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1.
The glutamatergic transmission system plays a key role in afferent and efferent pathways involved in micturition. By in situ hybridization combined with retrograde Fast Blue labeling, expression of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid (AMPA) receptor (GluR-A to -D) and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor (NR1 and NR2A-D) subunit mRNAs were examined in visceromotor and somatomotor neurons of the rat lumbosacral spinal cord. Parasympathetic preganglionic neurons (PGNs) in the intermediolateral nucleus highly expressed GluR-A and GluR-B subunit mRNAs, with very low levels for GluR-C and GluR-D subunits. As for the NMDA receptor, PGNs were associated with abundant signals for NR1 subunit mRNA, but without any NR2 subunit mRNAs. On the other hand, somatomotor neurons in the ventral horn (dorsolateral nucleus) express all four AMPA receptor subunit mRNAs, showing relatively abundant expressions of GluR-C and GluR-D subunit mRNA compared with PGNs. In addition to high levels of NR1 subunit mRNA, dorsolateral nucleus neurons moderately expressed NR2A and NR2B subunit mRNAs. These results suggest that molecular organization of both AMPA and NMDA receptor channels are distinct between PGNs and dorsolateral nucleus neurons. Considering that native NMDA receptors are heteromeric channels composed of NR1 and NR2 subunits, it seems likely that dorsolateral nucleus neurons, not PGNs, are provided with functional NMDA receptors, which could induce activity-dependent changes in synaptic transmission in the efferent pathway for the lower urinary tract.  相似文献   

2.
The NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) subclass of glutamate receptor is essential for the synaptic plasticity thought to underlie learning and memory and for synaptic refinement during development. It is currently believed that the NMDA receptor (NMDAR) is a heteromultimeric channel comprising the ubiquitous NR1 subunit and at least one regionally localized NR2 subunit. Here we report the characterization of a regulatory NMDAR subunit, NR3A (formerly termed NMDAR-L or chi-1), which is expressed primarily during brain development. NR3A co-immunoprecipitates with receptor subunits NR1 and NR2 in cerebrocortical extracts. In single-channel recordings from Xenopus oocytes, addition of NR3A to NR1 and NR2 leads to the appearance of a smaller unitary conductance. Genetic knockout of NR3A in mice results in enhanced NMDA responses and increased dendritic spines in early postnatal cerebrocortical neurons. These data suggest that NR3A is involved in the development of synaptic elements by modulating NMDAR activity.  相似文献   

3.
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptors have an established role in the regulation of motor behavior by the basal ganglia. Recent studies have revealed that NMDA receptors are heteromeric assemblies of structurally related subunits from two families: NMDAR1, which is required for channel activity, and NMDAR2A-D, which modulate the properties of the channels. In the rat, the NMDA receptor subunits exhibit anatomically restricted patterns of expression, so that each component of the basal ganglia has a distinct NMDA receptor subunit mRNA phenotype. We have used in vivo intrastriatal injection of synthetic antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) to examine the roles of particular NMDA receptor subunits in the regulation of motor behavior in rats. Injection of 15 nmol of a 20-mer ODN targeted to the NMDAR1 subunit induced spontaneous ipsilateral rotation. Smaller doses of NMDAR1 antisense ODN did not lead to spontaneous rotation, but prominent ipsilateral rotation was observed after systemic administration of D-amphetamine. An antisense ODN to NMDAR2A was also effective in eliciting amphetamine-inducible rotation, although the magnitude of the effect was less than that seen with NMDAR1, whereas ODNs targeted to NMDAR2B, NMDAR2C and an NMDAR1 sense strand ODN had no effect on behavior. In situ hybridization demonstrated that injection of the NMDAR1, NMDAR2A or NMDAR2B antisense ODNs produced specific reductions in target mRNA signal intensity in the injected striatum. After NMDAR1 antisense ODN injection, striatal binding of 3H-glutamate target mRNA signal intensity in the injected striatum. After NMDAR1 antisense ODN injection, striatal binding of 3H-glutamate to NMDA sites was not altered, although strychnine-insensitive 3H-glycine binding sites exhibited a small but significant reduction. These observations suggest that NMDA receptor complexes containing NMDAR1 and, to a lesser extent, NMDAR2A subunits play particularly important roles in the regulation of motor behavior by neostriatal neurons.  相似文献   

