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Query: UNIPROT:P46098 (5-HT3 receptor)
2,290 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The 5-HT3 receptor is a transmitter-gated ion channel of the Cys-loop superfamily. Uniquely, 5-HT3 receptor subunits (5-HT3A and 5-HT3B) possess a positively charged lysine residue within the putative channel lining M2 domain (4' position). Using whole cell recording techniques, we examined the role of this residue in receptor function using wild-type (WT) and mutant 5-HT3A receptor subunits of murine origin transiently expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK 293) cells. WT 5-HT3A receptors mediated rapidly activating currents in response to 5-HT (10-90 % rise time, 103 ms; EC50, 2.34 microM; Hill coefficient, nH, 2.87). The currents rectified inwardly, reversed in sign at a potential of -9 mV and desensitized in the continuous presence of agonist (half-time of desensitization, t(1/2), 2.13 s). 5-HT3A receptor subunits in which the 4'lysine was mutated to arginine, glutamine, serine or glycine formed functional receptors. 5-HT EC50 values were approximately 2-fold lower than for WT 5-HT3A receptors, but Hill coefficients, kinetics of current activation, rectification, and reversal potentials were unaltered. Each of the mutants desensitized more slowly than the WT 5-HT3A receptor, with the arginine and glycine mutations exhibiting the greatest effect (5-fold reduction). The rank order of effect was arginine > glycine > serine > glutamine. The single-channel conductance of the WT 5-HT3A receptor, as assessed by fluctuation analysis of macroscopic currents, was 390 fS. A similar value was obtained for the 4'lysine mutant receptors. Thus it appears unlikely that 4'lysine is exposed to the channel lumen. Mutation of residues immediately adjacent to 4'lysine to glutamate or lysine resulted in lack of receptor expression or function. We conclude that 4'lysine does not form part of the channel lining, but may play an important role in 5-HT3 receptor desensitization.
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PMID:The 4'lysine in the putative channel lining domain affects desensitization but not the single-channel conductance of recombinant homomeric 5-HT3A receptors. 1063 97

The patch-clamp technique was used on excised (outside-out) patches to characterize h5-HT3A receptors stably transfected in HEK 293 cells and to compare the effects of the barbiturate anaesthetics methohexital and pentobarbital on this ligand-gated cation channel. At negative membrane potentials 5-HT induced inward currents in a concentration-dependent manner (EC50=8.6 microM, Hill coefficient =1.5). The mean peak current induced by 30 microM 5-HT was -110 pA at -100 mV. The 5-HT3A receptor antagonist ondansetron (0.3 nM) reversibly inhibited the 5-HT (30 microM) signal by 70% and at 3 nM it abolished the response. Methohexital and pentobarbital inhibited 5-HT-induced (30 microM) currents in a concentration-dependent manner. The maximal inhibition with a given methohexital or pentobarbital concentration was reached when the respective drug was applied 45 s prior to and during the 2-s 5-HT pulse (IC50 values=95 microM and 127 microM, Hill coefficient = -1.0 and -1.6, respectively). Although the barbiturates were, thus, equipotent, their effects differed substantially with respect to the dependence on the time schedule of application to the patches: the potency of methohexital was virtually maximal when the drug was applied exclusively 45 s before the agonist pulse, but its inhibitory potency decreased considerably when it was exclusively applied during the 2-s 5-HT pulse (IC50=380 microM). Conversely, pentobarbital was almost maximally potent in inhibiting the 5-HT signal when it was exclusively coapplied with this agonist, but its inhibitory potency was considerably lower (IC50 approximately 500 microM) when applied exclusively 45 s before 5-HT. Another difference between both barbiturates involves the rate of inactivation of 5-HT3 receptor-mediated currents: whereas high concentrations of methohexital (> or = 300 microM) were necessary to induce moderate (< or = twofold) acceleration of this parameter, pentobarbital produced such an effect at all concentrations and the extent of acceleration increased with increasing concentration (1.5- to fivefold). In conclusion, two barbiturates, chemically closely related but of different lipophilicity, clearly differ with respect to the kinetics of their effect on 5-HT3 receptor channels; one possible explanation involves drug access to an amphipathic site of action via both an aqueous and a hydrophobic pathway. Pentobarbital, in contrast to methohexital, inhibits hS-HT3A receptor-mediated currents at anaesthetic concentrations (approximately 90 microM).
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PMID:Recombinant human 5-HT3A receptors in outside-out patches of HEK 293 cells: basic properties and barbiturate effects. 1099 28

