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Dive into the research topics where Patrizia Rubini is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrizia Rubini.


Advances in pharmacology (San Diego) | 2011

P2 Receptor Signaling in Neurons and Glial Cells of the Central Nervous System

Laszlo Köles; Anna Leichsenring; Patrizia Rubini; Peter Illes

Purine and pyrimidine nucleotides are extracellular signaling molecules in the central nervous system (CNS) leaving the intracellular space of various CNS cell types via nonexocytotic mechanisms. In addition, ATP is a neuro-and gliotransmitter released by exocytosis from neurons and neuroglia. These nucleotides activate P2 receptors of the P2X (ligand-gated cationic channels) and P2Y (G protein-coupled receptors) types. In mammalians, seven P2X and eight P2Y receptor subunits occur; three P2X subtypes form homomeric or heteromeric P2X receptors. P2Y subtypes may also hetero-oligomerize with each other as well as with other G protein-coupled receptors. P2X receptors are able to physically associate with various types of ligand-gated ion channels and thereby to interact with them. The P2 receptor homomers or heteromers exhibit specific sensitivities against pharmacological ligands and have preferential functional roles. They may be situated at both presynaptic (nerve terminals) and postsynaptic (somatodendritic) sites of neurons, where they modulate either transmitter release or the postsynaptic sensitivity to neurotransmitters. P2 receptors exist at neuroglia (e.g., astrocytes, oligodendrocytes) and microglia in the CNS. The neuroglial P2 receptors subserve the neuron-glia cross talk especially via their end-feets projecting to neighboring synapses. In addition, glial networks are able to communicate through coordinated oscillations of their intracellular Ca(2+) over considerable distances. P2 receptors are involved in the physiological regulation of CNS functions as well as in its pathophysiological dysregulation. Normal (motivation, reward, embryonic and postnatal development, neuroregeneration) and abnormal regulatory mechanisms (pain, neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration, epilepsy) are important examples for the significance of P2 receptor-mediated/modulated processes.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2007

Metabotropic P2Y receptors inhibit P2X3 receptor-channels via G protein-dependent facilitation of their desensitization

Zoltan Gerevich; Zoltán S. Zádori; C Müller; Kerstin Wirkner; Wolfgang Schröder; Patrizia Rubini; Peter Illes

The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the endogenous metabotropic P2Y receptors modulate ionotropic P2X3 receptor‐channels.


Pain | 2009

Cross-inhibition between native and recombinant TRPV1 and P2X3 receptors

Doychin Stanchev; Maren Blosa; Doreen Milius; Zoltan Gerevich; Patrizia Rubini; Günther Schmalzing; Klaus Eschrich; Michael Schaefer; Kerstin Wirkner; Peter Illes

ABSTRACT Small‐ to medium‐sized neurons in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) convey nociceptive information to the spinal cord. The co‐expression of TRPV1 receptors (sensitive to vanilloids, heat and acidic pH) with P2X3 receptors (sensitive to extracellular ATP) has been found in many DRG neurons. We investigated whether the co‐activation of these two receptor classes in small‐diameter cells leads to a modulation of the resulting current responses shaping the intensity of pain sensation. The whole‐cell patch clamp method was used to record agonist‐induced currents in cultured rat DRG neurons and in HEK293 cells transfected with the respective wild‐type recombinant receptors or their mutants. Co‐immunoprecipitation studies were used to demonstrate the physical association of TRPV1 and P2X3 receptors. At a negative holding potential, the P2X3 receptor agonist α,β‐meATP induced less current in the presence of the TRPV1 agonist capsaicin than that in its absence. This inhibitory interaction was not changed at a positive holding potential, in a Ba2+‐containing superfusion medium, or when the buffering of intrapipette Ca2+ was altered. The C‐terminal truncation at Glu362 of P2X3 receptors abolished the TRPV1/P2X3 cross‐talk in the HEK293 expression system. Co‐immunoprecipitation studies with polyclonal antibodies generated against TRPV1 and P2X3 showed a visible signal in HEK293 cells transfected with both receptors. It is concluded that the two pain‐relevant receptors TRPV1 and P2X3 interact with each other in an inhibitory manner probably by a physical association established by a motif located at the C‐terminal end of the P2X3 receptor distal to Glu362.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Amino Acid Residues Constituting the Agonist Binding Site of the Human P2X3 Receptor

Mandy Bodnar; Haihong Wang; Thomas Riedel; Stefan Hintze; Erzsébet Kató; Ghada Fallah; Helke Gröger-Arndt; Rashid Giniatullin; Marcus Grohmann; Ralf Hausmann; Günther Schmalzing; Peter Illes; Patrizia Rubini

