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  • Allosteric signaling through an mGlu2 and 5-HT2A heteromeric receptor complex and its potential contribution to schizophrenia.

Allosteric signaling through an mGlu2 and 5-HT2A heteromeric receptor complex and its potential contribution to schizophrenia.

Science signaling (2016-01-14)
José L Moreno, Patricia Miranda-Azpiazu, Aintzane García-Bea, Jason Younkin, Meng Cui, Alexey Kozlenkov, Ariel Ben-Ezra, Georgios Voloudakis, Amanda K Fakira, Lia Baki, Yongchao Ge, Anastasios Georgakopoulos, José A Morón, Graeme Milligan, Juan F López-Giménez, Nikolaos K Robakis, Diomedes E Logothetis, J Javier Meana, Javier González-Maeso
ABSTRACT

Heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding protein (G protein)-coupled receptors (GPCRs) can form multiprotein complexes (heteromers), which can alter the pharmacology and functions of the constituent receptors. Previous findings demonstrated that the Gq/11-coupled serotonin 5-HT2A receptor and the Gi/o-coupled metabotropic glutamate 2 (mGlu2) receptor-GPCRs that are involved in signaling alterations associated with psychosis-assemble into a heteromeric complex in the mammalian brain. In single-cell experiments with various mutant versions of the mGlu2 receptor, we showed that stimulation of cells expressing mGlu2-5-HT2A heteromers with an mGlu2 agonist led to activation of Gq/11 proteins by the 5-HT2A receptors. For this crosstalk to occur, one of the mGlu2 subunits had to couple to Gi/o proteins, and we determined the relative location of the Gi/o-contacting subunit within the mGlu2 homodimer of the heteromeric complex. Additionally, mGlu2-dependent activation of Gq/11, but not Gi/o, was reduced in the frontal cortex of 5-HT2A knockout mice and was reduced in the frontal cortex of postmortem brains from schizophrenic patients. These findings offer structural insights into this important target in molecular psychiatry.

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Anti-Syntaxin 1 Antibody, Chemicon®, from rabbit