نتایج جستجو برای: gaba receptor

تعداد نتایج: 599149  

Journal: :Neuroendocrinology 2002
Katia Gamel-Didelon Claudia Corsi Giancarlo Pepeu Heike Jung Manfred Gratzl Artur Mayerhofer

There is increasing evidence suggesting that the neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is a local factor involved in the regulation of endocrine organs. Examples of such functions are documented in the pancreas, but recent results suggest that GABA may act in a similar way in the pituitary, in which GABA receptors are expressed and pituitary growth hormone (GH) cells provide a source ...

Journal: :Trends in neurosciences 2004
Kim Schuske Asim A Beg Erik M Jorgensen

GABA neurotransmission requires a specialized set of proteins to synthesize, transport or respond to GABA. This article reviews results from a genetic strategy in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans designed to identify the genes responsible for these activities. These studies identified mutations in genes encoding five different proteins: the biosynthetic enzyme for GABA, the vesicular GABA tr...

Journal: :Journal of molecular endocrinology 2004
D M Hollis F W Goetz S B Roberts S K Boyd

The inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) has multiple receptors. In mammals, the GABA(A) receptor subtype is modulated by neurosteroids. However, whether steroid interaction with the GABA(A) receptor is unique to mammals or a conserved feature in vertebrates is unknown. Thus, neurosteroid modulation of the GABA(A) receptor was investigated in the brain of the bullfrog (Ran...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2000
J Kehoe C Vulfius

In certain Aplysia neurons, glutamate, GABA, and acetylcholine (ACh) all elicit desensitizing Cl-dependent responses. This fact and the finding that the glutamate and GABA responses "cross-desensitize" led to the suggestion (Swann and Carpenter, 1975; King and Carpenter, 1987) that the responses to these transmitters were mediated by the same receptor-channel complex. This hypothesis is incompa...

Journal: :The Journal of comparative neurology 2006
Rosa M Villalba Dinesh V Raju Randy A Hall Yoland Smith

Strong gamma-aminobutyric acid type B (GABA(B)) receptor binding has been shown throughout the thalamus, but the distribution of the two GABA(B) receptor subunits, GABA(B) receptor subunit 1 (GABA(B)R1) and GABA(B) receptor subunit 2 (GABA(B)R2), remains poorly characterized. In primates, the caudal intralaminar nuclei, centromedian and parafascicular (CM/PF), are an integral part of basal gang...

Journal: :The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2012
M Paola Castelli Angelo Casu Paola Casti Carla Lobina Mauro A M Carai Giancarlo Colombo Maurizio Solinas Daniela Giunta Claudia Mugnaini Serena Pasquini Andrea Tafi Simone Brogi Gian Luigi Gessa Federico Corelli

The potential efficacy of GABA(B) receptor agonists in the treatment of pain, drug addiction, epilepsy, cognitive dysfunctions, and anxiety disorders is supported by extensive preclinical and clinical evidence. However, the numerous side effects produced by the GABA(B) receptor agonist baclofen considerably limit the therapeutic use of this compound. The identification of positive allosteric mo...

Journal: :Current pharmaceutical design 2005
Graham A R Johnston

GABA(A) receptor channels are ubiquitous in the mammalian central nervous system mediating fast inhibitory neurotransmission by becoming permeant to chloride ions in response to GABA. The emphasis of this review is on the rich chemical diversity of ligands that influence GABA(A) receptor function. Such diversity provides many avenues for the design and development of new chemical entities actin...

Journal: :The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2008
Neil E Paterson Styliani Vlachou Sebastien Guery Klemens Kaupmann Wolfgang Froestl Athina Markou

Acute administration of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-B receptor agonists decreases nicotine, cocaine, ethanol, and heroin self-administration and also decreases food-maintained responding and suppresses locomotor activity at high doses. GABA(B) receptor-positive modulators may represent potentially improved therapeutic compounds because of their fewer side effects than receptor agonists. The ...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology 2001
A Manfridi D Brambilla M Mancia

There is evidence that GABA plays a major role in sleep regulation. GABA(A) receptor agonists and different compounds interacting with the GABA(A) receptor complex, such as barbiturates and benzodiazepines, can interfere with the sleep/wake cycle. On the other hand, there is very little information about the possible role of GABA(B) receptors in sleep modulation. The nucleus basalis of Meynert ...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2011
Gennady Dvoryanchikov Yijen A Huang Rene Barro-Soria Nirupa Chaudhari Stephen D Roper

Taste buds consist of at least three principal cell types that have different functions in processing gustatory signals: glial-like (type I) cells, receptor (type II) cells, and presynaptic (type III) cells. Using a combination of Ca2+ imaging, single-cell reverse transcriptase-PCR and immunostaining, we show that GABA is an inhibitory transmitter in mouse taste buds, acting on GABA(A) and GABA...

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