Homomeric P2X3 receptors are present in sensory ganglia and participate in pain perception. Amino acid (AA) residues were replaced in the four supposed nucleotide binding segments (NBSs) of the human (h) P2X3 receptor by alanine, and these mutants were expressed in HEK293 cells and Xenopus laevis oocytes. Patch clamp and two-electrode voltage clamp measurements as well as the Ca2+ imaging technique were used to compare the concentration-response curves of the selective P2X1,3 agonist α,β-methylene ATP obtained at the wild-type P2X3 receptor and its NBS mutants. Within these NBSs, certain Gly (Gly-66), Lys (Lys-63, Lys-176, Lys-284, Lys-299), Asn (Asn-177, Asn-279), Arg (Arg-281, Arg-295), and Thr (Thr-172) residues were of great importance for a full agonist response. However, the replacement of further AAs in the NBSs by Ala also appeared to modify the amplitude of the current and/or [Ca2+]i responses, although sometimes to a minor degree. The agonist potency decrease was additive after the simultaneous replacement of two adjacent AAs by Ala (K65A/G66A, F171A/T172A, N279A/F280A, F280A/R281A) but was not altered after Ala substitution of two non-adjacent AAs within the same NBS (F171A/N177A). SDS-PAGE in the Cy5 cell surface-labeled form demonstrated that the mutants appeared at the cell surface in oocytes. Thus, groups of AAs organized in NBSs rather than individual amino acids appear to be responsible for agonist binding at the hP2X3 receptor. These NBSs are located at the interface of the three subunits forming a functional receptor.


Neuropharmacology | 2013

P2X7 receptors at adult neural progenitor cells of the mouse subventricular zone

Nanette Messemer; Christin Kunert; Marcus Grohmann; Helga Sobottka; Karen Nieber; Herbert Zimmermann; Heike Franke; Wolfgang Nörenberg; Isabelle Straub; Michael Schaefer; Thomas Riedel; Peter Illes; Patrizia Rubini

Neurogenesis requires the balance between the proliferation of newly formed progenitor cells and subsequent death of surplus cells. RT-PCR and immunocytochemistry demonstrated the presence of P2X7 receptor mRNA and immunoreactivity in cultured neural progenitor cells (NPCs) prepared from the adult mouse subventricular zone (SVZ). Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings showed a marked potentiation of the inward current responses both to ATP and the prototypic P2X7 receptor agonist dibenzoyl-ATP (Bz-ATP) at low Ca(2+) and zero Mg(2+) concentrations in the bath medium. The Bz-ATP-induced currents reversed their polarity near 0 mV; in NPCs prepared from P2X7(-/-) mice, Bz-ATP failed to elicit membrane currents. The general P2X/P2Y receptor antagonist PPADS and the P2X7 selective antagonists Brilliant Blue G and A-438079 strongly depressed the effect of Bz-ATP. Long-lasting application of Bz-ATP induced an initial current, which slowly increased to a steady-state response. In combination with the determination of YO-PRO uptake, these experiments suggest the dilation of a receptor-channel and/or the recruitment of a dye-uptake pathway. Ca(2+)-imaging by means of Fura-2 revealed that in a Mg(2+)-deficient bath medium Bz-ATP causes [Ca(2+)](i) transients fully depending on the presence of external Ca(2+). The MTT test indicated a concentration-dependent decrease in cell viability by Bz-ATP treatment. Correspondingly, Bz-ATP led to an increase in active caspase 3 immunoreactivity, indicating a P2X7-controlled apoptosis. In acute SVZ brain slices of transgenic Tg(nestin/EGFP) mice, patch-clamp recordings identified P2X7 receptors at NPCs with pharmacological properties identical to those of their cultured counterparts. We suggest that the apoptotic/necrotic P2X7 receptors at NPCs may be of particular relevance during pathological conditions which lead to increased ATP release and thus could counterbalance the ensuing excessive cell proliferation.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2017

Neuronal P2X7 Receptors Revisited: Do They Really Exist?

