INVESTIGADORES
RUBINSTEIN marcelo
artículos
Título:
The Role of the D2 Dopamine Receptor in A2A Adenosine Receptor-Mediated Behavioral and Cellular Responses as Revealed by A2A and D2 Receptor Knockout Mice.
Autor/es:
CHEN J-F, MORATALLA R, IMPAGNATIELLO F, GRANDY DK, CUELLAR B, RUBINSTEIN M, BEILSTEIN MA, HACKETT E, FINK JS, LOW MJ, ONGINI E, SCHWARZSCHILD MA
Revista:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Editorial:
NATL ACAD SCIENCES
Referencias:
Lugar: Washington DC, USA; Año: 2001 vol. 98 p. 1970 - 1975
ISSN:
0027-8424
Resumen:
The A(2A)R is largely coexpressed with D(2)Rs and enkephalin mRNA in the striatum where it modulates dopaminergic activity. Activation of the A(2A)R antagonizes D(2)R-mediated behavioral and neurochemical effects in the basal ganglia through a mechanism that may involve direct A(2A)R-D(2)R interaction. However, whether the D(2)R is required for the A(2A)R to exert its neural function is an open question. In this study, we examined the role of D(2)Rs in A(2A)R-induced behavioral and cellular responses, by using genetic knockout (KO) models (mice deficient in A(2A)Rs or D(2)Rs or both). Behavioral analysis shows that the A(2A)R agonist 2-4-(2-carboxyethyl)phenethylamino-5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine reduced spontaneous as well as amphetamine-induced locomotion in both D(2) KO and wild-type mice. Conversely, the nonselective adenosine antagonist caffeine and the A(2A)R antagonist 8-(3-chlorostyryl)caffeine produced motor stimulation in mice lacking the D(2)R, although the stimulation was significantly attenuated. At the cellular level, A(2A)R inactivation counteracted the increase in enkephalin expression in striatopallidal neurons caused by D(2)R deficiency. Consistent with the D(2) KO phenotype, A(2A)R inactivation partially reversed both acute D(2)R antagonist (haloperidol)-induced catalepsy and chronic haloperidol-induced enkephalin mRNA expression. Together, these results demonstrate that A(2A)Rs elicit behavioral and cellular responses despite either the genetic deficiency or pharmacological blockade of D(2)Rs. Thus, A(2A)R-mediated neural functions are partially independent of D(2)Rs. Moreover, endogenous adenosine acting at striatal A(2A)Rs may be most accurately viewed as a facilitative modulator of striatal neuronal activity rather than simply as an inhibitory modulator of D(2)R neurotransmission.