Abstract
A review. Ionotropic glutamate receptors function can be affected by neurosteroids, both pos. and neg. N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor responses to exogenously applied glutamate are potentiated or inhibited (depending on the receptor subunit component) by pregnenolone sulfate (PS) and inhibited by pregnanolone sulfate (3α,5βS).
While PS effect is most pronounced when its application precedes that of glutamate, 3α,5βS only binds to receptors already activated. Synaptically activated NMDA receptors are inhibited by 3α,5βS, though to a lesser extent than those tonically activated by exogenous glutamate. PS, on the other hand, shows virtually no effect on any of the models of synaptically activated NMDA receptors. The site of neurosteroid action at the receptor mol. has not yet been identified, however, the expts. indicate that there are at least two distinct extracellularly located binding sites for PS mediating its potentiating and inhibitory effects resp. Experiments with chimeric receptors revealed the importance of the extracellular loop connecting the third and the fourth transmembrane domain of the receptor NR2 subunit for the neurosteroid action.
α-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionate (AMPA)/kainate receptors are inhibited by both PS and 3α,5βS. These neurosteroids also affect AMPA receptors-mediated synaptic transmission, however, in a rather indirect way, through presynaptically located targets of action.