4.
The NMDA (N-methyl D-aspartate) receptors in the brain play a critical role in synaptic plasticity, synaptogenesis and excitotoxicity. Molecular cloning has demonstrated that NMDA receptors consist of several homologous subunits (NMDAR1, 2A-2D). A variety of studies have suggested that protein phosphorylation of NMDA receptors may regulate their function and play a role in many forms of synaptic plasticity such as long-term potentiation. We have examined the phosphorylation of the NMDA receptor subunit NMDAR1 (NR1) by protein kinase C (PKC) in cells transiently expressing recombinant NR1 and in primary cultures of cortical neurons. PKC phosphorylation occurs on several distinct sites on the NR1 subunit. Most of these sites are contained within a single alternatively spliced exon in the C-terminal domain, which has previously been proposed to be on the extracellular side of the membrane. These results demonstrate that alternative splicing of the NR1 messenger RNA regulates its phosphorylation by PKC, and that mRNA splicing is a novel mechanism for regulating the sensitivity of glutamate receptors to protein phosphorylation. These results also provide evidence that the C-terminal domain of the NR1 protein is located intracellularly, suggesting that the proposed transmembrane topology model for glutamate receptors may be incorrect.  相似文献   

5.
The expression of mRNAs encoding subunits of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor was examined in cortical neurons maintained in primary culture. Cultures were prepared from embryonic day 17 rat neocortex. At this developmental age, levels of NR1, NR2A, NR2B, and NR2C mRNA were low or undetectable. Expression of NR1 mRNA increased progressively between days 1 and 21 in vitro. The amount of NR2A mRNA did not change between days 1 and 7 but increased between days 7 and 21. In contrast, levels of NR2B mRNA increased between days 1 and 7, with little further change after day 7. The level of NR2B mRNA was approximately 4-fold higher than that of NR2A mRNA in 21-day cultures. Using ligand binding assays, the proportion of NMDA receptors having a low affinity for ifenprodil was also found to increase over time in culture. The increase in the expression of receptors having a low affinity for ifenprodil and the increase in NR1 and NR2A mRNAs were reduced or prevented by maintaining cells in medium with a low concentration of serum. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that inclusion of the NR2A subunit in native NMDA receptors is responsible for their low affinity for ifenprodil. Splice variants of NR1 lacking the 5' (amino-terminal) insert were found to be the predominant forms of NR1 in cultured neurons. Variants containing the 5' insert represented only a small (< or = 5%) fraction of total NR1 mRNA, and their proportion was not altered as a function of time in culture. Time-dependent changes in the properties of NMDA receptors and in the expression of subunit mRNA occurring in cultured neurons are similar to changes observed in developing rat brain. Thus, the developmental sequence of NMDA receptor expression that occurs in vivo is partially retained in neurons maintained in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
The developing neurons have been reported to be extremely susceptible to toxicity of NMDA during a restricted developmental period. Pontosubicular neuronal necrosis is a typical type of perinatal human brain lesion and often coexists with other forms of cerebral hypoxic and ischemic injuries. To determine whether functional changes of NMDA receptors related to the susceptibility to NMDA toxicity are involved in developing neurons in the pontine nucleus, we have examined the lesion produced by in vivo direct injection of NMDA into the pontine nucleus of rats at postnatal days 1-30, recorded NMDA-induced whole-cell currents from neurons in the pontine nucleus in the developing rat brainstem slices, and performed in situ hybridization for NMDA receptor subunit mRNAs in the pontine nucleus. The susceptibility to NMDA neurotoxicity peaked near postnatal day 15, and the NMDA-induced currents showed prominent reduction of the voltage-dependent block by Mg2+ near postnatal day 15. The pontine nucleus near postnatal day 15 showed distinct expression of the NMDA receptor subunit NR2C mRNA. These results suggest that the susceptibility to NMDA neurotoxicity that is enhanced in the rat pontine nucleus near postnatal day 15 is mediated by the NMDA receptor channels that are relatively insensitive to Mg2+ and that the reduction in the sensitivity of NMDA receptors to Mg2+ correlates with the expression of the NR2C. We present the possibility that functional changes in the NMDA receptor channels play a crucial role in the occurrence of developmentally specific neuronal injury.  相似文献   

