Role of NMDA receptor functional domains in excitatory cell death.

Neuropharmacology

Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biochemistry, NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY 10016, USA.

Published: September 2000

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how NMDA receptors (NMDAR) contribute to cell death (excitotoxicity) using a new assay with CHO cells and cortical neurons.
  • Mutations in the NR1 subunit that inhibit calcium (Ca²⁺) entry and the deletion of the NR1 C-terminal domain reduced cell killing by NMDAR.
  • The research found that these mutant receptors not only protect cultured neurons from excitotoxicity but also show dominant negative effects, meaning they can inhibit the function of normal receptors when co-expressed.

Article Abstract

The mechanisms by which the NMDA receptor (NMDAR) induces excitotoxicity were investigated using a novel assay. We quantitated the capacity of wild type and mutant receptors for cell killing in CHO cells and cultured cortical neurons by measuring the activity of a co-transfected firefly luciferase expression plasmid. NR1 subunit pore mutations that block Ca(2+) influx, and deletion of the NR1 cytoplasmic C-terminal domain, which functions in Ca(2+) regulation of receptor currents, decreased NMDAR mediated cell killing. We also transfected the NR1 pore mutants and C-terminal truncations in the presence of co-expressed exogenous wild type subunits. The pore and C-terminal truncation mutants acted in a dominant negative fashion and increased the survival of NMDAR-expressing CHO cells. Although physiological studies of similar NMDA receptor mutants have been carried out in heterologous cell lines, their functions in neurons remain relatively unknown. We show that expression of pore mutants and specific C terminal truncation mutants in cultured cortical neurons also exerts dominant negative function and protects these primary cells from endogenous receptor induced excitotoxic death. These results implicate positive actions of the selectivity filter and of the NR1 C-terminal domain in a Ca(2+)-dependent mechanism for NMDAR excitotoxicity. They also indicate that the mutant receptors which show diminished excitotoxicity and dominant negative action in heterologous cells can co-assemble with endogenous subunits in primary neurons and block NMDAR-dependent excitotoxic death.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0028-3908(00)00066-6DOI Listing

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