Nature neuroscience
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Nature neuroscience · Dec 2000
Benzodiazepines act on GABAA receptors via two distinct and separable mechanisms.
Benzodiazepines (BZs) act on gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptors such as alpha1beta2gamma2 through key residues within the N-terminal region of alpha subunits, to render their sedative and anxiolytic actions. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the BZs' other clinical actions are not known. ⋯ Converse mutation of the corresponding TM2 residue and a TM3 residue within rho1 subunits confers diazepam sensitivity on homo-oligomeric rho1-receptor channels that are otherwise insensitive to BZs. Thus, specific and distinct residues contribute to a previously unresolved component (micromolar) of diazepam action, indicating that diazepam can modulate the GABAA-receptor channel through two separable mechanisms.