5-Hydroxytryptamine-moduline: a novel
endogenous peptide involved in the
control of anxiety
by
Grimaldi B, Bonnin A, Fillion MP, Prudhomme N, Fillion G
Unite de pharmacologie neuroimmunoendocrinienne,
Institut Pasteur, Paris,
France.
grimaldi@pasteur.fr
Neuroscience 1999; 93(4):1223-5
ABSTRACT
The serotonergic system is considered as a neuromodulatory system interacting
with other neurotransmissions in the brain and participating in the elaboration
of an adapted response of the central nervous system to external stimuli.
Indeed, serotonin is involved in a large number of physiological events, such as
temperature regulation, sleep, learning and memory, behaviour, sexual function,
hormonal secretions and immune activity, and in parallel, it is also implicated
in pathological disorders particularly in stress, anxiety, aggressivity and
depression. At least 14 different types of serotonin receptors mediate
serotonergic activity and among them, serotonin-1B receptors play an important
role in the control of the serotonergic function. Serotonin-1B receptors are
autoreceptors localized on serotonergic neuron terminals (varicosities) where
they inhibit the evoked release of serotonin and its biosynthesis; they are also
heteroreceptors located on non-serotonergic terminals, where they inhibit the
release of the corresponding neurotransmitters (acetylcholine, GABA,
noradrenaline, etc.). 5-Hydroxytryptamine-moduline, an endogenous tetrapeptide
(Leu-Ser-Ala-Leu) recently isolated and characterized from rat and bovine brain
extracts, was shown to specifically interact with serotonin1B receptors as an
allosteric modulator having antagonistic properties in vitro and in vivo.
Immuncytochemical studies using specific polyclonal anti-peptide antibodies have
shown that this peptide is distributed heterogeneously in mouse brain and
located in areas which also contain serotonin-1B receptors. Moreover, the
content of these cerebral tissues in 5-hydroxytryptamine-moduline is affected by
stress. In the present work, polyclonal anti-5-hydroxytryptamine-moduline
antibodies were administered to mice via intracerebroventricular injections to
study the in vivo effects of a lowering (or suppression) of this neuropeptide in
the central nervous system. The inactivation of the peptide by the specific
antibodies significantly modified the behaviour of the animals in two
behavioural tests, the open-field and elevated plus-maze, known to be animal
models related to anxiety behaviour. Treated mice displayed behaviour consistent
with an anxiolytic effect of the antibody, suggesting a potential role of
5-hydroxytryptamine-moduline in the control of anxiety.
TCAs
SSRIs
5-HT1
5-HT2
5-HT3
5-HT1a
5-HT1b
Eltoprazine
5-HT-moduline
Lithium/5-HT1b
5-HT2c/5-HT2b
MDMA and 5-HT1a
MDMA and 5-HT1b
Anxiety and depression
5-HT1b inverse agonists as antidepressants
5-HT1b and 5-HT1d agonists and antagonists
Presynaptic and postsynaptic 5-HT1b receptors
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