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GABA(A) Receptor α Subunits Differentially Contribute to Diazepam Tolerance after Chronic Treatment

BACKGROUND: Within the GABA(A)-receptor field, two important questions are what molecular mechanisms underlie benzodiazepine tolerance, and whether tolerance can be ascribed to certain GABA(A)-receptor subtypes. METHODS: We investigated tolerance to acute anxiolytic, hypothermic and sedative effects...

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Autores principales: Vinkers, Christiaan H., van Oorschot, Ruud, Nielsen, Elsebet Ø., Cook, James M., Hansen, Henrik H., Groenink, Lucianne, Olivier, Berend, Mirza, Naheed R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3418228/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22912786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043054
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author Vinkers, Christiaan H.
van Oorschot, Ruud
Nielsen, Elsebet Ø.
Cook, James M.
Hansen, Henrik H.
Groenink, Lucianne
Olivier, Berend
Mirza, Naheed R.
author_facet Vinkers, Christiaan H.
van Oorschot, Ruud
Nielsen, Elsebet Ø.
Cook, James M.
Hansen, Henrik H.
Groenink, Lucianne
Olivier, Berend
Mirza, Naheed R.
author_sort Vinkers, Christiaan H.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Within the GABA(A)-receptor field, two important questions are what molecular mechanisms underlie benzodiazepine tolerance, and whether tolerance can be ascribed to certain GABA(A)-receptor subtypes. METHODS: We investigated tolerance to acute anxiolytic, hypothermic and sedative effects of diazepam in mice exposed for 28-days to non-selective/selective GABA(A)-receptor positive allosteric modulators: diazepam (non-selective), bretazenil (partial non-selective), zolpidem (α(1) selective) and TPA023 (α(2/3) selective). In-vivo binding studies with [(3)H]flumazenil confirmed compounds occupied CNS GABA(A) receptors. RESULTS: Chronic diazepam treatment resulted in tolerance to diazepam's acute anxiolytic, hypothermic and sedative effects. In mice treated chronically with bretazenil, tolerance to diazepam's anxiolytic and hypothermic, but not sedative, effects was seen. Chronic zolpidem treatment resulted in tolerance to diazepam's hypothermic effect, but partial anxiolytic tolerance and no sedative tolerance. Chronic TPA023 treatment did not result in tolerance to diazepam's hypothermic, anxiolytic or sedative effects. CONCLUSIONS: Our data indicate that: (i) GABA(A)-α(2)/α(3) subtype selective drugs might not induce tolerance; (ii) in rodents quantitative and temporal variations in tolerance development occur dependent on the endpoint assessed, consistent with clinical experience with benzodiazepines (e.g., differential tolerance to antiepileptic and anxiolytic actions); (iii) tolerance to diazepam's sedative actions needs concomitant activation of GABA(A)-α(1)/GABA(A)-α(5) receptors. Regarding mechanism, in-situ hybridization studies indicated no gross changes in expression levels of GABA(A) α(1), α(2) or α(5) subunit mRNA in hippocampus or cortex. Since selective chronic activation of either GABA(A) α(2), or α(3) receptors does not engender tolerance development, subtype-selective GABA(A) drugs might constitute a promising class of novel drugs.
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spelling pubmed-34182282012-08-21 GABA(A) Receptor α Subunits Differentially Contribute to Diazepam Tolerance after Chronic Treatment Vinkers, Christiaan H. van Oorschot, Ruud Nielsen, Elsebet Ø. Cook, James M. Hansen, Henrik H. Groenink, Lucianne Olivier, Berend Mirza, Naheed R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Within the GABA(A)-receptor field, two important questions are what molecular mechanisms underlie benzodiazepine tolerance, and whether tolerance can be ascribed to certain GABA(A)-receptor subtypes. METHODS: We investigated tolerance to acute anxiolytic, hypothermic and sedative effects of diazepam in mice exposed for 28-days to non-selective/selective GABA(A)-receptor positive allosteric modulators: diazepam (non-selective), bretazenil (partial non-selective), zolpidem (α(1) selective) and TPA023 (α(2/3) selective). In-vivo binding studies with [(3)H]flumazenil confirmed compounds occupied CNS GABA(A) receptors. RESULTS: Chronic diazepam treatment resulted in tolerance to diazepam's acute anxiolytic, hypothermic and sedative effects. In mice treated chronically with bretazenil, tolerance to diazepam's anxiolytic and hypothermic, but not sedative, effects was seen. Chronic zolpidem treatment resulted in tolerance to diazepam's hypothermic effect, but partial anxiolytic tolerance and no sedative tolerance. Chronic TPA023 treatment did not result in tolerance to diazepam's hypothermic, anxiolytic or sedative effects. CONCLUSIONS: Our data indicate that: (i) GABA(A)-α(2)/α(3) subtype selective drugs might not induce tolerance; (ii) in rodents quantitative and temporal variations in tolerance development occur dependent on the endpoint assessed, consistent with clinical experience with benzodiazepines (e.g., differential tolerance to antiepileptic and anxiolytic actions); (iii) tolerance to diazepam's sedative actions needs concomitant activation of GABA(A)-α(1)/GABA(A)-α(5) receptors. Regarding mechanism, in-situ hybridization studies indicated no gross changes in expression levels of GABA(A) α(1), α(2) or α(5) subunit mRNA in hippocampus or cortex. Since selective chronic activation of either GABA(A) α(2), or α(3) receptors does not engender tolerance development, subtype-selective GABA(A) drugs might constitute a promising class of novel drugs. Public Library of Science 2012-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3418228/ /pubmed/22912786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043054 Text en © 2012 Vinkers et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vinkers, Christiaan H.
van Oorschot, Ruud
Nielsen, Elsebet Ø.
Cook, James M.
Hansen, Henrik H.
Groenink, Lucianne
Olivier, Berend
Mirza, Naheed R.
GABA(A) Receptor α Subunits Differentially Contribute to Diazepam Tolerance after Chronic Treatment
title GABA(A) Receptor α Subunits Differentially Contribute to Diazepam Tolerance after Chronic Treatment
title_full GABA(A) Receptor α Subunits Differentially Contribute to Diazepam Tolerance after Chronic Treatment
title_fullStr GABA(A) Receptor α Subunits Differentially Contribute to Diazepam Tolerance after Chronic Treatment
title_full_unstemmed GABA(A) Receptor α Subunits Differentially Contribute to Diazepam Tolerance after Chronic Treatment
title_short GABA(A) Receptor α Subunits Differentially Contribute to Diazepam Tolerance after Chronic Treatment
title_sort gaba(a) receptor α subunits differentially contribute to diazepam tolerance after chronic treatment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3418228/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22912786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043054
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