Abstract
GABAB receptors are G-protein-coupled receptors that mediate inhibitory synaptic actions through a series of downstream target proteins. It is increasingly appreciated that the GABAB receptor forms part of larger signaling complexes, which enable the receptor to mediate multiple different effects within neurons. Here we report that GABAB receptors can physically associate with the potassium-chloride cotransporter protein, KCC2, which sets the driving force for the chloride-permeable ionotropic GABAA receptor in mature neurons. Using biochemical, molecular, and functional studies in rodent hippocampus, we show that activation of GABAB receptors results in a decrease in KCC2 function, which is associated with a reduction in the protein at the cell surface. These findings reveal a novel “crosstalk” between the GABA receptor systems, which can be recruited under conditions of high GABA release and which could be important for the regulation of inhibitory synaptic transmission.
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Wright, R., Newey, S. E., Ilie, A., Wefelmeyer, W., Raimondo, J. V., Ginham, R., … Akerman, C. J. (2017). Neuronal chloride regulation via KCC2 is modulated through a GABAB receptor protein complex. Journal of Neuroscience, 37(22), 5447–5462. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2164-16.2017
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