7.
8.
NMDA receptors are composed of proteins from two families: NMDAR1 and NMDAR2. We used quantitative double-label in situ hybridization to examine in rat brain the expression of NMDAR1, NMDAR2A, NMDAR2B, and NMDAR2C mRNA in six neurochemically defined populations of striatal neurons: preproenkephalin (ENK) and preprotachykinin (SP) expressing projection neurons, and somatostatin (SOM), glutamic acid decarboxylase 67 (GAD67), parvalbumin (PARV), and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) expressing interneurons. NMDAR1 was expressed by all striatal neurons: strongly in ENK, SP, PARV and ChAT neurons, and less intensely in SOM and GAD67 positive cells. NMDAR2A mRNA was present at moderate levels in all striatal neurons except those containing ChAT. Labeling for NMDAR2B was strong in projection neurons and ChAT interneurons, and only moderate in SOM, GAD67 and PARV interneurons. NMDAR2C was scarce in striatal neurons, but a low level signal was detected in GAD67 positive cells. NMDAR2C expression was also observed in small cells not labeled by any of the markers, most likely glia. These data suggest that all striatal neurons have NMDA receptors, but different populations have different subunit compositions which may affect function as well as selective vulnerability.  相似文献   

9.
Recent studies of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors have led to the suggestion that there are two distinct classes of native NMDA receptors, identifiable from their single-channel conductance properties. 'High-conductance' openings arise from NR2A- or NR2B-containing receptors, and 'low-conductance' openings arise from NR2C- or NR2D-containing receptors. In addition, the low-conductance channels show reduced sensitivity to block by Mg2+. The readily identified cell types and simple architecture of the cerebellum make it an ideal model system in which to determine the contribution of specific subunits to functional NMDA receptors. Furthermore, mRNA for all of these four NR2 subunits are represented in this brain region. We have examined NMDA channels in Purkinje cells, deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN) neurons and Golgi cells. First we find that NR2D-containing NMDA receptors give rise to low-conductance openings in cell-attached recordings from Purkinje cells. The characteristic conductance of these events cannot, therefore, be ascribed to patch excision. Second, patches from some DCN neurons exhibit mixed populations of high- and low-conductance openings. Third, Golgi cells also exhibit a mixed population of high- and low-conductance NMDA receptor openings. The features of these low-conductance openings are consistent with the presence of NR2D-containing NMDA receptors, as suggested by in situ hybridization data. On the other hand the existence of high-conductance channels, with properties typical of NR2B-containing receptors, was not expected. Our results provide new evidence about the subunit composition of NMDA receptors in identified cerebellar cells, and suggest that examination of single-channel properties is a potentially powerful approach for determining the possible subunit composition of native NMDA receptors.  相似文献   

10.
The N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) subtype of ionotropic glutamate receptors comprises a family of highly homologous subunits which assemble into oligomeric protein complexes. Alterations in subunit composition are developmentally regulated, leading to functionally distinct receptor populations. Here, the contribution of the subunit NR2B to NMDA receptor complex formation was analysed in neonatal rat brain, employing polyclonal antibodies raised against NR2B-specific synthetic peptides. By hydrodynamic size fractionation of the solubilized receptor protein and chemical cross-linking, NR2B antigen was found to be associated with several protein species of up to 690 kDa molecular weight. These observations show NR2B to be part of a multimeric receptor complex. Fractionation of cortex homogenates from E18 rat embryos on sucrose density gradients revealed NR2B polypeptide to be highly enriched in axonal growth cones. A similar distribution was found by fluorescence microscopy of immature hippocampal neurons, showing a preferential accumulation of NR2B antigen in axonal growth cones and varicosities. In mature cells, NR2B antigen displayed a punctated distribution pattern with redistribution to somato-dendritic spheres. The association of NR2B with axonal growth cones and processes of immature neurons suggests a role of NMDA receptors in the regulation of neurite outgrowth and migration.  相似文献   