Antidepressants are commonly supposed to enhance serotonergic and/or noradrenergic neurotransmission by inhibition of neurotransmitter reuptake through binding to the respective neurotransmitter transporters or through inhibition of the monoamine oxidase. Using the concentration-clamp technique and measurements of intracellular Ca2+, we demonstrate that different classes of antidepressants act as functional antagonists at the human 5-HT3A receptor stably expressed in HEK 293 cells and at endogenous 5-HT3 receptors of rat hippocampal neurons and N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells. The tricyclic antidepressants desipramine, imipramine, and trimipramine, the serotonin reuptake inhibitor fluoxetine, the norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor reboxetine, and the noradrenergic and specific serotonergic antidepressant mirtazapine effectively reduced the serotonin-induced Na(+)- and Ca(2)(+)-currents in a dose-dependent fashion. This effect was voltage-independent and, with the exception of mirtazapine, noncompetitive. Desipramine, imipramine, trimipramine, and fluoxetine also accelerated receptor desensitization. Moclobemide and carbamazepine had no effect on the serotonin-induced cation current. By analyzing analogues of desipramine and carbamazepine, we found that a basic propylamine side chain increases the antagonistic potency of tricyclic compounds, whereas it is abolished by an uncharged carboxamide group. The antagonistic effects of antidepressants at the 5-HT3 receptor did not correlate with their effects on membrane fluidity. In conclusion, structurally different types of antidepressants modulate the function of this ligand-gated ion channel. This may represent a yet unrecognized pharmacological principle of antidepressants.
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PMID:Antidepressants are functional antagonists at the serotonin type 3 (5-HT3) receptor. 1464 97

The nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) and the 5-HT3 serotonin receptor subtype belong to a superfamily of neurotransmitter-gated ion channels involved in fast synaptic communication throughout the nervous system. Their trafficking to the neuron plasmalemma, as well as their targeting to specific subcellular compartments, is critical for understanding their physiological role. In order to investigate the cellular distribution of these receptors, we tagged the N-termini of alpha3beta4-nAChR subunits and the 5-HT3AR subunit with cyan and yellow fluorescent proteins (CFP, YFP). The fusion subunits were coexpressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK-293) cells, where they assemble into functional receptor channels, as well as in primary cultures of hippocampal neurons. Fluorescence microscopy of living cells revealed that the heteropentameric alpha3CFP-beta4 and YFP-alpha3beta4 receptors are mainly distributed in the endoplasmic reticulum, while the homopentameric YFP-5-HT3A receptor was localized both to the plasma membrane and within intracellular compartments. Moreover, the YFP-5-HT3A receptor was found to be targeted to the micropodia in HEK-293 cells and to the dendritic spines in hippocampal neurons, where it could be accessed by extracellularly applied specific fluorescent probes. The efficient targeting of the YFP-5-HT3A to the cytoplasmic membrane is in line with the large serotonin-elicited currents (nA range) measured by whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings in transfected HEK-293 cells. In contrast, alpha3beta4-nAChRs expressed in the same cells yielded weaker ACh-evoked responses. Taken together, the fluorescent and electrophysiological studies presented here demonstrate the predominant intracellular location of alpha3beta4-nACh receptors and the predominant expression of the 5-HT3AR in dendritic surface loci.
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PMID:Distinct subcellular targeting of fluorescent nicotinic alpha 3 beta 4 and serotoninergic 5-HT3A receptors in hippocampal neurons. 1500 32

