4.8 Article

Evidence against dopamine D1/D2 receptor heteromers

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 20, Issue 11, Pages 1373-1385

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/mp.2014.166

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [RO1MH086629, F31DA029499, TL1 RR024158-04, K05DA022413, R01MH54137, RO1MH093672, R01NS078291]
  2. Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene
  3. Lieber Center for Schizophrenia Research and Treatment
  4. [P30HD15052]

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Hetero-oligomers of G-protein-coupled receptors have become the subject of intense investigation, because their purported potential to manifest signaling and pharmacological properties that differ from the component receptors makes them highly attractive for the development of more selective pharmacological treatments. In particular, dopamine D1 and D2 receptors have been proposed to form hetero-oligomers that couple to G(alpha q) proteins, and SKF83959 has been proposed to act as a biased agonist that selectively engages these receptor complexes to activate G(alpha q) and thus phospholipase C. D1/D2 heteromers have been proposed as relevant to the pathophysiology and treatment of depression and schizophrenia. We used in vitro bioluminescence resonance energy transfer, ex vivo analyses of receptor localization and proximity in brain slices, and behavioral assays in mice to characterize signaling from these putative dimers/oligomers. We were unable to detect G(alpha q) or G(alpha 11) protein coupling to homomers or heteromers of D1 or D2 receptors using a variety of biosensors. SKF83959-induced locomotor and grooming behaviors were eliminated in D1 receptor knockout (KO) mice, verifying a key role for D1-like receptor activation. In contrast, SKF83959-induced motor responses were intact in D2 receptor and G(alpha q) KO mice, as well as in knock-in mice expressing a mutant Ala(286)-CaMKII alpha that cannot autophosphorylate to become active. Moreover, we found that, in the shell of the nucleus accumbens, even in neurons in which D1 and D2 receptor promoters are both active, the receptor proteins are segregated and do not form complexes. These data are not compatible with SKF83959 signaling through G(alpha q) or through a D1/D2 heteromer and challenge the existence of such a signaling complex in the adult animals that we used for our studies.

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