Peter Illes; Tahir Muhammad Khan; Patrizia Rubini

P2X7 receptors (Rs) constitute a subclass of ATP-sensitive ionotropic receptors (P2X1-P2X7). P2X7Rs have many distinguishing features, mostly based on their long intracellular C terminus regulating trafficking to the cell membrane, protein–protein interactions, and post-translational modification. Their C-terminal tail is especially important in enabling the transition from the nonselective ion channel mode to a membrane pore allowing the passage of large molecules. There is an ongoing dispute on the existence of neuronal P2X7Rs with consequences for our knowledge on their involvement in neuroinflammation, aggravating stroke, temporal lobe epilepsy, neuropathic pain, and various neurodegenerative diseases. Whereas early results appeared to support the operation of P2X7Rs at neurons, more recently glial P2X7Rs are increasingly considered as indirect causes of neuronal effects. Specific tools for P2X7Rs are of limited value because of the poor selectivity of agonists, and the inherent failure of antibodies to differentiate between the large number of active and inactive splice variants, or gain-of-function and loss-of-function small nucleotide polymorphisms of the receptor. Unfortunately, the available P2RX7 knock-out mice generated by pharmaceutical companies possess certain splice variants, which evade inactivation. In view of the recently discovered bidirectional dialogue between astrocytes and neurons (and even microglia and neurons), we offer an alternative explanation for previous data, which assumedly support the existence of P2X7Rs at neurons. We think that the unbiased reader will follow our argumentation on astrocytic or microglial P2X7Rs being the primary targets of pathologically high extracellular ATP concentrations, although a neuronal localization of these receptors cannot be fully excluded either.


Purinergic Signalling | 2016

Modulation of excitatory neurotransmission by neuronal/glial signalling molecules: interplay between purinergic and glutamatergic systems.

Laszlo Köles; Erzsébet Kató; Adrienn Hanuska; Zoltán S. Zádori; Mahmoud Al-Khrasani; Tibor Zelles; Patrizia Rubini; Peter Illes

Glutamate is the main excitatory neurotransmitter of the central nervous system (CNS), released both from neurons and glial cells. Acting via ionotropic (NMDA, AMPA, kainate) and metabotropic glutamate receptors, it is critically involved in essential regulatory functions. Disturbances of glutamatergic neurotransmission can be detected in cognitive and neurodegenerative disorders. This paper summarizes the present knowledge on the modulation of glutamate-mediated responses in the CNS. Emphasis will be put on NMDA receptor channels, which are essential executive and integrative elements of the glutamatergic system. This receptor is crucial for proper functioning of neuronal circuits; its hypofunction or overactivation can result in neuronal disturbances and neurotoxicity. Somewhat surprisingly, NMDA receptors are not widely targeted by pharmacotherapy in clinics; their robust activation or inhibition seems to be desirable only in exceptional cases. However, their fine-tuning might provide a promising manipulation to optimize the activity of the glutamatergic system and to restore proper CNS function. This orchestration utilizes several neuromodulators. Besides the classical ones such as dopamine, novel candidates emerged in the last two decades. The purinergic system is a promising possibility to optimize the activity of the glutamatergic system. It exerts not only direct and indirect influences on NMDA receptors but, by modulating glutamatergic transmission, also plays an important role in glia-neuron communication. These purinergic functions will be illustrated mostly by depicting the modulatory role of the purinergic system on glutamatergic transmission in the prefrontal cortex, a CNS area important for attention, memory and learning.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2006

Regulation of intracellular Ca2+ by P2Y1 receptors may depend on the developmental stage of cultured rat striatal neurons†

Patrizia Rubini; Christina Pinkwart; Heike Franke; Zoltan Gerevich; Wolfgang Nörenberg; Peter Illes

Mixed striatal cell cultures containing neurons and glial cells were grown either in neurobasal medium (NBM) or Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium (DMEM). Whole‐cell patch‐clamp recordings indicated that, if at all, only a single, low amplitude spike was evoked shortly after starting the injection of a depolarizing current pulse into NBM neurons. In contrast, DMEM neurons fired series of high amplitude action potentials, without apparent spike frequency adaptation. The possible reason for the observed action potential failure in NBM neurons was a low density of Na+ channels per unit of membrane surface area. However, both in NBM and DMEM neurons, ATP did not induce inward current responses via P2X receptor‐channels, although GABAA and N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate (NMDA) receptor‐channels could be activated by muscimol and NMDA, respectively. Ca2+ imaging experiments by means of the Fura‐2 method were utilized to measure intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) in neurons and glial cells. NBM, but not DMEM neurons responded to ATP with [Ca2+]i transients; glial cells grown in either culture medium were equally sensitive to ATP. ATP caused an increase of [Ca2+]i by a mechanism only partly dependent on external Ca2+; the residual ATP effect was blocked by cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) and was therefore due to the release of Ca2+ from its intracellular pools. The receptor involved was characterized by P2 receptor antagonists (PPADS, MRS 2179, AR‐C69931MX) and was found to belong to the P2Y1 subtype. CPA caused an early [Ca2+]i response due to release from intracellular storage sites, followed by a late [Ca2+]i response due to the influx of this cation from the extracellular space, probably triggered by the opening of store‐operated channels (SOCs) in the plasma membrane. It is concluded that in partial analogy with the effect of CPA, ATP releases [Ca2+]i via the Gq/phospholipase C/inositoltrisphosphate (IP3) pathway, thereby opening SOCs. It is hypothesized that this effect of ATP may have an important role for the proliferation and migration of striatal neuronal progenitors. J. Cell. Physiol. 209: 81–93, 2006.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

ATP binding site mutagenesis reveals different subunit stoichiometry of functional P2X2/3 and P2X2/6 receptors.

