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Publication : High-affinity kainate receptor subunits are necessary for ionotropic but not metabotropic signaling.

First Author  Fernandes HB Year  2009
Journal  Neuron Volume  63
Issue  6 Pages  818-29
PubMed ID  19778510 Mgi Jnum  J:155003
Mgi Id  MGI:4412135 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2009.08.010
Citation  Fernandes HB, et al. (2009) High-affinity kainate receptor subunits are necessary for ionotropic but not metabotropic signaling. Neuron 63(6):818-29
abstractText  Kainate receptors signal through both ionotropic and metabotropic pathways. The high-affinity subunits, GluK4 and GluK5, are unique among the five receptor subunits, as they do not form homomeric receptors but modify the properties of heteromeric assemblies. Disruption of the Grik4 gene locus resulted in a significant reduction in synaptic kainate receptor currents. Moreover, ablation of GluK4 and GluK5 caused complete loss of synaptic ionotropic kainate receptor function. The principal subunits were distributed away from postsynaptic densities and presynaptic active zones. There was also a profound alteration in the activation properties of the remaining kainate receptors. Despite this, kainate receptor-mediated inhibition of the slow afterhyperpolarization current (I(sAHP)), which is dependent on metabotropic pathways, was intact in GluK4/GluK5 knockout mice. These results uncover a previously unknown obligatory role for the high-affinity subunits for ionotropic kainate receptor function and further demonstrate that kainate receptor participation in metabotropic signaling pathways does not require their classic role as ion channels.
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