A chimera comprising the N-terminal region of the human alpha7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, fused to the transmembrane/C-terminal domains of the mouse serotonin 5-HT3 receptor, was constructed. Injection of the chimera cDNA into Xenopus oocytes, or transient transfection in human embryonic kidney (HEK-293) cells, resulted in the expression of functional channels that were sensitive to nicotinic acetylcholine, but not serotonin receptor ligands. In both systems, the responses obtained from chimeric receptors inactivated more slowly than those recorded following activation of wild-type alpha7 receptors. A stable HEK-293 cell line expressing the human alpha7/mouse 5-HT3 chimera was established, which showed that the chimera displayed a similar pharmacological profile to wild-type alpha7 receptors. Use of this chimera in high-throughput screening may enable the identification of novel pharmacological agents that will help to define further the role of alpha7 nicotinic receptors in physiology and disease.
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PMID:Stable expression and characterisation of a human alpha 7 nicotinic subunit chimera: a tool for functional high-throughput screening. 1546 87

The actions of metoclopramide and ergotamine, drugs which are used as a combined migraine medication, on human (h)5-HT3A receptors and 5-HT reuptake carriers, stably expressed in HEK-293 cells, were studied with patch-clamp- and ([3H]5-HT)-uptake techniques. At clinical concentrations, metoclopramide inhibited peak and integrated currents through h5-HT3A receptors concentration-dependently (IC50 = 0.064 and 0.076 microM, respectively) when it was applied in equilibrium (60 s before and during 5-HT (30 microM) exposure). The onset and offset time constants of metoclopramide action were 1.3 and 2.1 s, respectively. The potency of metoclopramide when exclusively applied during the agonist pulse decreased more than 200-fold (IC50 = 19.0 microM, peak current suppression). Metoclopramide (0.10 microM) did not alter the EC50 of 5-HT-induced peak currents. In contrast to the lack of competitive interaction between metoclopramide and 5-HT in this functional assay, metoclopramide inhibited specific [3H]GR65630 binding to human h5-HT3A receptors in a surmountable manner. This seeming discrepancy between functional studies and radioligand binding experiments may be accounted for by (1) the slow kinetics of inhibition of peak currents by metoclopramide compared with the fast onset and offset kinetics of 5-HT-induced currents and (2) the low efficacy of metoclopramide in inhibiting radioligand binding (e.g. only 20% binding inhibition compared to 79% peak current suppression by 200 nM metoclopramide). At low concentrations (1-10 nM), ergotamine had no effect on 5-HT (30 microM)-induced peak currents. Above clinical concentrations, ergotamine (>3 microM) inhibited them. When both drugs were applied together (0.10 microM metoclopramide +0.001 to 0.01 microM ergotamine), an inhibition of both, peak and integrated current responses was observed. Neither metoclopramide (< or =30 microM) nor ergotamine (< or =30 microM) had an effect on the 5-HT reuptake carrier as they did not alter the citalopram-sensitive [3H]5-HT uptake.
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PMID:Interactions of metoclopramide and ergotamine with human 5-HT(3A) receptors and human 5-HT reuptake carriers. 1604 95

([3H]5-HT)-uptake and patch-clamp techniques were used to study the actions of (+) and (-) tramadol and the active metabolites of tramadol, (+) and (-) O-demethyl-tramadol on the human serotonin (5-HT) transporter and the human 5-HT3A receptor, stably expressed in HEK-293 cells. The (+) and (-) enantiomers of tramadol suppressed the human 5-HT transporter concentration-dependently (IC50=1.0 and 0.8 microM, respectively), resulting in 97% and 87% transport inhibition at their respective initial plasma concentrations (9.5 microM). The (+) and (-) enantiomers of the active tramadol metabolite were less potent than tramadol in inhibiting the human 5-HT transporter (IC50=15 and 44 microM, respectively), resulting in 19.2% and 4.8% transport inhibition at their highest plasma concentrations (2.5 microM). In contrast to their potent suppression of the 5-HT transporter, both, (+) and (-) tramadol inhibited 5-HT (30 microM)-induced currents only at substantially higher concentrations (IC50=199 and 251 microM, respectively), resulting in only 6% and 4% inhibition at the initial maximum plasma concentration. A similar low potent inhibition of human 5-HT(3A) receptors was found for (+) and (-) O-demethyl-tramadol (IC50=158 and 63 microM, respectively). In conclusion, at clinical plasma concentrations tramadol potently suppresses the human 5-HT transporter, whereas it has only a slight effect on the human 5-HT3A receptor. The results are compatible with a possible mechanism for tramadol-induced early emesis involving the serotonergic system.
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PMID:Effects of tramadol and O-demethyl-tramadol on human 5-HT reuptake carriers and human 5-HT3A receptors: a possible mechanism for tramadol-induced early emesis. 1642 41

