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Dive into the research topics where Nail Burnashev is active.

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Featured researches published by Nail Burnashev.


Neuron | 1994

Developmental and regional expression in the rat brain and functional properties of four NMDA receptors.

Hannah Monyer; Nail Burnashev; David J. Laurie; Bert Sakmann; Peter H. Seeburg

An in situ study of mRNAs encoding NMDA receptor subunits in the developing rat CNS revealed that, at all stages, the NR1 gene is expressed in virtually all neurons, whereas the four NR2 transcripts display distinct expression patterns. NR2B and NR2D mRNAs occur prenatally, whereas NR2A and NR2C mRNAs are first detected near birth. All transcripts except NR2D peak around P20. NR2D mRNA, present mainly in midbrain structures, peaks around P7 and thereafter decreases to adult levels. Postnatally, NR2B and NR2C transcript levels change in opposite directions in the cerebellar internal granule cell layer. In the adult hippocampus, NR2A and NR2B mRNAs are prominent in CA1 and CA3 pyramidal cells, but NR2C and NR2D mRNAs occur in different subsets of interneurons. Recombinant binary NR1-NR2 channels show comparable Ca2+ permeabilities, but marked differences in voltage-dependent Mg2+ block and in offset decay time constants. Thus, the distinct expression profiles and functional properties of NR2 subunits provide a basis for NMDA channel heterogeneity in the brain.


Science | 1992

Heteromeric NMDA receptors: molecular and functional distinction of subtypes

Hannah Monyer; Rolf Sprengel; Ralf Schoepfer; Anne Herb; Miyoko Higuchi; Hilda Lomelí; Nail Burnashev; Bert Sakmann; Peter H. Seeburg

The N-methyl d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor subtype of glutamate-gated ion channels possesses high calcium permeability and unique voltage-dependent sensitivity to magnesium and is modulated by glycine. Molecular cloning identified three complementary DNA species of rat brain, encoding NMDA receptor subunits NMDAR2A (NR2A), NR2B, and NR2C, which are 55 to 70% ientical in sequence. These are structurally related, with less than 20% sequence identity, to other excitatory amino acid receptor subunits, including the NMDA receptor subunit NMDAR1 (NR1). Upon expression in cultured cells, the new subunits yielded prominent, typical glutamate-and NMDA-activated currents only when they were in heteromeric configurations with NR1. NR1-NR2A and NR1-NR2C channels differed in gating behavior and magnesium sensitivity. Such heteromeric NMDA receptor subtypes may exist in neurons, since NR1 messenger RNA is synthesized throughout the mature rat brain, while NR2 messenger RNA show a differential distribution.


Neuron | 1992

Divalent ion permeability of AMPA receptor channels is dominated by the edited form of a single subunit

Nail Burnashev; Hannah Monyer; Peter H. Seeburg; Bert Sakmann

Functionally diverse GluR channels of the AMPA subtype are generated by the assembly of GluR-A, -B, -C, and -D subunits into homo- and heteromeric channels. The GluR-B subunit is dominant in determining functional properties of heteromeric AMPA receptors. This subunit exists in developmentally distinct edited and unedited forms, GluR-B(R) and GluR-B(Q), which differ in a single amino acid in transmembrane segment TM2 (Q/R site). Homomeric GluR-B(R) channels expressed in 293 cells display a low divalent permeability, whereas homomeric GluR-B(Q) and GluR-D channels exhibit a high divalent permeability. Mutational analysis revealed that both the positive charge and the size of the amino acid side chain located at the Q/R site control the divalent permeability of homomeric channels. Coexpression of Q/R site arginine- and glutamine-containing subunits generates cells with varying divalent permeabilities depending on the amounts of expression vectors used for cell transfection. Intermediate divalent permeabilities were traced to the presence of both divalent permeant homomeric and impermeant heteromeric channels. It is suggested that the positive charge contributed by the arginine of the edited GluR-B(R) subunit determines low divalent permeability in heteromeric GluR channels and that changes in GluR-B(R) expression regulate the AMPA receptor-dependent divalent permeability of a cell.


Science | 1991

Structural determinants of ion flow through recombinant glutamate receptor channels

Todd A. Verdoorn; Nail Burnashev; Hannah Monyer; Peter H. Seeburg; Bert Sakmann

Functional glutamate receptor (GluRs) were transiently expressed in cultured mammalian cells from cloned complementary DNAs encoding GluR-A, -B, -C, or -D polypeptides. The steady-state current-voltage (I-V) relations of glutamate- and kainate-induced currents through homomeric channels fell into two classes: channels composed of either the GluR-A, -C, and -D subunits showed doubly rectifying I-V curves, and channels composed of the GluR-B subunits displayed simple outward rectification. The presence of GluR-B subunits in heteromeric GluRs determined the I-V behavior of the resulting channels. Site-directed mutagenesis identified a single amino acid difference (glutamine to arginine) in the putative transmembrane segment TM2 responsible for subunit-specific I-V relationships. The properties of heteromeric wild-type and mutant GluRs revealed that the dominance of GluR-B is due to the arginine residue in the TM2 region.


