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Regulation of phosphoinositide turnover in neonatal rat cerebral cortex by group I‐ and II‐ selective metabotropic glutamate receptor agonists
Author(s) -
Mistry Rajendra,
Golding Nicki,
John Challiss R A.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0007-1188
DOI - 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701626
Subject(s) - agonist , metabotropic glutamate receptor , chemistry , metabotropic receptor , inositol phosphate , medicine , glutamate receptor , endocrinology , hippocampus , receptor , inositol , cerebral cortex , nmda receptor , biochemistry , biology
The interactive effects of different metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptor subtypes to regulate phosphoinositide turnover have been studied in neonatal rat cerebral cortex and hippocampus by use of agonists and antagonists selective between group I and II mGlu receptors. The group II‐selective agonist 2 R ,4 R ‐4‐aminopyrrolidine‐2,4‐dicarboxylate (2 R ,4 R ‐APDC; 100 μ M ) had no effect on basal total inositol phosphate ([ 3 H]‐InsP x ) accumulation (in the presence of Li + ) in myo ‐[ 3 H]‐inositol pre‐labelled slices, but enhanced the maximal [ 3 H]‐InsP x response to the group I‐selective agonist ( S )‐3,5‐dihydroxyphenylglycine (DHPG) by about 100% in both hippocampus and cerebral cortex. In cerebral cortex the enhancing effect of 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC occurred with respect to the maximal responsiveness and had no effect on EC 50 values for DHPG (‐log EC 50 ( M ): control, 5.56±0.05; +2 R ,4 R ‐APDC, 5.51±0.08). 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC also caused a significant enhancement of the DHPG‐stimulated inositol 1,4,5‐trisphosphate (Ins(1,4,5)P 3 ) mass response over an initial 0–300 s time‐course. The enhancing effects of 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC on DHPG‐stimulated [ 3 H]‐InsP x accumulation were observed in both the presence and nominal absence of extracellular Ca 2+ , and irrespective of whether 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC was added before, simultaneous with, or subsequent to DHPG. Furthermore, increasing the tissue cyclic AMP concentration up to 100 fold had no effect on DHPG‐stimulated Ins(1,4,5)P 3 accumulation in the absence or presence of 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC. 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC and (2 S , 1′ R , 2′ R , 3′ R )‐2‐(2,3‐dicarboxylcyclopropyl)glycine (DCG‐IV), the latter agent in the presence of MK‐801 to prevent activation of NMDA‐receptors, each inhibited forskolin‐stimulated cyclic AMP accumulation by about 50%, with respective EC 50 values of 1.3 and 0.04 μ M (‐log EC 50 ( M ): 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC, 5.87±0.09; DCG‐IV, 7.38±0.05). In the presence of DHPG (30 μ M ), 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC and DCG‐IV also concentration‐dependently increased [ 3 H]‐InsP x accumulation with respective EC 50 values of 4.7 and 0.28 μ M (‐log EC 50 ( M ): 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC, 5.33±0.04; DCG‐IV, 6.55±0.09) which were 3–7 fold rightward‐shifted relative to the adenylyl cyclase inhibitory responses. The group II‐selective mGlu receptor antagonist LY307452 (30 μ M ) caused parallel rightward shifts in the concentration‐effect curves for inhibition of forskolin‐stimulated adenylyl cyclase, and enhancement of DHPG‐stimulated [ 3 H]‐InsP x accumulation, by 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC yielding similar equilibrium dissociation constants ( K d s, 3.7±1.1 and 4.1±0.4 μ M respectively) for each response. The ability of 2 R ,4 R ‐APDC to enhance receptor‐mediated [ 3 H]‐InsP x accumulation appeared to be agonist‐specific; thus although DHPG (100 μ M ) and the muscarinic cholinoceptor agonist carbachol (10 μ M ) stimulated similar [ 3 H]‐InsP x accumulations, only the response to the former agonist was enhanced by co‐activation of group II mGlu receptors. These data demonstrate that second messenger‐generating phosphoinositide responses stimulated by group I mGlu receptors are positively modulated by co‐activation of group II mGlu receptors in cerebral cortex and hippocampus. The data presented here are discussed with respect to the possible mechanisms which might mediate the modulatory activity, and the physiological and pathophysiological significance of such crosstalk between mGlu receptors.British Journal of Pharmacology (1998) 123 , 581–589; doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0701626