A. Wevers et al., CELLULAR-DISTRIBUTION OF THE MESSENGER-RNA FOR THE ALPHA-7 SUBUNIT OFTHE NICOTINIC ACETYLCHOLINE-RECEPTOR IN THE HUMAN CEREBRAL-CORTEX, Drug development research, 36(2), 1995, pp. 103-110
Central nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) are ligand-gated ca
tionic channels characterized by a wide pharmacological and molecular
diversity depending on the subunits involved. Recently a new type of a
nicotinic acetylcholine receptor channel, highly permeable to calcium
, consisting of alpha 7 subunits which bear a binding site for the sna
ke venom alpha-bungarotoxin has been described. alpha-bungarotoxin bin
ding sites have previously been localized in the human and rat brain.
Immunohistochemistry has revealed the presence of alpha 7 subunits in
the rodent CNS. Presently we have applied digoxigenin-labeled RNA prob
es to localize alpha 7 mRNA in human brain using autopsy samples of pr
efrontal (Area 10) and motor cortex (Area 4). alpha 7 transcripts are
expressed in numerous neurons throughout both cortical regions. Mainly
pyramidal-like neurons of layers II/III, V, and VI were labeled. In c
ontrast to our previous studies on the localization of alpha 3 and alp
ha 4 transcripts, only a few giant pyramidal neurons in A4 but a rathe
r high number of layer I neurons in A4 and A10 expressed alpha 7 mRNA.
The study shows that nicotinic receptor subunit mRNAs are distributed
in a subunit- and area-specific manner in the human cerebral cortex.
These findings will be of importance as to the selective, ligand-media
ted stimulation of nicotinic receptor subtypes as a possible tool to i
mprove cholinergic transmission in neurodegenerative disorders like Al
zheimer's disease. (C) 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.