Nature | 2000

Point mutation in an AMPA receptor gene rescues lethality in mice deficient in the RNA-editing enzyme ADAR2

Miyoko Higuchi; Stefan Maas; Frank Nicolai Single; Jochen C. Hartner; Andrej Rozov; Nail Burnashev; Dirk Feldmeyer; Rolf Sprengel; Peter H. Seeburg

RNA editing by site-selective deamination of adenosine to inosine alters codons and splicing in nuclear transcripts, and therefore protein function. ADAR2 (refs 7, 8) is a candidate mammalian editing enzyme that is widely expressed in brain and other tissues, but its RNA substrates are unknown. Here we have studied ADAR2-mediated RNA editing by generating mice that are homozygous for a targeted functional null allele. Editing in ADAR2-/- mice was substantially reduced at most of 25 positions in diverse transcripts; the mutant mice became prone to seizures and died young. The impaired phenotype appeared to result entirely from a single underedited position, as it reverted to normal when both alleles for the underedited transcript were substituted with alleles encoding the edited version exonically. The critical position specifies an ion channel determinant, the Q/R site, in AMPA (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate) receptor GluR-B pre-messenger RNA. We conclude that this transcript is the physiologically most important substrate of ADAR2.


Nature Neuroscience | 1998

Target-cell-specific facilitation and depression in neocortical circuits

Alex D. Reyes; Rafael Luján; Andrej Rozov; Nail Burnashev; Peter Somogyi; Bert Sakmann

In neocortical circuits, repetitively active neurons evoke unitary postsynaptic potentials (PSPs) whose peak amplitudes either increase (facilitate) or decrease (depress) progressively. To examine the basis for these different synaptic responses, we made simultaneous recordings from three classes of neurons in cortical layer 2/3. We induced repetitive action potentials in pyramidal cells and recorded the evoked unitary excitatory (E)PSPs in two classes of GABAergic neurons. We observed facilitation of EPSPs in bitufted GABAergic interneurons, many of which expressed somatostatin immunoreactivity. EPSPs recorded from multipolar interneurons, however, showed depression. Some of these neurons were immunopositive for parvalbumin. Unitary inhibitory (I)PSPs evoked by repetitive stimulation of a bitufted neuron also showed a less pronounced but significant difference between the two target neurons. Facilitation and depression involve presynaptic mechanisms, and because a single neuron can express both behaviors simultaneously, we infer that local differences in the molecular structure of presynaptic nerve terminals are induced by retrograde signals from different classes of target neurons. Because bitufted and multipolar neurons both formed reciprocal inhibitory connections with pyramidal cells, the results imply that the balance of activation between two recurrent inhibitory pathways in the neocortex depends on the frequency of action potentials in pyramidal cells.


Neuron | 1992

The KA−2 subunit of excitatory amino acid receptors shows widespread expression in brain and forms ion channels with distantly−related subunits

Anne Herb; Nail Burnashev; Pia Werner; Bert Sakmann; William Wisden; Peter H. Seeburg

A new ionotropic glutamate receptor subunit termed KA-2, cloned from rat brain cDNA, exhibits high affinity for [3H]kainate (KD approximately 15 nM). KA-2 mRNA is widely expressed in embryonic and adult brain. Homomeric KA-2 expression does not generate agonist-sensitive channels, but currents are observed when KA-2 is coexpressed with GluR5 or GluR6 subunits. Specifically, coexpression of GluR5(R) and KA-2 produces channel activity, whereas homomeric expression of either subunit does not. Currents through heteromeric GluR5(Q)/KA-2 channels show more rapid desensitization and different current-voltage relations when compared with GluR5(Q) currents. GluR6/KA-2 channels are gated by AMPA, which fails to gate homomeric GluR6 receptor channels. These results suggest possible in vivo partnership relations for high affinity kainate receptors.


Cell | 1998

Importance of the Intracellular Domain of NR2 Subunits for NMDA Receptor Function In Vivo

Rolf Sprengel; Bettina Suchanek; Carla Amico; Rossella Brusa; Nail Burnashev; Andrei Rozov; OØivind Hvalby; Vidar Jensen; Ole Paulsen; Per Andersen; Jeansok J. Kim; Richard F. Thompson; William Sun; Lorna C. Webster; Seth G. N. Grant; Jens Eilers; Arthur Konnerth; Jianying Li; James O McNamara; Peter H. Seeburg

NMDA receptors, a class of glutamate-gated cation channels with high Ca2+ conductance, mediate fast transmission and plasticity of central excitatory synapses. We show here that gene-targeted mice expressing NMDA receptors without the large intracellular C-terminal domain of any one of three NR2 subunits phenotypically resemble mice made deficient in that particular subunit. Mice expressing the NR2B subunit in a C-terminally truncated form (NR2B(deltaC/deltaC) mice) die perinatally. NR2A(deltaC/deltaC) mice are viable but exhibit impaired synaptic plasticity and contextual memory. These and NR2C(deltaC/deltaC) mice display deficits in motor coordination. C-terminal truncation of NR2 subunits does not interfere with the formation of gateable receptor channels that can be synaptically activated. Thus, the phenotypes of our mutants appear to reflect defective intracellular signaling.


