Corticosterone affects the differentiation of a neuronal cerebral cortex-derived cell line through modulation of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor
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2014Metadata
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Baier, C. J.
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Corticosterone affects the differentiation of a neuronal cerebral cortex-derived cell line through modulation of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor
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Abstract
Chronic exposure to stress hormones has an
impact on brain structures relevant to cognition. Nicotinic
acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) are involved in numerous
cognitive processes including learning and memory
formation. In order to better understand the molecular
mechanisms of chronic stress-triggered mental disease,
the effect of corticosterone (CORT) on the biology of AChRs
was studied in the neuronal cell line CNh. We found that
chronic treatment with CORT reduced the expression levels
of the a7-type neuronal AChR and, to a lesser extent, of
a4-AChR. CORT also delayed the acquisition of the mature
cell phenotype in CNh cells. Chronic nicotine treatment
affected the differentiation of CNh cells and exerted a synergistic
effect with CORT, suggesting that AChR could participate
in signaling pathways that control the cell cycle.
Overexpression of a7-AChR-GFP abolished the CORT
effects on the cell cycle and the specific a7-AChR inhibitor,
methyllycaconitine, mimicked the proliferative action
exerted by CORT. Whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings
showed a significant decrease in nicotine-evoked currents
in CORT-treated cells. Taken together, these observations
indicate that AChRs, and the a7-AChR in particular, could
act as modulators of the differentiation of CNh cells and
that CORT could impair the acquisition of a mature
phenotype by affecting the function of this AChR subtype.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
Research described in this article was supported by
grants PICT 2008-1003 and 2011-0604 from FONCYT, Ministry
of Science, Technology and Innovative Production of Argentina
(MINCyT) and PIP No. 112-201101-01023 from the Scientific
and Technological Research Council of Argentina (CONICET)
to F.J.B and Fondecyt No 1130241 (Chile) to P.C.
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129432
DOI: DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2014.05.049
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Neuroscience 274 (2014) 369–382
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