Receptors for excitatory amino-acid transmitters on nerve cells fall into two main categories associated with non-selective cationic channels, the NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) and non-NMDA (kainate and quisqualate) receptors. Special properties of NMDA receptors such as their voltage-dependent blockade by Mg2+ (refs 3, 4) and their permeability to Na+, K+ as well as to Ca2+ (refs 5, 6), have led to the suggestion that these receptors are important in plasticity during development and learning. They have been implicated in long-term potentiation (LTP), a model for the study of the cellular mechanisms of learning. We report here that glutamate and NMDA, acting at typical NMDA receptors, stimulate the release of arachidonic acid (as well as 11- and 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids from striatal neurons probably by stimulation of a Ca2+-dependent phospholipase A2. Kainate and quisqualate, as well as K+-induced depolarization were ineffective. Our results provide direct evidence in favour of the hypothesis, that arachidonic acid derivatives, produced by activation of the postsynaptic cell, could be messengers that cross the synaptic cleft to modify the presynaptic functions known to be altered during LTP. In addition, we suggest that NMDA receptors are the postsynaptic receptors which trigger the synthesis of these putative transynaptic messengers.
The neurotransmitter serotonin (5-HT) plays an important role in the regulation of multiple events in the CNS. We demonstrated recently a coupling between the 5-HT 4 receptor and the heterotrimeric G13-protein resulting in RhoA-dependent neurite retraction and cell rounding (Ponimaskin et al., 2002). In the present study, we identified G12 as an additional G-protein that can be activated by another member of serotonin receptors, the 5-HT 7 receptor. Expression of 5-HT 7 receptor induced constitutive and agonist-dependent activation of a serum response element-mediated gene transcription through G12-mediated activation of small GTPases. In NIH3T3 cells, activation of the 5-HT 7 receptor induced filopodia formation via a Cdc42-mediated pathway correlating with RhoA-dependent cell rounding. In mouse hippocampal neurons, activation of the endogenous 5-HT 7 receptors significantly increased neurite length, whereas stimulation of 5-HT 4 receptors led to a decrease in the length and number of neurites. These data demonstrate distinct roles for 5-HT 7 R/G12 and 5-HT 4 R/G13 signaling pathways in neurite outgrowth and retraction, suggesting that serotonin plays a prominent role in regulating the neuronal cytoarchitecture in addition to its classical role as neurotransmitter.
We are creating families of designer G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) to allow for precise spatiotemporal control of GPCR signaling in vivo. These engineered GPCRs, called receptors activated solely by synthetic ligands (RASSLs), are unresponsive to endogenous ligands but can be activated by nanomolar concentrations of pharmacologically inert, drug-like small molecules. Currently, RASSLs exist for the three major GPCR signaling pathways (Gs, Gi, Gq). These new advances are reviewed here to help facilitate the use of these powerful and diverse tools.
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