The Journal of Physiology | 1995

Fractional calcium currents through recombinant GluR channels of the NMDA, AMPA and kainate receptor subtypes.

Nail Burnashev; Zhuan Zhou; Erwin Neher; Bert Sakmann

1. Simultaneous fluorescence and whole‐cell current measurements using the calcium indicator dye fura‐2 were made in HEK 293 cells expressing recombinant glutamate receptor (GluR) channels, and fractional Ca2+ currents (the proportion of whole‐cell current carried by Ca2+; Pf) were determined. 2. Cells expressing N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate receptor (NMDAR) channels showed glutamate activated Ca2+ inflow in the voltage range ‐60 to 40 mV in normal extracellular solution. Ca2+ inflow decreased in a voltage‐dependent manner at membrane potentials more negative than ‐30 mV due to Mg2+ block. Voltage dependence of block at negative potentials was stronger in cells expressing the NR1‐NR2A as compared with cells expressing NR1‐NR2C subunits. 3. Fractional Ca2+ currents through NMDARs were independent of extracellular Mg2+ and varied between 8.2% (NR1‐NR2C subunits) and 11% (NR1‐NR2A subunits) in normal extracellular solution (1.8 mM Ca2+) at ‐60 mV membrane potential. Pf values increased with increasing [Ca2+]o in the range of 0.5‐10mM [Ca2+]o in a saturating fashion. 4. In cells expressing alpha‐amino‐3‐hydroxy‐5‐methyl‐4‐isoxazolepropionate receptor (AMPAR) subunits which were unedited at the Q/R site of the putative transmembrane segment TM2 (Q‐form), or in cells coexpressing unedited and edited subunits (R‐form), the glutamate‐evoked Ca2+ inflow increased from 20 to ‐80 mV in an almost linear way. 5. Fractional Ca2+ currents through AMPAR channels depended on subunit composition. Pf values of Q‐form homomeric channels at ‐60 mV and 1.8 mM [Ca2+]o were between 3.2 and 3.9%. They were slightly voltage dependent and increased with [Ca2+]o in the range 1.8‐10mM. Pf values in cells co‐expressing Q‐ and R‐form subunits were almost one order of magnitude smaller (0.54%). 6. Relative concentrations of Q‐form and R‐form GluR‐B subunit‐specific cDNAs used for cell transfection determined the expression of functionally different heteromeric AMPARS. Pf decreased with increasing relative concentration of R‐form encoding CDNAs from 3.4 to 1.4%, demonstrating that editing of the Q/R site of GluR‐B subunits decreases Ca2+ inflow through heteromeric AMPARs. 7. Cells expressing the GluR‐6 subunit of the kainate receptor (KAR) family were characterized by Pf values which depended on the editing in the TM1 and TM2 segments. Pf values were largest for the Q‐form (1.55‐2.0%) and lowest for R‐form channels (< 0.2%), suggesting that Q/R site editing also decreases Ca2+ inflow through KAR channels. Cells co‐expressing both subunit forms showed an intermediate value (0.58%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Neuron | 1993

Determinants of ca2+ permeability in both TM1 and TM2 of high affinity kainate receptor channels: Diversity by RNA editing

Martin Köhler; Nail Burnashev; Bert Sakmann; Peter H. Seeburg

GluR6, a subunit of high affinity kainate receptor channels in the mammalian CNS, carries a glutamine (Q) or arginine (R) residue in a critical position (Q/R site) of the putative channel-forming segment TM2. One form, GluR6(Q), is encoded by the GluR6 gene; the other, GluR6(R), is generated by RNA editing. Further analysis of cloned GluR6 cDNA revealed that two additional positions, located in transmembrane segment TM1, are diversified by RNA editing to generate either isoleucine (I) or valine (V) in one and tyrosine (Y) or cysteine (C) in the other TM1 position. In GluR6 channels, in contrast with AMPA receptor channels, the presence of Q in the TM2 Q/R site determines channels with low Ca2+ permeability, whereas an R determines a higher Ca2+ permeability if TM1 is fully edited. In the TM1 unedited form of GluR6, Ca2+ permeability is less dependent on the presence of either Q or R in TM2. Thus Ca2+ permeability of kainate receptor channels can vary, depending on editing of both TM1 and TM2.

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Peter Jonas

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

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