Lesch K P, Manji H K
Section of Neuropharmacology, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
Biol Psychiatry. 1992 Oct 1;32(7):549-79. doi: 10.1016/0006-3223(92)90070-g.
Signal-transducing G proteins, heterotrimers formed of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits, are central to the coordination of receptor-effector communication. They are derived from a large gene family, and recent cloning and sequencing of cDNAs encoding the alpha subunits, which confer receptor and effector specificity on the heterotrimer, have defined four major classes, Gs, Gi, Gq, and G12, with at least 16 isotypes. The G proteins that coordinate receptor-effector activity are especially important in the central nervous system (CNS), where they serve widespread, critical roles in the regulation of neuronal function, maintain the functional balance between neurotransmitter systems, and, as such, represent attractive potential targets for antidepressant drugs. We describe an integrated series of animal and cell culture studies aimed at testing the hypothesis that alterations in G protein function may contribute the complex neuroadaptive mechanisms involved in the clinical actions of antidepressants, and demonstrate that long-term administration of a wide spectrum of antidepressant drugs regulate G alpha s, G alpha i1, G alpha i2, G alpha o, G alpha q, and G alpha 12 mRNA and protein expression in various areas of the rat brain. Additionally, we present the polymerase chain reaction-(PCR) mediated cross-species partial cDNA cloning and sequencing of rat and human G alpha o and rat G alpha 12, illustrate the regional distribution of G alpha mRNA and protein in rat brain, and provide evidence that different classes of antidepressants alter expression and/or stability of the recently identified G alpha 12 mRNA. We conclude that long-term treatment with antidepressant drugs exerts differential effects on G alpha mRNA and protein expression in rat brain, thus modifying signal transduction as an integral part of complex neuroadaptive mechanisms that may underlie their therapeutic efficacy. The development of novel drugs with G proteins as primary targets remains an attractive prospect for the future.
信号转导G蛋白是由α、β和γ亚基组成的异源三聚体,是受体 - 效应器通讯协调的核心。它们源自一个庞大的基因家族,最近对编码α亚基的cDNA进行克隆和测序,α亚基赋予异源三聚体受体和效应器特异性,已确定了四个主要类别,即Gs、Gi、Gq和G12,至少有16种亚型。协调受体 - 效应器活性的G蛋白在中枢神经系统(CNS)中尤为重要,它们在调节神经元功能、维持神经递质系统之间的功能平衡中发挥广泛而关键的作用,因此代表了抗抑郁药物有吸引力的潜在靶点。我们描述了一系列综合的动物和细胞培养研究,旨在检验G蛋白功能改变可能促成抗抑郁药临床作用中涉及的复杂神经适应性机制这一假设,并证明长期给予多种抗抑郁药可调节大鼠脑不同区域的Gαs、Gαi1、Gαi2、Gαo、Gαq和Gα12 mRNA及蛋白表达。此外,我们展示了聚合酶链反应(PCR)介导的大鼠和人类Gαo以及大鼠Gα12的跨物种部分cDNA克隆和测序,阐明了Gα mRNA和蛋白在大鼠脑中的区域分布,并提供证据表明不同类别的抗抑郁药会改变最近鉴定的Gα12 mRNA的表达和/或稳定性。我们得出结论,长期用抗抑郁药治疗对大鼠脑Gα mRNA和蛋白表达产生不同影响,从而改变信号转导,这是可能构成其治疗效果基础的复杂神经适应性机制的一个组成部分。以G蛋白为主要靶点开发新型药物仍然是未来一个有吸引力的前景。