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Query: EC:3.5.4.4 (
adenosine deaminase
)
5,136
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Glutamate inhibits the electrically evoked release of noradrenaline in rabbit brain cortex slices; the inhibition is mediated by adenyl compounds, presumably adenosine. The aim of the present study was to identify the receptors involved in this indirect inhibitory effect of glutamate. Slices of the occipitoparietal cortex were preincubated with [3H]-noradrenaline and then superfused and stimulated by trains of 6 pulses, 100 Hz. 2. The ionotropic glutamate receptor agonists alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate (AM-PA; 10-100 microM), kainate (10-100 microM) and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA; 30-300 microM) but not the metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist, 1-amino-1,3-cyclopentanedicarboxylate (ACPD; 10-100 microM) reduced the electrically evoked overflow of tritium. 3. The effects of
AMPA
, kainate and NMDA were attenuated or abolished by the adenosine A1-receptor antagonist, 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX) as well as by adenosine A1-receptor antagonist, 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX) as well as by
adenosine deaminase
but not by the alpha 2-adrenoceptor antagonist yohimbine, the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor antagonists, bicuculline and 2-hydroxysaclofen and the NO synthase inhibitor NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME). 4. The NMDA receptor antagonist, 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoate (AP5) blocked the inhibitory effect of NMDA but not that of
AMPA
and kainate. The non-NMDA-receptor antagonist, 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) blocked the effect of
AMPA
but not of kainate and NMDA. 5. In addition to decreasing the electrically evoked overflow of tritium,
AMPA
, kainate and NMDA but not ACPD caused a steep but transient rise of basal tritium efflux. This immediate releasing effect was not significantly changed by DPCPX,
adenosine deaminase
, yohimbine, bicuculline, 2-hydroxysaclofen and L-NAME (except that L-NAME enhanced the effect of kainate). AP5 and CNQX antagonized the immediate releasing effects in the same way that they antagonized the inhibition by
AMPA
, kainate and NMDA of the electrically evoked overflow of tritium.6. It is concluded that
AMPA
, kainate and NMDA, like glutamate, reduce the electrically evoked release of noradrenaline by releasing adenosine or an adenine nucleotide which is then degraded to adenosine. Activation of each of the three ionotropic glutamate receptors,
AMPA
, kainate and NMDA receptors, but not activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors can initiate this indirect inhibitory effect on the release of noradrenaline (as well as the known noradrenaline releasing effect).
...
PMID:Ionotropic glutamate receptor types leading to adenosine-mediated inhibition of electrically evoked [3H]-noradrenaline release in rabbit brain cortex slices. 750 27
A functionally critical position (Q/R site) of the
AMPA
receptor subunit GluR-B is controlled by RNA editing that operates in the nucleus, since in brain and clonal cell lines of neural origin, unspliced GluR-B transcripts occur edited in the Q/R site CAG codon and, additionally, in intronic adenosines. Transfection of GluR-B gene constructs into PC12 cells revealed that the proximal part of the intron downstream of the unedited exonic site is required for Q/R site editing. This intron portion contains an imperfect inverted repeat preceding a 10 nt sequence with exact complementarity to the exon centered on the unedited codon. Single nucleotide substitutions in this short intronic sequence or its exonic complement curtailed Q/R site editing, which was recovered by restoring complementarity in the respective partner strand. Base conversion in the channel-coding region of GluR-B directed by base paired sequences may be executed by a ubiquitous nuclear
adenosine deaminase
specific for double-stranded RNA.
...
PMID:RNA editing of AMPA receptor subunit GluR-B: a base-paired intron-exon structure determines position and efficiency. 826 14
Activation of ionotropic but not metabotropic glutamate receptors causes an indirect inhibition of the release of noradrenaline in slices of rabbit brain cortex. The inhibition is mediated by adenosine which activates presynaptic adenosine A1-receptors. The present study characterizes the ionotropic receptor types through which glutamate itself produces this indirect inhibition. Rabbit brain cortex slices were preincubated with [3H]-noradrenaline, superfused with medium containing desipramine (1 microM) and stimulated electrically by trains of 6 pulses at 100 Hz. Glutamate (100-3000 micro M) reduced the electrically evoked overflow of tritium by up to 58%. The effect did not differ 20 min and 60 min after addition of glutamate. Adenosine deaminase (1 U ml-1) as well as 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX; 30 microM) and D-gamma-glutamylamino-methanesulfonate (GAMS; 30 micro M), both of which block kainate receptors, attenuated the glutamate-induced inhibition. The NMDA receptor antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoate (AP5; 100 micro M) and the
AMPA
receptor antagonist 6-nitro-7-sulfamoylbenzo(f)-quinoxaline-2,3-dione (NBQX; 30 micro M) did not change the effect of glutamate. Given alone, CNQX and GAMS, but not AP5 and NBQX, slightly increased the evoked overflow of tritium; the increases were abolished in the presence of
adenosine deaminase
. The results indicate that activation of kainate but not NMDA and
AMPA
receptors is involved in the indirect, adenosine-mediated inhibition by exogenous glutamate of the release of noradrenaline in rabbit brain cortex slices. Moreover, as shown by the increase caused by CNQX and GAMS, endogenous excitatory amino acids inhibit the release of noradrenaline through the kainate receptor-adenosine mechanism and thus contribute to the purinergic inhibitory control of noradrenaline release in the brain.
...
PMID:Kainate receptors are involved in the glutamate-induced indirect, purinergic inhibition of [3H]-noradrenaline release in rabbit brain cortex. 875 Sep 16
To date, two structurally related RNA-editing enzymes with
adenosine deaminase
activity have been identified in mammalian tissue: ADAR1 and ADAR2 [Bass B. I. et al. (1997) RNA 3, 947-949]. In rodents, ADAR2 undergoes alternative RNA splicing, giving rise to two splice variants that differ by the presence or absence of a 10-amino-acid insert in the carboxy-terminal catalytic domain. However, the physiological significance of the splicing and its regional and developmental regulation are as yet unknown. The present study examined spatial and temporal patterns of ADAR2 gene transcripts within specific neuronal populations of rat brain. The two rodent ADAR2 isoforms were expressed at comparable levels at all ages examined. rADAR2 messenger RNA expression was first detectable in the thalamic nuclei formation at embryonic day E19. The rADAR2b insert and rADAR2a splice probes produced images similar to that of the rADAR2 pan probe. At birth, rADAR2a messenger RNA splice variants were abundantly expressed in the thalamic nuclei. No signal for any probe was detectable in other brain regions, including neocortex, hippocampus, striatum and cerebellum at this stage of development. During the first week of postnatal life, rADAR2 messenger RNA expression (detected with the pan probe) increased gradually in several brain regions, with low expression detected at postnatal day P7 in the olfactory bulb, inferior colliculus, and within the pyramidal and granule cell layers of the hippocampus. Hybridization patterns of the rADAR2a variant probe reached peak expression at about the second week of life, while peak expression of the rADAR2b probe was reached at about the third week of life. At the end of the first week of life (P7), expression of both splice variants was strongest in the thalamic nuclei. By P14, rADAR2 messenger RNA expression was more consolidated in the deeper structures, including the thalamic nuclei and the granule cell layer of the cerebellum. By P21, maximal levels of rADARb expression were observed in the thalamic nuclei, inferior colliculus, cerebellum and pontine nuclei. In the adult, rADAR2 messenger RNA expression was of highest intensity in the thalamic nuclei, with high levels of expression in the olfactory bulb, inferior colliculus, cerebellum and pontine nuclei. At the level of the hippocampus, positive labelling was restricted to the CA3 region of the Ammon's horn and the dentate gyrus, with weak signals in the CA1 subfield. rADAR2 pan expression was at near background levels throughout the neocortex and caudate putamen. In summary, our study shows that ADAR2 messenger RNA expression is regulated in a cell-specific manner throughout development. At early ages, ADAR2 messenger RNA is expressed only within (and restricted to) the thalamic nuclei. By the third postnatal week, expression of the editase enzyme is more widely distributed throughout the olfactory bulb, CA3 and dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, thalamus, inferior colliculus and the molecular cell layer of the cerebellum. ADAR2 is thought to act at specific nucleotide positions in primary transcripts encoding glutamate receptor subunits, thereby altering gating and ionic permeability properties of
AMPA
- and kainate-activated channels. ADAR2 also acts at pre-messenger RNA encoding the serotonin 5HT-2C receptor to alter G-protein coupling. Thus, RNA editing may be an important mechanism for fine-tuning of the physiological and pharmacological properties of transmitter receptors of the central nervous system.
...
