AI Article Synopsis

  • The study shows that A2A and D2 receptors are found together on astrocytes in the striatum of adult rats and can interact to regulate glutamate release.
  • Researchers provided evidence that this interaction occurs through the formation of A2A-D2 heteromers, which is a specific pairing of these two receptors at the cell membrane.
  • These findings are important for understanding Parkinson's disease, as they highlight how the interaction between A2A and D2 receptors in astrocytes could influence the disease's development by affecting glutamatergic transmission.

Article Abstract

Our previous findings indicate that A2A and D2 receptors are co-expressed on adult rat striatal astrocytes and on the astrocyte processes, and that A2A-D2 receptor⁻receptor interaction can control the release of glutamate from the processes. Functional evidence suggests that the receptor⁻receptor interaction was based on heteromerization of native A2A and D2 receptors at the plasma membrane of striatal astrocyte processes. We here provide biochemical and biophysical evidence confirming that receptor⁻receptor interaction between A2A and D2 receptors at the astrocyte plasma membrane is based on A2A-D2 heteromerization. To our knowledge, this is the first direct demonstration of the ability of native A2A and D2 receptors to heteromerize on glial cells. As striatal astrocytes are recognized to be involved in Parkinson's pathophysiology, the findings that adenosine A2A and dopamine D2 receptors can form A2A-D2 heteromers on the astrocytes in the striatum (and that these heteromers can play roles in the control of the striatal glutamatergic transmission) may shed light on the molecular mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of the disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6566402PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms20102457DOI Listing

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