| Literature DB >> 26966584 |
Daniela Bonini1, Cristina Mora1, Paolo Tornese2, Nathalie Sala2, Alice Filippini1, Luca La Via1, Marco Milanese3, Stefano Calza4, Gianbattista Bonanno3, Giorgio Racagni2, Massimo Gennarelli5, Maurizio Popoli2, Laura Musazzi2, Alessandro Barbon1.
Abstract
Clinical studies on patients with stress-related neuropsychiatric disorders reported functional and morphological changes in brain areas where glutamatergic transmission is predominant, including frontal and prefrontal areas. In line with this evidence, several preclinical works suggest that glutamate receptors are targets of both rapid and long-lasting effects of stress. Here we found that acute footshock- (FS-) stress, although inducing no transcriptional and RNA editing alterations of ionotropic AMPA and NMDA glutamate receptor subunits, rapidly and transiently modulates their protein expression, phosphorylation, and localization at postsynaptic spines in prefrontal and frontal cortex. In total extract, FS-stress increased the phosphorylation levels of GluA1 AMPA subunit at Ser(845) immediately after stress and of GluA2 Ser(880) 2 h after start of stress. At postsynaptic spines, stress induced a rapid decrease of GluA2 expression, together with an increase of its phosphorylation at Ser(880), suggesting internalization of GluA2 AMPA containing receptors. GluN1 and GluN2A NMDA receptor subunits were found markedly upregulated in postsynaptic spines, 2 h after start of stress. These results suggest selected time-dependent changes in glutamatergic receptor subunits induced by acute stress, which may suggest early and transient enhancement of AMPA-mediated currents, followed by a transient activation of NMDA receptors.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26966584 PMCID: PMC4757710 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7267865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Corticosterone serum levels.
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| 2 h | 24 h | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 60.32 ± 13.06 ( | 11.85 ± 3.82 ( | 21.53 ± 6.93 ( |
| FS-stress | 308.30 ± 23.30 | 57.20 ± 17.34 | 53.63 ± 13.41 ( |
Data are expressed as ng/mL and reported as mean ± SE. p < 0.001.
Figure 1Time-dependent changes of protein expression levels of GluA1 (a), GluA2 (b), GluA1 phospho-Ser831 (c), GluA1 phospho-Ser845 (d), and GluA2 phospho-Ser880 (e) in PFC/FC total homogenate of rats subjected to FS-stress and sacrificed immediately after stress and 2 h and 24 h from stress beginning. Data are represented as percentage of controls at each time point, as means ± SEM (n = 8). Statistics: Generalized Linear Models (GLM) and Bonferroni Post Hoc Test (see Section 2 for details). p < 0.01; p < 0.001.
Figure 2Time-dependent changes of protein expression levels of GluA1 (a), GluA2 (b), GluA1 phospho-Ser831 (c), GluA1 phospho-Ser845 (d), and GluA2 phospho-Ser880 (e) in PFC/FC postsynaptic spine membranes of rats subjected to FS-stress and sacrificed immediately after stress and 2 h and 24 h from stress beginning. Data are represented as percentage of controls at each time point, as means ± SEM (n = 8). Statistics: Generalized Linear Models (GLM) and Bonferroni Post Hoc Test (see Section 2 for details). p < 0.01.
Figure 3Time-dependent changes of protein expression levels of GluN1 (a), GluN2A (b), GluN2B (c), and GluN2A/GluN2B (d) in PFC/FC total homogenate of rats subjected to FS-stress and sacrificed immediately after stress and 2 h and 24 h from stress beginning. Data are represented as percentage of controls at each time point, as means ± SEM (n = 8). Statistics: Generalized Linear Models (GLM) and Bonferroni Post Hoc Test (see Section 2 for details). p < 0.01; p < 0.001.
Figure 4Time-dependent changes of protein expression levels of GluN1 (a), GluN2A (b), GluN2B (c), and GluN2A/GluN2B (d) in PFC/FC postsynaptic spine membranes of rats subjected to FS-stress and sacrificed immediately after stress and 2 h and 24 h from stress beginning. Data are represented as percentage of controls at each time point, as means ± SEM (n = 8). Statistics: Generalized Linear Models (GLM) and Bonferroni Post Hoc Test (see Section 2 for details). p < 0.01; p < 0.001.