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Jeffrey L. Arriza

AstraZeneca (United States)

Publishes on Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research, Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling, Ion channel regulation and function. 19 papers and 7.1k citations.

19Publications
7.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Cloning of Human Mineralocorticoid Receptor Complementary DNA: Structural and Functional Kinship with the Glucocorticoid Receptor
Cited by 2k

Low-stringency hybridization with human glucocorticoid receptor (hGR) complementary DNA was used to isolate a new gene encoding a predicted 107-kilodalton polypeptide. Expression studies demonstrate its ability to bind aldosterone with high affinity and to activate gene transcription in response to aldosterone, thus establishing its identity as the human mineralocorticoid receptor (hMR). This molecule also shows high affinity for glucocorticoids and stimulates a glucocorticoid-responsive promoter. Together the hMR and hGR provide unexpected functional diversity in which hormone-binding properties, target gene interactions, and patterns of tissue-specific expression may be used in a combinatorial fashion to achieve complex physiologic control.

Excitatory amino acid transporter 5, a retinal glutamate transporter coupled to a chloride conductance
Jeffrey L. Arriza, Scott Eliasof, Michael P. Kavanaugh et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1997
Cited by 916Open Access

Although a glutamate-gated chloride conductance with the properties of a sodium-dependent glutamate transporter has been described in vertebrate retinal photoreceptors and bipolar cells, the molecular species underlying this conductance has not yet been identified. We now report the cloning and functional characterization of a human excitatory amino acid transporter, EAAT5, expressed primarily in retina. Although EAAT5 shares the structural homologies of the EAAT gene family, one novel feature of the EAAT5 sequence is a carboxy-terminal motif identified previously in N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors and potassium channels and shown to confer interactions with a family of synaptic proteins that promote ion channel clustering. Functional properties of EAAT5 were examined in the Xenopus oocyte expression system by measuring radiolabeled glutamate flux and two-electrode voltage clamp recording. EAAT5-mediated L-glutamate uptake is sodium- and voltage-dependent and chloride-independent. Transporter currents elicited by glutamate are also sodium- and voltage-dependent, but ion substitution experiments suggest that this current is largely carried by chloride ions. These properties of EAAT5 are similar to the glutamate-elicited chloride conductances previously described in retinal neurons, suggesting that the EAAT5-associated chloride conductance may participate in visual processing.

A Complete Protocol for <i>In Situ</i> Hybridization of Messenger RNAs in Brain and Other Tissues With Radio-labeled Single-Stranded RNA Probes
Donna M. Simmons, Jeffrey L. Arriza, Larry W. Swanson|Journal of Histotechnology|1989
Cited by 872

We present a detailed protocol for In Situ hybridization of messenger RNA molecules in brain and other tissues, using 35S-labeled single-stranded RNA transcribed from commercially available plasmid vectors. These vectors contain promoter sequences for specific synthesis of RNA, and polylinker regions that will accept cDNA inserts for virtually any target molecule of interest. The protocol is optimized for studies that include concomitant irnmunohistochemical and cytoarchitectonic evaluations, and it is sufficiently detailed for the molecular biologist unfamiliar with histologic technique or the histologist inexperienced in molecular biological methods. We have used it with consistant results for In Situ hybridization studies using probes to more than twenty different mRNAs; and for several of those we have obtained results showing quantitative differences in experimentally altered mRNA levels. Included are details of perfusion fixation, tissue sectioning and preparation, probe synthesis, hybridization reaction, and signal detection. The introduction and annotated comments include rationale for basic procedures and the purpose of various specific steps in the hybridization histochemistry protocol. (The J HistotechnoL 12:169, 1989).

Expression in Brain of a Messenger RNA Encoding a Novel Neuropeptide Homologous to Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide
Cited by 615

As a consequence of alternative RNA processing events, a single rat gene can generate messenger RNA's (mRNA's) encoding either calcitonin or a neuropeptide referred to as alpha-type calcitonin gene-related peptide (alpha-CGRP). An mRNA product of a related gene has been identified in rat brain and thyroid encoding the protein precursor of a peptide differing from alpha-CGRP by only a single amino acid. The RNA encoding this peptide, which is referred to as beta-CGRP, appears to be the only mature transcript of the beta-CGRP gene. Hybridization histochemistry reveals a similar distribution of alpha- and beta-CGRP mRNA's, but their relative levels of expression vary in different cranial nerve nuclei. Thus beta-CGRP is a new member of a family of related genes with potential functions in regulating the transduction of sensory and motor information.