| Literature DB >> 21663703 |
Ahmed Hasbi1, Brian F O'Dowd, Susan R George.
Abstract
Dopamine is an important catecholamine neurotransmitter modulating many physiological functions, and is linked to psychopathology of many diseases such as schizophrenia and drug addiction. Dopamine D1 and D2 receptors are the most abundant dopaminergic receptors in the striatum, and although a clear segregation between the pathways expressing these two receptors has been reported in certain subregions, the presence of D1-D2 receptor heteromers within a unique subset of neurons, forming a novel signaling transducing functional entity has been shown. Recently, significant progress has been made in elucidating the signaling pathways activated by the D1-D2 receptor heteromer and their potential physiological relevance.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21663703 PMCID: PMC3138392 DOI: 10.1186/1756-6606-4-26
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Brain ISSN: 1756-6606 Impact factor: 4.041
Figure 1Example of Confocal FRET analysis of D1 and D2 receptor interaction in a medium spiney neuron from the core region of rat nucleus accumbens. Anti-D2-Alexa 350 (green) and anti-D1-Alexa 488 (red) were used as donor and acceptor dipoles. The FRET signal was detected and measured in microdomains [regions of interest (ROIs)] within the neuron coexpressing D1 and D2 receptors. Analysis shows the FRET efficiency and the distance separating the dipoles.
Confocal FRET analysis of D1 and D2 receptor interaction
| ROI | Donor of FRET | Acceptor of FRET | PFRET | FRET | Distance between |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Donor alone | 13.944 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 |
| 2 | 842.685 | 562.542 | 529.703 | 0.357 | 5.91 |
| 3 | 804.879 | 488.573 | 474.042 | 0.351 | 5.9 |
| 4 | 830.377 | 569.241 | 535.203 | 0.353 | 5.924 |
| 5 | 720.099 | 436.039 | 410.781 | 0.319 | 6.269 |
| 6 | 898.475 | 482.132 | 444.885 | 0.311 | 6.171 |
| 7 | 964.916 | 460.029 | 407.186 | 0.247 | 6.875 |
| 8 | 1116.854 | 399.85 | 384.365 | 0.234 | 6.632 |
| 9 | 951.224 | 324.177 | 314.284 | 0.206 | 7.145 |
| 10 | 1076.73 | 341.095 | 326.925 | 0.2 | 7.153 |
| 11 | 976.861 | 227.299 | 216.367 | 0.149 | 7.789 |
| 12 | 1201.314 | 363.612 | 336.45 | 0.191 | 7.121 |
| 13 | 998.373 | 283.121 | 269.621 | 0.187 | 7.197 |
| 14 | 1017.225 | 303.213 | 287.876 | 0.2 | 6.987 |
| 15 | 816.347 | 166.339 | 156.562 | 0.129 | 8.069 |
| 16 | 806.034 | 265.133 | 251.731 | 0.19 | 7.393 |
| 17 | 815.063 | 349.81 | 338.709 | 0.252 | 6.792 |
| 18 | 833.344 | 485.752 | 382.262 | 0.257 | 6.946 |
| (19)Non-Specific | 95.52 | 83.573 | 35.284 | 0.086 | 9.168 |
| 921.8117 | 382.821 | 356.88 | |||
| 33.82434 | 29.9949 | 27.1577 | 0.018620 | 0.165392 | |
Confocal FRET analysis of figure 1 shows the relative expression of the donor (D2-Alexa 350, green) and acceptor (D1-Alexa 488, red). The analysis also shows the processed FRET (pFRET), the FRET efficiency and the distances separating the two fluorophore-tagged receptors in each microdomain (ROI), with averages and SEM in the bottom of the table. A distance ~10 nm or higher indicates no FRET.