Ralf Hausmann; Mandy Bodnar; Ronja Woltersdorf; Haihong Wang; Martin Fuchs; Nanette Messemer; Ying Qin; Janka Günther; Thomas Riedel; Marcus Grohmann; Karen Nieber; Günther Schmalzing; Patrizia Rubini; Peter Illes

Background: Heteromeric P2X receptors increase the diversity of rapid ATP signaling. Results: Non-functional P2X2, P2X3, and P2X6 subunit mutants were used to investigate the composition of heteromeric P2X2/3 and P2X2/6 receptors. Conclusion: The subunit stoichiometry of P2X2/3 and P2X2/6 is 1:2 and 2:1, respectively. Significance: Recognition sites between P2X2 and its partners rather than random association may govern the subunit composition of the receptor trimers. The aim of the present experiments was to clarify the subunit stoichiometry of P2X2/3 and P2X2/6 receptors, where the same subunit (P2X2) forms a receptor with two different partners (P2X3 or P2X6). For this purpose, four non-functional Ala mutants of the P2X2, P2X3, and P2X6 subunits were generated by replacing single, homologous amino acids particularly important for agonist binding. Co-expression of these mutants in HEK293 cells to yield the P2X2 WT/P2X3 mutant or P2X2 mutant/P2X3 WT receptors resulted in a selective blockade of agonist responses in the former combination only. In contrast, of the P2X2 WT/P2X6 mutant and P2X2 mutant/P2X6 WT receptors, only the latter combination failed to respond to agonists. The effects of α,β-methylene–ATP and 2-methylthio-ATP were determined by measuring transmembrane currents by the patch clamp technique and intracellular Ca2+ transients by the Ca2+-imaging method. Protein labeling, purification, and PAGE confirmed the assembly and surface trafficking of the investigated WT and WT/mutant combinations in Xenopus laevis oocytes. In conclusion, both electrophysiological and biochemical investigations uniformly indicate that one subunit of P2X2 and two subunits of P2X3 form P2X2/3 heteromeric receptors, whereas two subunits of P2X2 and one subunit of P2X6 constitute P2X2/6 receptors. Further, it was shown that already two binding sites of the three possible ones are sufficient to allow these receptors to react with their agonists.


Cell Calcium | 2009

Increase of intracellular Ca2+ by adenine and uracil nucleotides in human midbrain-derived neuronal progenitor cells

Patrizia Rubini; Javorina Milosevic; Johannes Engelhardt; Mahmoud Al-Khrasani; Heike Franke; Attilla Heinrich; Beáta Sperlágh; Sigrid C. Schwarz; Johannes Schwarz; Wolfgang Nörenberg; Peter Illes

Nucleotides play an important role in brain development and may exert their action via ligand-gated cationic channels or G protein-coupled receptors. Patch-clamp measurements indicated that in contrast to AMPA, ATP did not induce membrane currents in human midbrain derived neuronal progenitor cells (hmNPCs). Various nucleotide agonists concentration-dependently increased [Ca(2+)](i) as measured by the Fura-2 method, with the rank order of potency ATP>ADP>UTP>UDP. A Ca(2+)-free external medium moderately decreased, whereas a depletion of the intracellular Ca(2+) storage sites by cyclopiazonic acid markedly depressed the [Ca(2+)](i) transients induced by either ATP or UTP. Further, the P2Y(1) receptor antagonistic PPADS and MRS 2179, as well as the nucleotide catalyzing enzyme apyrase, allmost abolished the effects of these two nucleotides. However, the P2Y(1,2,12) antagonistic suramin only slightly blocked the action of ATP, but strongly inhibited that of UTP. In agreement with this finding, UTP evoked the release of ATP from hmNPCs in a suramin-, but not PPADS-sensitive manner. Immunocytochemistry indicated the co-localization of P2Y(1,2,4)-immunoreactivities (IR) with nestin-IR at these cells. In conclusion, UTP may induce the release of ATP from hmNPCs via P2Y(2) receptor-activation and thereby causes [Ca(2+)](i) transients by stimulating a P2Y(1)-like receptor.

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Yong Tang

Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

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