Diversity in mammalian tachykinin peptidergic neurons: multiple peptides, receptors, and regulatory mechanisms <sup>1</sup>

Cinda J. Helke(Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences), James E. Krause(Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences), Patrick W. Mantyh(United States Department of Veterans Affairs), Réjean Couture(Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences), M. J. Rannon(Wayne State University)
The FASEB Journal
April 1, 1990
Cited by 442

Abstract

The tachykinins comprise a family of closely related peptides that participate in the regulation of diverse biological processes. The tachykinin peptides substance P, neurokinin A, neurokinin A(3-10), neuropeptide K, and neuropeptide gamma are produced from a single preprotachykinin gene as a result of differential RNA splicing and differential posttranslational processing. Another tachykinin, neurokinin B, is produced from a separate preprotachykinin gene. These preprotachykinin mRNAs and peptide products are differentially distributed throughout the nervous system. Three distinct G protein-coupled tachykinin receptors exist for these tachykinin peptides. The three receptors interact differentially with the tachykinin peptides and are uniquely distributed throughout the nervous system. The NK-1 receptor preferentially interacts with substance P, the NK-2 receptor prefers neurokinin A, neuropeptide K, and neuropeptide gamma, and the NK-3 receptor interacts best with neurokinin B. Examples of the roles of tachykinin peptidergic neuronal systems are taken from the spinal cord sensory system and the nigrostriatal extrapyramidal motor system. Analysis of the functional significance of multiple tachykinin peptide systems, receptor-second messenger coupling mechanisms, and developmental and regulatory mechanisms underlying peptide mRNA and receptor expression represent areas of current and future investigation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis