearance) following depolarization. The M3 chimerics containing the M1 i3 loop (M3M1i3) offered no protection against DA-induced decrements in calcium buffering. Results suggest that the longer i3 loop of the M3 may decrease OSS, possibly playing a role in targeting antioxidants to specific receptor sites that impart OSS.  相似文献   

17.
Many different G protein-coupled receptors modulate the activity of Ca2+ and K+ channels in a variety of neuronal types. There are five known subtypes (M1-M5) of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. Knockout mice lacking the M1, M2, or M4 subtypes are studied to determine which receptors mediate modulation of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels in mouse sympathetic neurons. In these cells, muscarinic agonists modulate N- and L-type Ca2+ channels and the M-type K+ channel through two distinct, G-protein mediated pathways. The fast and voltage-dependent pathway is lacking in the M2 receptor knockout mice. The slow and voltage-independent pathway is absent in the M1 receptor knockout mice. Neither pathway is affected in the M4 receptor knockout mice. Muscarinic modulation of the M current is absent in the M1 receptor knockout mice, and can be reconstituted in a heterologous expression system using cloned channels and M1 receptors. Our results using knockout mice are compared with pharmacological data in the rat.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Li JH  Hamdan FF  Kim SK  Jacobson KA  Zhang X  Han SJ  Wess J 《Biochemistry》2008,47(9):2776-2788
G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) function can be modulated by different classes of ligands including full and inverse agonists. At present, little is known about the conformational changes that agonist ligands induce in their target GPCRs. In this study, we employed an in situ disulfide cross-linking strategy to monitor ligand-induced structural changes in a series of cysteine (Cys)-substituted mutant M 3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. One of our goals was to study whether the cytoplasmic end of transmembrane domain V (TM V), a region known to be critically involved in receptor/G protein coupling, undergoes a major conformational change, similar to the adjacent region of TM VI. Another goal was to determine and compare the disulfide cross-linking patterns observed after treatment of the different mutant receptors with full versus inverse muscarinic agonists. Specifically, we generated 20 double Cys mutant M 3 receptors harboring one Cys substitution within the cytoplasmic end of TM V (L249-I253) and a second one within the cytoplasmic end of TM VI (A489-L492). These receptors were transiently expressed in COS-7 cells and subsequently characterized in pharmacological and disulfide cross-linking studies. Our cross-linking data, in conjunction with a three-dimensional model of the M 3 muscarinic receptor, indicate that M 3 receptor activation does not trigger major structural disturbances within the cytoplasmic segment of TM V, in contrast to the pronounced structural changes predicted to occur at the cytoplasmic end of TM VI. We also demonstrated that full and inverse muscarinic agonists had distinct effects on the efficiency of disulfide bond formation in specific double Cys mutant M 3 receptors. The present study provides novel information about the dynamic changes that accompany M 3 receptor activation and how the receptor conformations induced (or stabilized) by full versus inverse muscarinic agonists differ from each other at the molecular level. Because all class I GPCRs are predicted to share a similar transmembrane topology, the conclusions drawn from the present study should be of broad general relevance.  相似文献   

20.
Muscarinic receptors subserve many functions in both peripheral and central nervous systems. Some of these processes depend on increases in protein synthesis, which may be achieved by activation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), a kinase that regulates protein translation capacity. Here, we examined the regulation of mTOR-dependent signaling pathways by muscarinic receptors in SK-N-SH human neuroblastoma cells, and in human embryonic kidney (HEK) cell lines transfected with individual muscarinic receptor subtypes. In SK-N-SH cells, the acetylcholine analog carbachol stimulated phosphorylation of the ribosomal S6 protein, a downstream target of mTOR. The sensitivity of the response to subtype-selective muscarinic receptor antagonists indicated that it was mediated by M3 receptors. Carbachol-evoked S6 phosphorylation was blocked by the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin, but was independent of phosphoinositide 3-kinase activation. The response was significantly reduced by the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor U0126, which also inhibited carbachol-evoked S6 phosphorylation in HEK cells expressing M2 receptors, but was ineffective in M3 receptor-expressing HEK cells, although carbachol activated MAPK in both transfected lines. The p90 ribosomal S6 kinase has been implicated in mTOR regulation by phorbol esters, but was not activated by carbachol in any of the cell lines tested. The protein kinase C inhibitor bisindolylmaleimide I reduced carbachol-stimulated S6 phosphorylation in SK-N-SH cells, and in HEK cells expressing M3 receptors, but not in HEK cells expressing M2 receptors. The results demonstrate that multiple muscarinic receptor subtypes regulate mTOR, and that both MAPK-dependent and -independent mechanisms may mediate the response in a cell context-specific manner.  相似文献   

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