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Molecular biology of glutamate receptors

Authors :
Hilda Lomelí
Anne Herb
William Wisden
Rolf Sprengel
Hannah Monyer
Nail Burnashev
Willy Günther
Bernd Sommer
Martin Köhler
Thomas Kuner
Peter H. Seeburg
Ralf Schoepfer
Peter Ruppersberg
Source :
Progress in Neurobiology
Publication Year :
1994

Abstract

The ligand-gated receptors for L-glutamate play a central role in acute neuronal degeneration. Recently cDNAs have been isolated for subunits of several glutamate receptor subtypes. By sequence homology all these subunits clearly belong to one large gene family. Several subfamilies exist and match roughly previously pharmacologically and electrophysiologically defined subtypes of glutamate receptors. Currently four genes (GluR A, B, C and D) are known that code for the AMPA subtypes of glutamate receptors. Recombinant expression of wild type and mutated sequences identified a critical residue in the putative TM2 channel-lining segment that controls Ca2+ ion permeability. The arginine (R) found in GluR B subunits at that position renders AMPA channels impermeable for Ca2+ ions, whereas glutamine (Q) containing GluR A, C and D subunits give rise to Ca2+ permeable channels. RNA editing converts the genomically encoded glutamine codon into the arginine codon found in GluR B cDNAs for the Q/R site. NMDA subtypes of glutamate receptors are formed after coexpression of the NR1 cDNA with a cDNA of the NR2 family. Depending on the member of the NR2 family used, NMDA receptors with different kinetical and pharmacological properties are generated. Common to all channels of these NMDA receptors is a high permeability for Ca2+ ions and a voltage dependent block by Mg2+ ions. All currently known NMDA receptor subunits have an asparagine at the Q/R homologous position. We found that this residue is critical for Mg2+ block and Ca2+ permeability of NMDA receptor channels.

Details

ISSN :
03010082
Volume :
42
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Progress in neurobiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2bd51c7c085e82922f61b766f46aac13