Literature DB >> 8656286

Cloning and functional characterization of a novel dopamine receptor from Drosophila melanogaster.

G Feng1, F Hannan, V Reale, Y Y Hon, C T Kousky, P D Evans, L M Hall.   

Abstract

A cDNA clone is described that encodes a novel G-protein-coupled dopamine receptor (DopR99B) expressed in Drosophila heads. The DopR99B receptor maps to 99B3-5, close to the position of the octopamine/tyramine receptor gene at 99A10-B1, suggesting that the two may be related through a gene duplication. Agonist stimulation of DopR99B receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes increased intracellular Ca2+ levels monitored as changes in an endogenous inward Ca2+-dependent chloride current. In addition to initiating this intracellular Ca2+ signal, stimulation of DopR99B increased cAMP levels. The rank order of potency of agonists in stimulating the chloride current is: dopamine > norepinephrine > epinephrine > tyramine. Octopamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine are not active (< 100 microM). This pharmacological profile plus the second-messenger coupling pattern suggest that the DopR99B receptor is a D1-like dopamine receptor. However, the hydrophobic core region of the DopR99B receptor shows almost equal amino acid sequence identity (40-48%) with vertebrate serotonergic, alpha 1- and beta-adrenergic, and D1-like and D2-like dopaminergic receptors. Thus, this Drosophila receptor defines a novel structural class of dopamine receptors. Because DopR99B is the second dopamine receptor cloned from Drosophila, this work establishes dopamine receptor diversity in a system amenable to genetic dissection.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8656286      PMCID: PMC6578617     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  52 in total

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Review 5.  Pharmacologic treatment of schizophrenia.

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  55 in total

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Authors:  S M Nicola; R C Malenka
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1997-08-01       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Agonist-specific coupling of a cloned Drosophila melanogaster D1-like dopamine receptor to multiple second messenger pathways by synthetic agonists.

Authors:  V Reale; F Hannan; L M Hall; P D Evans
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1997-09-01       Impact factor: 6.167

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Review 4.  Phenotypic studies on dopamine receptor subtype and associated signal transduction mutants: insights and challenges from 10 years at the psychopharmacology-molecular biology interface.

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5.  Sleep deprivation during early-adult development results in long-lasting learning deficits in adult Drosophila.

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Journal:  Learn Mem       Date:  1998 May-Jun       Impact factor: 2.460

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9.  Corazonin neurons function in sexually dimorphic circuitry that shape behavioral responses to stress in Drosophila.

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10.  The role of dopamine in Drosophila larval classical olfactory conditioning.

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