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Published September 2015 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Inside-out neuropharmacology of nicotinic drugs

Abstract

Upregulation of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) is a venerable result of chronic exposure to nicotine; but it is one of several consequences of pharmacological chaperoning by nicotine and by some other nicotinic ligands, especially agonists. Nicotinic ligands permeate through cell membranes, bind to immature AChR oligomers, elicit incompletely understood conformational reorganizations, increase the interaction between adjacent AChR subunits, and enhance the maturation process toward stable AChR pentamers. These changes and stabilizations in turn lead to increases in both anterograde and retrograde traffic within the early secretory pathway. In addition to the eventual upregulation of AChRs at the plasma membrane, other effects of pharmacological chaperoning include modifications to endoplasmic reticulum stress and to the unfolded protein response. Because these processes depend on pharmacological chaperoning within intracellular organelles, we group them as "inside-out pharmacology". This term contrasts with the better-known, acute, "outside-in" effects of activating and desensitizing plasma membrane AChRs. We review current knowledge concerning the mechanisms and consequences of inside-out pharmacology.

Additional Information

© 2015 Published by Elsevier Ltd. Available online 4 February 2015. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants AG033954, DA017279, DA019375, DA030396, NS034407, and DA033721, by the California Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program Grant 17RT0127, and by Louis and Janet Fletcher. We thank Sherry Leonard for contributing comments.

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August 22, 2023
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