| Literature DB >> 30618598 |
Emily Quentin1,2,3, Arnauld Belmer1,2,3, Luc Maroteaux1,2,3.
Abstract
Several lines of evidence implicate serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT)in regulating personality traits and mood control. Serotonergic neurons are classically thought to be tonic regular-firing, "clock-like" neurons. Neurotransmission by serotonin is tightly regulated by the serotonin transporter (SERT) and by autoreceptors (serotonin receptors expressed by serotonin neurons) through negative feedback inhibition at the cell bodies and dendrites (5-HT1A receptors) of the dorsal raphe nuclei or at the axon terminals (5-HT1B receptors). In dorsal raphe neurons, the release of serotonin from vesicles in the soma, dendrites, and/or axonal varicosities is independent of classical synapses and can be induced by neuron depolarization, by the stimulation of L-type calcium channels, by activation of glutamatergic receptors, and/or by activation of 5-HT2 receptors. The resulting serotonin release displays a slow kinetic and a large diffusion. This process called volume transmission may ultimately affect the rate of discharge of serotonergic neurons, and their tonic activity. The therapeutic effects induced by serotonin-selective reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants are initially triggered by blocking SERT but rely on consequences of chronic exposure, i.e., a selective desensitization of somatodendritic 5-HT1A autoreceptors. Agonist stimulation of 5-HT2B receptors mimicked behavioral and neurogenic SSRI actions, and increased extracellular serotonin in dorsal raphe. By contrast, a lack of effects of SSRIs was observed in the absence of 5-HT2B receptors (knockout-KO), even restricted to serotonergic neurons (Htr2b5-HTKO mice). The absence of 5-HT2B receptors in serotonergic neurons is associated with a higher 5-HT1A-autoreceptor reactivity and thus a lower firing activity of these neurons. In agreement, mice with overexpression of 5-HT1A autoreceptor show decreased neuronal activity and increased depression-like behavior that is resistant to SSRI treatment. We propose thus that the serotonergic tone results from the opposite control exerted by somatodendritic (Gi-coupled) 5-HT1A and (Gq-coupled) 5-HT2B receptors on dorsal raphe neurons. Therefore, 5-HT2B receptors may contribute to SSRI therapeutic effects by their positive regulation of adult raphe serotonergic neurons. Deciphering the molecular mechanism controlling extrasynaptic release of serotonin, and how autoreceptors interact in regulating the tonic activity of serotonergic neurons, is critical to fully understand the therapeutic effect of SSRIs.Entities:
Keywords: antidepressants; autoreceptors; serotonin receptors; somatodendritic release; volume transmission
Year: 2018 PMID: 30618598 PMCID: PMC6307465 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Vesicle release needs the SNARE proteins. v-SNARE proteins, synaptobrevins/VAMPs, Vti1a/1b and t-SNARE proteins, syntaxins and synaptosomal-associated proteins (SNAPs) mediate synaptic vesicles fusion to the plasma membrane with a contribution of calcium sensors, synaptotagmins.
Vesicles-associated molecules and mRNA expression in serotonergic neurons.
| Molecule | Type | Expression in 5-HT NeuronsD |
|---|---|---|
| Synaptobrevin 1/VAMP1 | NC | ++ |
| Synaptobrevin 2/VAMP2 | C | ++++ |
| Vamp3 | NC | + |
| Vamp4 | NC | ++ |
| Vamp7 | NC | + |
| Vti1a | NC | + |
| Vti1b | NC | ++ |
| Syntaxin Stx1a | C | + |
| Stx1b | C | +++ |
| Stx2 | NC | + |
| Stx3 | NC | + |
| Stx4a | NC | ++ |
| Stx5a | NC | + |
| Stx6 | NC | + |
| Stx7 | NC | ++ |
| Stx8 | NC | + |
| Stx12 | NC | +++ |
| Stx16 | NC | ++ |
| Stx17 | NC | + |
| Stx18 | NC | + |
| SNAP-25 | C | +++++ |
| SNAP-29 | NC | + |
| Synaptotagmin Syt1 | ++++ | |
| Syt2 | + | |
| Syt3 | + | |
| Syt4 | +++ | |
| Syt5 | ++ | |
| Syt6 | + | |
| Syt7 | + | |
| Syt9 | ++ | |
| Syt11 | +++ | |
| Syt12 | + | |
| Syt13 | +++ | |
| Syt16 | + | |
| Syt17 | + | |
FIGURE 2Schematic representation of the potential role of 5-HT2B receptor in extrasynaptic release of serotonin. Left, in soma, the somatic release of serotonin depends on AMPA and NMDA receptors, L-type calcium channels, and action potentials, 5-HT1A and potentially 5-HT2B receptor via its coupling to PKC (Trueta et al., 2003, 2004; de Kock et al., 2006; Colgan et al., 2012; Leon-Pinzon et al., 2014). Activation of 5-HT1A and 5-HT2B receptors may decrease or increase the membrane expression of NMDA receptors, respectively (Yuen et al., 2005, 2008). Right, the NMDA receptor-dependent dendritic release is controlled by L-type calcium channels (Colgan et al., 2012), negatively by 5-HT1A and positively by 5-HT2B receptors at dendritic “puncta” independently of action potential (Colgan et al., 2012).