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Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors and their auxiliary subunits in synaptic plasticity and disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 599, Issue 10, Pages 2655-2671

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP279029

Keywords

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Funding

  1. MRC [MR/T002506/1]
  2. MRC [MR/T002506/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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CP-AMPARs are important regulators of synaptic plasticity, with their functional characteristics being modulated by auxiliary subunits and involved in various forms of central synaptic plasticity. Maladaptive synaptic plasticity and neurological disorders often involve changes in CP-AMPAR expression, such as those induced by inflammatory pain, fear conditioning, and cocaine exposure.
AMPA receptors are tetrameric glutamate-gated ion channels that mediate a majority of fast excitatory neurotransmission in the brain. They exist as calcium-impermeable (CI-) and calcium-permeable (CP-) subtypes, the latter of which lacks the GluA2 subunit. CP-AMPARs display an array of distinctive biophysical and pharmacological properties that allow them to be functionally identified. This has revealed that they play crucial roles in diverse forms of central synaptic plasticity. Here we summarise the functional hallmarks of CP-AMPARs and describe how these are modified by the presence of auxiliary subunits that have emerged as pivotal regulators of AMPARs. A lasting change in the prevalence of GluA2-containing AMPARs, and hence in the fraction of CP-AMPARs, is a feature in many maladaptive forms of synaptic plasticity and neurological disorders. These include modifications of glutamatergic transmission induced by inflammatory pain, fear conditioning, cocaine exposure, and anoxia-induced damage in neurons and glia. Furthermore, defective RNA editing of GluA2 can cause altered expression of CP-AMPARs and is implicated in motor neuron damage (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) and the proliferation of cells in malignant gliomas. A number of the players involved in CP-AMPAR regulation have been identified, providing useful insight into interventions that may prevent the aberrant CP-AMPAR expression. Furthermore, recent molecular and pharmacological developments, particularly the discovery of TARP subtype-selective drugs, offer the exciting potential to modify some of the harmful effects of increased CP-AMPAR prevalence in a brain region-specific manner.

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