5-HT3 receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that are involved in the modulation of emesis and pain. In this study, we investigated whether the opioid analgesic, morphine, exerts specific effects on human 5-HT3 receptors. Whole-cell patches from HEK-293 cells stably transfected with the human 5-HT3A receptor cDNA were used to determine the effects of morphine on the 5-HT-induced currents using the patch clamp technique. At negative membrane potentials, 5-HT induced inward currents in a concentration-dependent manner. The 5-HT3 receptor antagonist, ondansetron, (0.3 nM) reversibly inhibited the 5-HT-induced signals. Morphine reversibly suppressed 5-HT-induced peak currents as a function of concentration (IC50 = 1.1 microM, Hill coefficient = 1.2). The block by morphine decreased with increasing 5-HT concentrations, suggesting a competitive effect. In addition, the activation, as well as the inactivation, kinetics of the currents were significantly slowed in the presence of morphine. The morphine antagonist, naloxone, also inhibited 5-HT-induced currents (e.g., at 3 microM by 17%). The effects of morphine and naloxone were not additive. The potency of morphine and the competitivity of the blocking effect points to a specific mechanism at a receptor site rather than an unspecific membrane effect.
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PMID:The effects of morphine on human 5-HT3A receptors. 1693 91

The ligand binding pocket of Cys-loop receptors consists of a number of binding loops termed A-F. Here we examine the 5-HT3 receptor loop A residues Asn-128, Glu-129 and Phe-130 using modelling, mutagenesis, radioligand binding and functional studies on HEK 293 cells. Replacement of Asn-128 results in receptors that have wild type [3H]granisetron binding characteristics but large changes (ranging from a five-fold decrease to a 1500-fold increase) in the 5-HT EC50 when compared to wild type receptors. Phe-130 mutant receptors show both increases and decreases in Kd and EC50 values, depending on the amino acid substituted. The most critical of these residues appears to be Glu-129; its replacement with a range of other amino acids results in non-binding and non-functional receptors. Lack of binding and function in some, but not all, of these receptors is due to poor membrane expression. These data suggest that Glu-129 is important primarily for receptor expression, although it may also play a role in ligand binding; Phe-130 is important for both ligand binding and receptor function, and Asn-128 plays a larger role in receptor function than ligand binding. In light of these results, we have created two new homology models of the 5-HT3 receptor, with alternative positions of loop A. In our preferred model Glu-129 and Phe-130 contribute to the binding site, while the location of Asn-128 immediately behind the binding pocket could contribute to the conformation changes that result in receptor gating. This study provides a new model of the 5-HT3 receptor binding pocket, and also highlights the importance of experimental data to support modelling studies.
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PMID:Defining the roles of Asn-128, Glu-129 and Phe-130 in loop A of the 5-HT3 receptor. 1706 Jan 61

We developed an engineered site-directed labeling method (Foucaud et al., 2001) to investigate ligand receptor interactions on the acetylcholine (ACh)- binding site of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). The method uses cysteine receptor mutants, together with cysteine-reactive ligand analogs, to generate a site-directed covalent reaction within the binding site. We selected epibatidine (EPB) as a prototypical ligand, acting at all types of nAChRs with sufficient affinity to allow this study. Accordingly, we synthesized three cysteine-reactive derivatives, all modified at the C-3 of the pyridine ring of the alkaloid with NCS; -NHCOCH2Cl, and -CH2Cl groups, respectively (Fig. 1). The binding properties have been established on rat brain, alpha7-5HT3 chimera, and Torpedo membranes, respectively, whereas the functional properties were tested on alpha4beta2 and alpha7 receptor expressed in oocytes and Cys-less muscular receptor expressed in HEK cells (Sakr et al., 2005).
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PMID:Engineered site-directed labeling of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors using reactive epibatidine derivatives: appraisal of epibatidine-docking models in neuronal and muscular receptors. 1719 18


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