The effects of nanomolar cocaine concentrations, possibly not blocking the dopamine transporter activity, on striatal D2-σ1 heteroreceptor complexes and their inhibitory signaling over Gi/o, have been tested in rat striatal synaptosomes and HEK293T cells. Furthermore, the possible role of σ1 receptors (σ1Rs) in the cocaine-provoked amplification of D2 receptor (D2R)-induced reduction of K+-evoked [3H]-DA and glutamate release from rat striatal synaptosomes, has also been investigated. The dopamine D2-likeR agonist quinpirole (10 nM–1 μM), concentration-dependently reduced K+-evoked [3H]-DA and glutamate release from rat striatal synaptosomes. The σ1R antagonist BD1063 (100 nM), amplified the effects of quinpirole (10 and 100 nM) on K+-evoked [3H]-DA, but not glutamate, release. Nanomolar cocaine concentrations significantly enhanced the quinpirole (100 nM)-induced decrease of K+-evoked [3H]-DA and glutamate release from rat striatal synaptosomes. In the presence of BD1063 (10 nM), cocaine failed to amplify the quinpirole (100 nM)-induced effects. In cotransfected σ1R and D2LR HEK293T cells, quinpirole had a reduced potency to inhibit the CREB signal versus D2LR singly transfected cells. In the presence of cocaine (100 nM), the potency of quinpirole to inhibit the CREB signal was restored. In D2L singly transfected cells cocaine (100 nM and 10 μM) exerted no modulatory effects on the inhibitory potency of quinpirole to bring down the CREB signal. These results led us to hypothesize the existence of functional D2-σ1R complexes on the rat striatal DA and glutamate nerve terminals and functional D2-σ1R-DA transporter complexes on the striatal DA terminals. Nanomolar cocaine concentrations appear to alter the allosteric receptor-receptor interactions in such complexes leading to enhancement of Gi/o mediated D2R signaling.

Cocaine modulates allosteric D2-σ1 receptor-receptor interactions on dopamine and glutamate nerve terminals from rat striatum

Beggiato S.;
2017-01-01

Abstract

The effects of nanomolar cocaine concentrations, possibly not blocking the dopamine transporter activity, on striatal D2-σ1 heteroreceptor complexes and their inhibitory signaling over Gi/o, have been tested in rat striatal synaptosomes and HEK293T cells. Furthermore, the possible role of σ1 receptors (σ1Rs) in the cocaine-provoked amplification of D2 receptor (D2R)-induced reduction of K+-evoked [3H]-DA and glutamate release from rat striatal synaptosomes, has also been investigated. The dopamine D2-likeR agonist quinpirole (10 nM–1 μM), concentration-dependently reduced K+-evoked [3H]-DA and glutamate release from rat striatal synaptosomes. The σ1R antagonist BD1063 (100 nM), amplified the effects of quinpirole (10 and 100 nM) on K+-evoked [3H]-DA, but not glutamate, release. Nanomolar cocaine concentrations significantly enhanced the quinpirole (100 nM)-induced decrease of K+-evoked [3H]-DA and glutamate release from rat striatal synaptosomes. In the presence of BD1063 (10 nM), cocaine failed to amplify the quinpirole (100 nM)-induced effects. In cotransfected σ1R and D2LR HEK293T cells, quinpirole had a reduced potency to inhibit the CREB signal versus D2LR singly transfected cells. In the presence of cocaine (100 nM), the potency of quinpirole to inhibit the CREB signal was restored. In D2L singly transfected cells cocaine (100 nM and 10 μM) exerted no modulatory effects on the inhibitory potency of quinpirole to bring down the CREB signal. These results led us to hypothesize the existence of functional D2-σ1R complexes on the rat striatal DA and glutamate nerve terminals and functional D2-σ1R-DA transporter complexes on the striatal DA terminals. Nanomolar cocaine concentrations appear to alter the allosteric receptor-receptor interactions in such complexes leading to enhancement of Gi/o mediated D2R signaling.
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Ferraro-CellSign.pdf

Solo gestori archivio

Descrizione: Article
Tipologia: PDF editoriale
Dimensione 2.26 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
2.26 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11564/725282
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 10
  • Scopus 22
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 21
social impact