Department of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, Université Laval–Centre de Recherche de l'Université Laval Robert-Giffard, Québec-City, Québec, Canada.
Pharmacol Rev. 2011 Mar;63(1):182-217. doi: 10.1124/pr.110.002642. Epub 2011 Feb 8.
G protein-coupled dopamine receptors (D1, D2, D3, D4, and D5) mediate all of the physiological functions of the catecholaminergic neurotransmitter dopamine, ranging from voluntary movement and reward to hormonal regulation and hypertension. Pharmacological agents targeting dopaminergic neurotransmission have been clinically used in the management of several neurological and psychiatric disorders, including Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, Huntington's disease, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD(1)), and Tourette's syndrome. Numerous advances have occurred in understanding the general structural, biochemical, and functional properties of dopamine receptors that have led to the development of multiple pharmacologically active compounds that directly target dopamine receptors, such as antiparkinson drugs and antipsychotics. Recent progress in understanding the complex biology of dopamine receptor-related signal transduction mechanisms has revealed that, in addition to their primary action on cAMP-mediated signaling, dopamine receptors can act through diverse signaling mechanisms that involve alternative G protein coupling or through G protein-independent mechanisms via interactions with ion channels or proteins that are characteristically implicated in receptor desensitization, such as β-arrestins. One of the future directions in managing dopamine-related pathologic conditions may involve a transition from the approaches that directly affect receptor function to a precise targeting of postreceptor intracellular signaling modalities either directly or through ligand-biased signaling pharmacology. In this comprehensive review, we discuss dopamine receptor classification, their basic structural and genetic organization, their distribution and functions in the brain and the periphery, and their regulation and signal transduction mechanisms. In addition, we discuss the abnormalities of dopamine receptor expression, function, and signaling that are documented in human disorders and the current pharmacology and emerging trends in the development of novel therapeutic agents that act at dopamine receptors and/or on related signaling events.
G 蛋白偶联多巴胺受体(D1、D2、D3、D4 和 D5)介导儿茶酚胺递质多巴胺的所有生理功能,从自主运动和奖赏到激素调节和高血压。针对多巴胺能神经传递的药理学药物已在几种神经和精神疾病的治疗中得到临床应用,包括帕金森病、精神分裂症、双相情感障碍、亨廷顿病、注意缺陷多动障碍(ADHD(1))和妥瑞氏综合征。在理解多巴胺受体的一般结构、生化和功能特性方面取得了许多进展,这导致了多种直接针对多巴胺受体的药理学活性化合物的开发,例如抗帕金森病药物和抗精神病药。理解多巴胺受体相关信号转导机制的复杂生物学的最新进展表明,除了对 cAMP 介导的信号转导的主要作用外,多巴胺受体还可以通过涉及替代 G 蛋白偶联的多种信号转导机制起作用,或者通过与离子通道或与受体脱敏有关的蛋白质相互作用,通过 G 蛋白非依赖性机制起作用,例如β-arrestins。管理与多巴胺相关的病理状况的未来方向之一可能涉及从直接影响受体功能的方法向直接或通过配体偏向信号药理学靶向受体后细胞内信号转导方式的转变。在这篇全面的综述中,我们讨论了多巴胺受体分类、它们的基本结构和遗传组织、它们在大脑和外周的分布和功能以及它们的调节和信号转导机制。此外,我们还讨论了在人类疾病中记录的多巴胺受体表达、功能和信号转导异常,以及目前在多巴胺受体和/或相关信号事件上作用的新型治疗剂的药理学和新兴趋势。