For decades, delta glutamate receptors were considered ‘orphan’ receptors: they resembled ion channels structurally but appeared functionally silent in standard room-temperature electrophysiological assays. Recent studies have shown that their activation is governed by a high energetic barrier, a distinctive structural asymmetry and a strong dependence on physiological temperature (37 °C). This thermodynamic gating mechanism, along with recent evolutionary insights, is redefining their role from passive scaffolds to dynamic participants in synaptic physiology1. Delta glutamate receptors are no longer considered silent scaffolds. This Comment discusses how GluD2 can be activated by structural asymmetry and temperature, emphasizing its potential role in synaptic plasticity.
Vinnakota et al. (Wed,) studied this question.