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Epipregnanolone as a Positive Modulator of GABAA Receptor in Rat Cerebellar and Hippocampus Neurons.

  • Julia Bukanova‎ et al.
  • Biomolecules‎
  • 2021‎

Epipregnanolone (3β-hydroxy-5β-pregnan-20-one, Epi) is an endogenous steroid with important physiological effects and high affinity for GABAA receptors. The effect of Epi on GABA-induced chloride current (IGABA) in native neurons has hardly been studied. In this work, we studied the influence of Epi on the IGABA in the Purkinje cells of rat cerebellum and pyramidal neurons of rat hippocampus with the patch clamp technique. We showed that Epi is a positive modulator of the IGABA with EC50 of 5.7 µM in Purkinje cells and 9.3 µM in hippocampal neurons. Epi-induced potentiation of the IGABA was more potent at low vs. high GABA concentrations. Isopregnanolone (3β-hydroxy-5α-pregnan-20-one, Iso) counteracted Epi, reducing its potentiating effect by 2-2.3 times. Flumazenil, a nonsteroidal GABAA receptor antagonist, does not affect the Epi-induced potentiation. Comparison of the potentiating effects of Epi and allopregnanolone (3α-hydroxy-5α-pregnan-20-one, ALLO) showed that ALLO is, at least, a four times more potent positive modulator than Epi. The combined application of ALLO and Epi showed that the effects of these two steroids are not additive. We conclude that Epi has a dual effect on the IGABA increasing the current in the control solution and decreasing the stimulatory effect of ALLO.


Neurosteroids as Selective Inhibitors of Glycine Receptor Activity: Structure-Activity Relationship Study on Endogenous Androstanes and Androstenes.

  • Julia V Bukanova‎ et al.
  • Frontiers in molecular neuroscience‎
  • 2020‎

The ability of androstane and androstene neurosteroids with modifications at C-17, C-5, and C-3 (compounds 1-9) to influence the functional activity of inhibitory glycine and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors was estimated. The glycine- and GABA-induced chloride current (I Gly and I GABA) were measured in isolated pyramidal neurons of the rat hippocampus and isolated rat cerebellar Purkinje cells, correspondingly, using the patch-clamp technique. Our results demonstrate that all the nine neurosteroids display similar biological activity, namely, they strongly inhibited I Gly and weakly inhibited I GABA. The threshold concentration of neurosteroids inducing effects on I Gly was 0.1 μM, and for effects on I GABA was 10-50 μM. Moreover, our compounds accelerated desensitization of the I Gly with the IC50 values varying from 0.12 to 0.49 μM and decreased the peak amplitude with IC50 values varying from 16 to 22 μM. Interestingly, our study revealed that only compounds 4 (epiandrosterone) and 8 (dehydroepiandrosterone) were able to cause a significant change in I GABA in 10 μM concentration. Moreover, compounds 3 (testosterone), 5 (epitestosterone), 6 (dihydroandrostenedione), and 9 (etiocholanedione) did not modulate I GABA up to the concentration of 50 μM. Thus, we conclude that compounds 3, 5, 6, and 9 may be identified as selective modulators of I Gly. Our results offer new avenues of investigation in the field of drug-like selective modulators of I Gly.


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