11.
The cytotoxicity induced by the transient expression of functional N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors has been examined with the use of a luciferase reporter assay in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Various NMDA receptor antagonists, in a dose-dependent manner, prevented a loss of luciferase activity 24 to 48 hr post-transfection of either the NR1/NR2A or NR1/ NR2B subunit receptor configurations, likely correlating to the time required to express functionally these receptors. Both glutamate and NMDA were potently cytotoxic to transfected cells previously protected by antagonists. The novel ifenprodil analog (1S,2S)-1-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-(4-hydroxy-4-phenylpiperidino)-1-propanol (CP101,606-27) protected cells expressing NR1/NR2B, but not those cells expressing either NR1/NR2A or, putatively, NR1/NR2A/NR2B. Decreased cytotoxicity was observed when a mutated NR1 subunit (N616R) with reduced Ca++ permeability was used in coexpression studies with NR2A or NR2B. In contrast to our results with NR1/NR2A or NR1/NR2B, cells expressing NR1/NR2C did not perish. Our studies suggest that expression of functional NMDA receptors in non-neuronal cells leads to a form of excitotoxicity similar to that observed in mammalian neurons in vitro.  相似文献   

12.
Evidence has accumulated to suggest that the NMDA glutamate receptor subtype plays an important role in neuronal degeneration evoked by hypoxia, ischemia, or trauma. Cerebellar granule cells in culture are vulnerable to NMDA-induced neuronal excitotoxicity. In these cells, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF2) prevent the excitotoxic effect of NMDA. However, little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying the protective properties of these trophic factors. Using cultured rat cerebellar granule cells, we investigated whether BDNF and FGF2 prevent NMDA toxicity by downregulating NMDA receptor function. Western blot and RNase protection analyses were used to determine the expression of the various NMDA receptor subunits (NR1, NR2A, NR2B, and NR2C) after BDNF or FGF2 treatment. FGF2 and BDNF elicited a time-dependent decrease in the expression of NR2A and NR2C subunits. Because NMDA receptor activation leads to increased intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), we studied the effect of the BDNF- and FGF2-induced reduction in NR2A and NR2C synthesis on the NMDA-evoked Ca2+ responses by single-cell fura-2 fluorescence ratio imaging. BDNF and FGF2 reduced the NMDA-mediated [Ca2+]i increase with a time dependency that correlates with their ability to decrease NR2A and NR2C subunit expression, suggesting that these trophic factors also induce a functional downregulation of the NMDA receptor. Because sustained [Ca2+]i is believed to be causally related to neuronal injury, we suggest that BDNF and FGF2 may protect cerebellar granule cells against excitotoxicity by altering the NMDA receptor-Ca2+ signaling via a downregulation of NMDA receptor subunit expression.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined the membrane localization of an AMPA receptor subunit (GluR1) and an NMDA receptor subunit (NR1) endogenously expressed in primary cultures of rat hippocampal neurons. In unstimulated cultures, both GluR1 and NR1 subunits were concentrated in SV2-positive synaptic clusters associated with dendritic shafts and spines. Within 5 min after the addition of 100 microM glutamate to the culture medium, a rapid and selective redistribution of GluR1 subunits away from a subset of synaptic sites was observed. This redistribution of GluR1 subunits was also induced by AMPA, did not require NMDA receptor activation, did not result from ligand-induced neurotoxicity, and was reversible after the removal of agonist. The activation-induced redistribution of GluR1 subunits was associated with a pronounced (approximately 50%) decrease in the frequency of miniature EPSCs, consistent with a role of GluR1 subunit redistribution in mediating rapid regulation of synaptic efficacy. We conclude that ionotropic glutamate receptors are regulated in native neurons by rapid, subtype-specific membrane trafficking, which may modulate synaptic transmission in response to physiological or pathophysiological activation.  相似文献   

14.
Previous work with recombinant receptors has shown that the identity of the NMDA NR2 subunit influences receptor affinity for both glutamate and glycine. We have investigated the developmental change in NMDA receptor affinity for both glutamate and glycine in acutely dissociated parietal cortex neurons of the rat, together with the expression during ontogeny of NR2A and NR2B mRNA and protein. Whereas there is little change in NMDA receptor glutamate affinity with age, a population of NMDA receptors emerges in 14- and 28-d-old animals with a markedly reduced affinity for glycine (mKD = approximately 800 nM) and a reduced sensitivity to the NR2B subunit-selective NMDA antagonist ifenprodil. These changes are paralleled by a developmental increase in the expression of NR2A. Thus, in mature animals a population of NMDA receptors appears with a lower affinity for glycine that might not be saturated under normal physiological conditions. Ifenprodil (10 microM) inhibits virtually all of the NMDA receptor-evoked current in very young neurons that contain a single population of receptors exhibiting a high affinity for glycine (mKD = approximately 20 nM). In older neurons, which contain NMDA receptors with both high and low affinities for glycine, ifenprodil (10 microM) inhibits both the high-affinity population and a significant proportion of the low-affinity component, thus revealing three pharmacologically distinct populations of NMDA receptors in single neurons. Moreover, these observations suggest that ifenprodil might bind with high affinity to NMDA receptors containing both NR2A and NR2B subunits as well as those containing only NR2B.  相似文献   

15.
The expression of glutamate receptor/subunit mRNAs was examined 3 weeks after discontinuing 1 week of daily injections of saline or cocaine. The level of mRNA for GluR1-4, NMDAR1, and mGluR5 receptors was measured with in situ hybridization and RT-PCR. In nucleus accumbens, acute cocaine treatment significantly reduced the mRNA level for GluR3, GluR4, and NMDAR1 subunits, whereas repeated cocaine reduced the level for GluR3 mRNA. Acute cocaine treatment also reduced the NMDAR1 mRNA level in dorsolateral striatum and ventral tegmental area. In prefrontal cortex, repeated cocaine treatment significantly increased the level of GluR2 mRNA. The GluR2 mRNA level was not changed by acute or repeated cocaine in any other brain regions examined. Repeated cocaine treatment also significantly increased mGluR5 mRNA levels in nucleus accumbens shell and dorsolateral striatum. Functional properties of the ionotropic glutamate receptors are determined by subunit composition. In addition, metabotropic glutamate receptors can modulate synaptic transmission and the response to stimulation of ionotropic receptors. Thus, the observed changes in levels of AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits and the mGluR5 metabotropic receptor may alter excitatory neurotransmission in the mesocorticolimbic dopamine system, which could play a significant role in the enduring biochemical and behavioral effects of cocaine.  相似文献   