PMID:Patterns of developmental expression of the RNA editing enzyme rADAR2. 1067 Apr 54
Previous work showed the presence of adenosine receptors as well as adenosine uptake and release mechanisms in developing chick retinal neurons in culture. In the present work we show that exogenous glutamate or kainate promotes extensive cell death in these cultures which is blocked when the cultures are previously incubated with adenosine. Addition of glutamate or kainate to purified cultures of retinal neurons and photoreceptors induced massive death of cultured cells which was inhibited in both cases by preincubation with MK801, an NMDA antagonist, or DNQX, an
AMPA
/kainate antagonist. Cell death was also greatly attenuated by preincubation with adenosine plus EHNA, an
adenosine deaminase
inhibitor, NBI, an adenosine uptake blocker, the permeable cAMP analogs 8-Br cAMP and Sp cAMP and the A(2a) agonists CGS 21680 and DPMA, but not with the A(1) receptor agonist CHA. Kinetic studies performed determining the intracellular LDH activity showed that maximal death was observed after 8 h and in concentrations of glutamate as low as 50 microM. We also observed a time-dependent protective effect of adenosine beginning after 1 h of preincubation and reaching a maximal effect after 24 h, indicating its association with changes in cellular metabolism induced by long-term exposure of cells to the nucleoside. The results show that adenosine inhibits glutamate toxicity in retinal neurons through a long-term activation of A(2a) receptors and elevation of intracellular cyclic AMP levels.
...
PMID:Long-term activation of adenosine A(2a) receptors blocks glutamate excitotoxicity in cultures of avian retinal neurons. 1133 95
Although correlated neural activity is a hallmark of many regions of the developing nervous system, the neural events underlying its propagation remain largely unknown. In the developing vertebrate retina, waves of spontaneous, correlated neural activity sweep across the ganglion cell layer. Here, we demonstrate that L-type Ca(2+) channel agonists induce large, frequent, rapidly propagating waves of neural activity in the developing retina. In contrast to retinal waves that have been described previously, these L-type Ca(2+) channel agonist-potentiated waves propagate independent of fast synaptic transmission. Bath application of nicotinic acetylcholine,
AMPA
, NMDA, glycine, and GABA(A) receptor antagonists does not alter the velocity, frequency, or size of the potentiated waves. Additionally, these antagonists do not alter the frequency or magnitude of spontaneous depolarizations that are recorded in individual retinal ganglion cells. Like normal retinal waves, however, the area over which the potentiated waves propagate is reduced dramatically by 18alpha-glycyrrhetinic acid, a blocker of gap junctions. Additionally, like normal retinal waves, L-type Ca(2+) channel agonist-potentiated waves are abolished by
adenosine deaminase
, which degrades extracellular adenosine, and by aminophylline, a general adenosine receptor antagonist, indicating that they are dependent on adenosine-mediated signaling. Our study indicates that although the precise spatiotemporal properties of retinal waves are shaped by local synaptic inputs, activity may be propagated through the developing mammalian retina by nonsynaptic pathways.
...
PMID:Potentiation of L-type calcium channels reveals nonsynaptic mechanisms that correlate spontaneous activity in the developing mammalian retina. 1160 40
GluR2 is a subunit of the
AMPA
receptor, and the adenosine for the Q/R site of its pre-mRNA is converted to inosine (A-to-I conversion) by the enzyme called
adenosine deaminase
acting on RNA 2 (ADAR2). Failure of A-to-I conversion at this site affects multiple
AMPA
receptor properties, including the Ca(2+) permeability of the receptor-coupled ion channel, thereby inducing fatal epilepsy in mice (Brusa et al., 1995; Feldmeyer et al., 1999). In addition, inefficient GluR2 Q/R site editing is a disease-specific molecular dysfunction found in the motor neurons of sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients (Kawahara et al., 2004). Here, we generated genetically modified mice (designated as AR2) in which the ADAR2 gene was conditionally targeted in motor neurons using the Cre/loxP system. These AR2 mice showed a decline in motor function commensurate with the slow death of ADAR2-deficient motor neurons in the spinal cord and cranial motor nerve nuclei. Notably, neurons in nuclei of oculomotor nerves, which often escape degeneration in ALS, were not decreased in number despite a significant decrease in GluR2 Q/R site editing. All cellular and phenotypic changes in AR2 mice were prevented when the mice carried endogenous GluR2 alleles engineered to express edited GluR2 without ADAR2 activity (Higuchi et al., 2000). Thus, loss of ADAR2 activity causes
AMPA
receptor-mediated death of motor neurons.
...
PMID:Induced loss of ADAR2 engenders slow death of motor neurons from Q/R site-unedited GluR2. 2222 19
AMPA
receptors are glutamate receptors that are tetramers of various combinations of GluR1-4 subunits.
