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Most central nervous system D2 dopamine receptors are coupled to their effectors by Go

Authors :
Jiang, Meisheng
Spicher, Karsten
Boulay, Guylain
Wang, Ying
Birnbaumer, Lutz
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. March 13, 2001, Vol. 98 Issue 6, 3577
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

We reported previously that Go-deficient mice develop severe neurological defects that include hyperalgesia, a generalized tremor, lack of coordination, and a turning syndrome somewhat reminiscent of unilateral lesions of the dopaminergic nigro-striatal pathway. By using frozen coronal sections of serially sectioned brains of normal and Go-deficient mice, we studied the ability of several G protein coupled receptors to promote binding of GTP[Gamma]S to G proteins and the ability of GTP to promote a shift in the affinity of D2 dopamine receptor for its physiologic agonist dopamine. We found a generalized, but not abolished reduction in agonist-stimulated binding of GTP[Gamma]S to frozen brain sections, with no significant left-right differences. Unexpectedly, the ability of GTP to regulate the binding affinity of dopamine to D2 receptors (as seen in in situ [[sup.35]S]sulpiride displacement curves) that was robust in control mice, was absent in Go-deficient mice. The data suggest that most of the effects of the Gi/Go-coupled D2 receptors in the central nervous system are mediated by Go instead of Gi1, Gi2, or Gi3. In agreement with this, the effect of GTP on dopamine binding to D2 receptors in double Gi1 plus Gi2- and Gi1 plus Gi3-deficient mice was essentially unaffected. G protein | knockout mice | homologous recombination | GTP shift | sulpiride

Details

ISSN :
00278424
Volume :
98
Issue :
6
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.74802407