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    Free Radic Biol Med. 2008 Mar 15;44(6):1042-54. Epub 2007 Dec 15.

    A glutathione deficit alters dopamine modulation of L-type calcium channels via D2 and ryanodine receptors in neurons.

    Steullet P, Lavoie S, Kraftsik R, Guidi R, Gysin R, Cuénod M, Do KQ.

    Center for Psychiatric Neurosciences, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois and University of Lausanne, Prilly-Lausanne, Switzerland. Pascal.Steullet@CHUV.ch

    Synthesis of glutathione, a major redox regulator, is compromised in schizophrenia. We postulated that the resulting glutathione deficit via its effect on redox-sensitive proteins could contribute to dysfunction of some neurotransmitter systems in schizophrenia. We investigated whether a glutathione deficit, induced by a blocker of glutathione synthesis, L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine, affects intracellular pathways implicated in dopamine signaling in neurons, namely dopamine modulation of calcium responses to NMDA. Such a glutathione deficit changed the modulation of responses by dopamine, from enhanced responses in control neurons (likely via D1-type receptors) to decreased responses in low-glutathione neurons (via D2-type receptors). This difference in dopamine modulation was due to a different modulation of L-type calcium channels activated during NMDA stimulation: dopamine enhanced function of these channels in control neurons but decreased it in low-glutathione neurons. The effect of a glutathione deficit on dopamine signaling was dependent on the redox-sensitive ryanodine receptors (RyRs), whose function was enhanced in low-glutathione neurons. This suggests that enhanced RyRs in low-glutathione neurons strengthens intracellular calcium-dependent pathways following activation of D2-type receptors and causes a decrease in function of L-type channels. This represents a mechanism by which dopaminergic systems could be dysfunctional under conditions of impaired glutathione synthesis as in schizophrenia.

    PMID: 18206662 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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