| Literature DB >> 29249995 |
Valentina Castelli1, Anna Brancato1, Angela Cavallaro1, Gianluca Lavanco1, Carla Cannizzaro1.
Abstract
The past two decades of data derived from addicted individuals and preclinical animal models of addiction implicate a role for the excitatory glutamatergic transmission within the mesolimbic structures in alcoholism. The cellular localization of the glutamatergic receptor subtypes, as well as their signaling efficiency and function, are highly dependent upon discrete functional constituents of the postsynaptic density, including the Homer family of scaffolding proteins. The consequences of repeated alcohol administration on the expression of the Homer family proteins demonstrate a crucial and active role, particularly for the expression of Homer2 isoform, in regulating alcohol-induced behavioral and cellular neuroplasticity. The interaction between Homer2 and alcohol can be defined as a mutual relation: alcohol consumption enhances the expression of Homer2 protein isoform within the nucleus accumbens and the extended amygdala, cerebral areas where, in turn, Homer2 is able to mediate the development of the "pro-alcoholic" behavioral phenotype, as a consequence of the morpho-functional synaptic adaptations. Such findings are relevant for the detection of the strategic molecular components that prompt alcohol-induced functional and behavioral disarrangement as targets for future innovative treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: Homer proteins; Homer2; addiction; alcohol; glutamate
Year: 2017 PMID: 29249995 PMCID: PMC5714871 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2017.00268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Homer proteins form a physical link among signaling molecules in glutamatergic postsynaptic density (PSD). Long Homer forms (Homer1b/c; Homer2a/b; Homer3a/b) bind to each other through their carboxy-terminal domains and to the target proteins: Group1 of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs); Ca2+-signaling-related proteins, including phospholipase C-ß (PLCß), inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP3-R), ryanodine receptors (Ry-R), transient receptor potential canonical ion channels [voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel (VDCC)]; PSD scaffolding proteins, such as Shank component of the NMDA receptor-associated PSD-95 complex. The binding to these molecules allows Homers to serve as a postsynaptic scaffold that crosslinks and, thus, regulates the functionality of the ligands. Long Homer isoforms additionally encode a C-terminal coiled-coil domain, which allows their multimerization at a specific site or subcellular compartment, such as the actin cytoskeleton. Synaptic multimerization of long Homer proteins probably regulates or facilitates signal transduction or cross-talk between target proteins. The short Homer isoform (Homer1a) lacks the coiled-coil domain and, therefore, cannot form multimers and functionally compete with the long Homer isoforms in binding postsynaptic signaling proteins. In this way, Homer1a acts as a natural dominant-negative regulator of the long Homers, causing rapid disruption of long Homer clusters and, consequently, affecting synaptic architecture.
The effects of alcohol treatments in rodents on Homer2 isoform levels.
| Procedure | Animal | Tissue | Detection technique | Effect on Homer2 levels | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protracted alcohol withdrawal after chronic alcohol consumption | C57BL/6J (B6) mice | NAC | Immunoblotting | Robust increase | Szumlinski et al. ( |
| Short- versus long-term withdrawal (SW or LW) from ethanol consumption | P rats | Nucleus accumbens shell (NACsh) | Immunoblotting | Limited changes | Obara et al. ( |
| ceAmy and NACc | Immunoblotting | Substantial changes | |||
| Scheduled high alcohol consumption (SHAC) procedure | C57BL/6J (B6) mice | NAC | Immunoblotting | Doubling | Cozzoli et al. ( |
| Drinking-in-the-Dark (DID) procedure | C57BL/6J (B6) mice | NACsh | Immunoblotting | Upregulation | Cozzoli et al. ( |
| Short-term withdrawal from a chronic history of binge drinking | C57BL/6J (B6) mice | ceAmy | Immunoblotting | Increase | Cozzoli et al. ( |
| 4-bottle DID procedure | C57BL/6J (B6) mice | ceAmy | Immunoblotting | Decrease | Lee et al. ( |
The effect of the alterations of Homer2 isoform on the alcoholic phenotype.
| Treatment | Test | Animal | Tissue | Data | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adeno-associated virus (AAV) carrying Homer2b | Operant paradigm | C57BL/6J (B6) mice | NAC | Enhanced behavioral output for alcohol | Szumlinski et al. ( |
| Conditioned place-preference | Up-expression of an alcohol-conditioned place-preference | ||||
| Increase in glutamate and dopamine (DA) release | |||||
| Ethanol place-conditioning test | Homer2 knockout (H2KO) mice | NAC | Strong preference for water | Szumlinski et al. ( | |
| Ethanol versus water preference test | Place aversion | ||||
| Locomotor depression; no behavioral adaptation | |||||
| No increase in extracellular levels of DA and glutamate | |||||
| Drinking-in-the-Dark (DID) procedure | H2KO mice | Nucleus accumbens shell (NACsh) | Significant reduction in alcohol intake | Cozzoli et al. ( | |
| Infusion of mGluR1 antagonist | DID procedure | H2KO mice | NACsh | Reduction of alcohol consumption | Lum et al. ( |
| C57BL/6J mice | No reduction in alcohol consumption | ||||
| AAV-shRNA-Homer2b | 4-bottle DID procedure | Homer knockdown | ceAmy | Significant reduction at the highest alcohol concentrations | Cozzoli et al. ( |
| AAV-GFP-infused controls | No reduction in alcohol consumption | ||||
| Infusion of mGluR1, mGluR5 and PLC inhibitors | DID procedure | H2KO mice | ceAmy | No effect in alcohol intake | Cozzoli et al. ( |
| AAV-cDNA-Homer2b | Continuous alcohol access procedure | Alcohol-preferring P rats and Wistar rats | NACc | Elevation in alcohol intake | Haider et al. ( |
| AAV-shRNA-Homer2b | Continuous alcohol access procedures | Alcohol-preferring P rats and Wistar rats | NACc | Reduction in alcohol intake | Haider et al. ( |
| Inhibition of protein kinase Cε translocation | DID and SHAC procedures | H2KO mice | NAC and ceAmy | No effect in alcohol intake | Cozzoli et al. ( |
| Homer2 wild-type mice | Inhibition of alcohol intake | ||||
| AAV-cDNA-Homer2 | 3-bottle DID procedure | Adolescent-onset alcohol-drinking mice | ceAmy | Reduction in alcohol consumption | Lee et al. ( |
| Alcohol-inexperienced mice | Significant increase in alcohol consumption | ||||