Abstract

GABAA receptors (GABAARs) play a crucial inhibitory role in the CNS. Benzodiazepines (BDZs) are positive modulators of specific subtypes of GABAARs, but the underlying mechanism remains obscure. Early studies demonstrated the major impact of BDZs on binding and more recent investigations indicated gating, but it is unclear which transitions are affected. Moreover, the upregulation of GABAAR spontaneous activity by BDZs indicates their impact on receptor gating but the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Herein, we investigated the effect of a BDZ (flurazepam) on the spontaneous and GABA-induced activity for wild-type (WT, α1β2γ2) and mutated (at the orthosteric binding site α1F64) GABAARs. Surprisingly, in spite of the localization at the binding site, these mutations increased the spontaneous activity. Flurazepam (FLU) upregulated this activity for mutants and WT receptors to a similar extent by affecting opening/closing transitions. Spontaneous activity affected GABA-evoked currents and is manifested as an overshoot after agonist removal that depended on the modulation by BDZs. We explain the mechanism of this phenomenon as a cross-desensitization of ligand-activated and spontaneously active receptors. Moreover, due to spontaneous activity, FLU-pretreatment and co-application (agonist + FLU) protocols yielded distinct results. We provide also the first evidence that GABAAR may enter the desensitized state in the absence of GABA in a FLU-dependent manner. Based on our data and model simulations, we propose that FLU affects agonist-induced gating by modifying primarily preactivation and desensitization. We conclude that the mechanisms of modulation of spontaneous and ligand-activated GABAAR activity concerns gating but distinct transitions are affected in spontaneous and agonist-evoked activity.

Highlights

  • MATERIALS AND METHODSGABA(gamma aminobutyric acid) is the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain (Cherubini and Conti, 2001; Fritschy and Brünig, 2003)

  • It has been reported that various types of ionotropic GABAergic receptor (GABAAR), including α1β2γ2, show spontaneous activity that can be enhanced by BDZs (Mortensen et al, 2003), but the underlying mechanism remains unknown

  • We present the first, to our knowledge, thorough analysis of a mechanism whereby a BDZ FLU affects the spontaneous activity of GABAAR

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Summary

Introduction

MATERIALS AND METHODSGABA(gamma aminobutyric acid) is the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain (Cherubini and Conti, 2001; Fritschy and Brünig, 2003). Considering that α1F64 mutations strongly affect the receptor gating ( flipping/preactivation), we investigated the impact of FLU on currents elicited by saturating [GABA] and mediated by these mutants.

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