16.
The goal of this study was to determine whether chronic ethanol-mediated up-regulation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) was associated with an augmentation of the NMDAR polypeptide subunits in the mammalian cortical neurons. The results show that chronic ethanol treatment produced an increase in the R1 and R2B polypeptide subunits. The R2A subunit was not expressed in these neurons. Chronic NMDAR antagonist ((+)-3-2-(carboxypiperazin-4-yl)propyl-1-phosphonic acid (CPP)) treatment also increased the R1 and R2B polypeptide subunits. A similar increase was observed when ethanol and CPP were used in combination. Binding studies using [3H]MK-801 ((+)-5-methyl-10, 11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]cyclophenptan-5,10-imine maleate), a noncompetitive NMDAR antagonist, confirmed that concomitant exposure of ethanol and CPP up-regulated the NMDAR. Our results demonstrate for the first time that chronic ethanol treatment increased the NMDA receptor polypeptide subunit synthesis and that it was associated with an increase in [3H]MK-801 binding sites.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Pregnenolone sulfate (PS) is an abundant neurosteroid that can potentiate or inhibit ligand gated ion channel activity and thereby alter neuronal excitability. Whereas PS is known to inhibit kainate and AMPA responses while potentiating NMDA responses, the dependence of modulation on receptor subunit composition remains to be determined. Toward this end, the effect of PS on recombinant kainate (GluR6), AMPA (GluR1 or GluR3), and NMDA (NR1(100)+NR2A) receptors was characterized electrophysiologically with respect to efficacy and potency of modulation. With Xenopus oocytes expressing GluR1, GluR3 or GluR6 receptors, PS reduces the efficacy of kainate without affecting its potency, indicative of a noncompetitive mechanism of action. Conversely, with oocytes expressing NR1(100)+NR2A subunits, PS enhances the efficacy of NMDA without affecting its potency. Whereas the modulatory efficacy, but not the potency, of PS is increased two-fold by co-injection of NR1(100)+NR2A cRNAs as compared with NR1(100) cRNA alone, there is little or no effect of the NR2A subunit on efficacy or potency of pregnanolone (or epipregnanolone) sulfate as an inhibitor of the NMDA response. This suggests that the NR2A subunit controls the efficacy of neurosteroid enhancement, but not inhibition, which is consistent with our previous finding that potentiating and inhibitory steroids act at distinct sites on the NMDA receptor. This represents a first step towards understanding the role of subunit composition in determining neurosteroid modulation of ionotropic glutamate receptor function.  相似文献   

19.
The associations of glutamate receptor subunits (NMDAR1, AMPA GluR1 and GluR2/3) and spinothalamic tract neurons in the rat lumbar spinal cord dorsal horn were investigated. Staining for NMDAR1 and AMPA GluR1 and GluR2/3 receptor subunits was observed throughout the spinothalamic tract soma and dendrites, particularly in association with the rough endoplasmic reticulum and some postsynaptic membrane sites. Immunostaining for NMDAR1 and AMPA GluR2/3 was also noted in presynaptic membrane sites. Localization of both NMDA and AMPA glutamate receptor subunits in association with spinothalamic tract neurons provides anatomical evidence in support of the various interactions reported for glutamate receptors in nociception. Presynaptic localization of the AMPA GluR2/3 receptor subunit suggests that spinothalamic tract cells may also be affected presynaptically by AMPA glutamate receptor interactions.  相似文献   

20.
Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides were used to determine whether alterations in the expression of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor subunit mRNA are responsible for developmental changes in the sensitivity of receptors to agonists and antagonists. Xenopus laevis oocytes were injected with mRNA prepared from neonatal and adult rat cerebral cortex, and the effects of agonists and antagonists were determined under voltage-clamp conditions. Glycine-site antagonists like 7-chlorokynurenate and glutamate-site antagonists like CGP-39653 were more potent at NMDA receptors expressed from mRNA from adult rat cerebral cortex than those expressed from mRNA from 1-day-old rat. NMDA receptors from 1-day-old rat cerebral cortex were more sensitive to activation by glycine than were receptors from adult rat cerebral cortex. 7-Chlorokynurenate and CGP-39653 were more potent inhibitors of responses seen with heteromeric NR1/NR2A receptors than with NR1/ NR2B receptors. Conversely, heteromeric NR1/NR2B receptors were more sensitive to activation by glycine than were NR1/NR2A receptors. We previously described a delay in the expression of the NR2A subunit in developing rat brain. Anti-sense oligodeoxynucleotides were used to determine whether the delayed expression of the NR2A subunit underlies changes in pharmacological properties observed during development. The properties of receptors seen when adult brain mRNA was coinjected with antisense oligodeoxynucleotides against the NR2A subunit were similar to those found in receptors from 1-day-old rat brain. These data suggest that changes in the sensitivity of NMDA receptors to antagonists and to glycine seen during development are a result of alterations in the expression of different species of NR2 subunit mRNA.  相似文献   

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