AMPA
receptors containing GluR1, 3 and 4 are Ca2+ permeable, however,
AMPA
receptors containing even a single subunit of GluR2 are Ca2+ impermeable. Most
AMPA
receptors are Ca2+ impermeable due to the presence of GluR2. GluR2 confers special properties on
AMPA
receptors through the presence of arginine at the pore apex; other subunits (GluR1, 3, 4) contain glutamine at the pore apex and allow Ca2+ influx. Normally, an RNA editing step changes DNA-encoded glutamine to arginine, introduces arginine in the GluR2 pore apex. GluR2 RNA editing is carried out by an RNA-dependent
adenosine deaminase
(ADAR2). Loss of GluR2 editing leads to the formation of highly excitotoxic
AMPA
channels [Mahajan and Ziff (2007) Mol Cell Neurosci 35:470-481] and is shown to contribute to loss of motor neurons in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Relatively higher levels of Ca2+-permeable
AMPA
receptors are found in motor neurons and this has been correlated with lower GluR2 mRNA levels. However, the reason for loss of GluR2 editing is not known. Here we show that exposure of neurons to excitotoxic levels of glutamate leads to specific cleavage of ADAR2 that leads to generation of unedited GluR2. We demonstrate that cleaved ADAR2 leads to a decrease or loss of GluR2 editing, which will further result in high Ca2+ influx and excitotoxic neuronal death.
...
PMID:Exposure of neurons to excitotoxic levels of glutamate induces cleavage of the RNA editing enzyme, adenosine deaminase acting on RNA 2, and loss of GLUR2 editing. 2162 Sep 33
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is the most common adult-onset motor neuron disease. More than 90% of ALS cases are sporadic, and the majority of sporadic ALS patients do not carry mutations in genes causative of familial ALS; therefore, investigation specifically targeting sporadic ALS is needed to discover the pathogenesis. The motor neurons of sporadic ALS patients express unedited GluA2 mRNA at the Q/R site in a disease-specific and motor neuron-selective manner. GluA2 is a subunit of the
AMPA
receptor, and it has a regulatory role in the Ca(2+)-permeability of the
AMPA
receptor after the genomic Q codon is replaced with the R codon in mRNA by adenosine-inosine conversion, which is mediated by
adenosine deaminase
acting on RNA 2 (ADAR2). Therefore, ADAR2 activity may not be sufficient to edit all GluA2 mRNA expressed in the motor neurons of ALS patients. To investigate whether deficient ADAR2 activity plays pathogenic roles in sporadic ALS, we generated genetically modified mice (AR2) in which the ADAR2 gene was conditionally knocked out in the motor neurons. AR2 mice showed an ALS-like phenotype with the death of ADAR2-lacking motor neurons. Notably, the motor neurons deficient in ADAR2 survived when they expressed only edited GluA2 in AR2/GluR-B(R/R) (AR2res) mice, in which the endogenous GluA2 alleles were replaced by the GluR-B(R) allele that encoded edited GluA2. In heterozygous AR2 mice with only one ADAR2 allele, approximately 20% of the spinal motor neurons expressed unedited GluA2 and underwent degeneration, indicating that half-normal ADAR2 activity is not sufficient to edit all GluA2 expressed in motor neurons. It is likely therefore that the expression of unedited GluA2 causes the death of motor neurons in sporadic ALS. We hypothesize that a progressive downregulation of ADAR2 activity plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of sporadic ALS and that the pathological process commences when motor neurons express unedited GluA2.
...
PMID:When Does ALS Start? ADAR2-GluA2 Hypothesis for the Etiology of Sporadic ALS. 2210 33
Adenosine has been proposed as an endogenous homeostatic sleep factor that accumulates during waking and inhibits wake-active neurons to promote sleep. It has been specifically hypothesized that adenosine decreases wakefulness and promotes sleep recovery by directly inhibiting wake-active neurons of the basal forebrain (BF), particularly BF cholinergic neurons. We previously showed that adenosine directly inhibits BF cholinergic neurons. Here, we investigated 1) how adenosine modulates glutamatergic input to BF cholinergic neurons and 2) how adenosine uptake and adenosine metabolism are involved in regulating extracellular levels of adenosine. Our experiments were conducted using whole cell patch-clamp recordings in mouse brain slices. We found that in BF cholinergic neurons, adenosine reduced the amplitude of
AMPA
-mediated evoked glutamatergic excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) and decreased the frequency of spontaneous and miniature EPSCs through presynaptic A(1) receptors. Thus we have demonstrated that in addition to directly inhibiting BF cholinergic neurons, adenosine depresses excitatory inputs to these neurons. It is therefore possible that both direct and indirect inhibition may synergistically contribute to the sleep-promoting effects of adenosine in the BF. We also found that blocking the influx of adenosine through the equilibrative nucleoside transporters or inhibiting adenosine kinase and
adenosine deaminase
increased endogenous adenosine inhibitory tone, suggesting a possible mechanism through which adenosine extracellular levels in the basal forebrain are regulated.
...
PMID:Adenosine inhibits glutamatergic input to basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. 2235 97
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