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1.
Basal synaptic transmission involves the release of neurotransmitters at individual synapses in response to a single action potential. Recent discoveries show that astrocytes modulate the activity of neuronal networks upon sustained and intense synaptic activity. However, their ability to regulate basal synaptic transmission remains ill defined and controversial. Here, we show that astrocytes in the hippocampal CA1 region detect synaptic activity induced by single-synaptic stimulation. Astrocyte activation occurs at functional compartments found along astrocytic processes and involves metabotropic glutamate subtype 5 receptors. In response, astrocytes increase basal synaptic transmission, as revealed by the blockade of their activity with a Ca(2+) chelator. Astrocytic modulation of basal synaptic transmission is mediated by the release of purines and the activation of presynaptic A(2A) receptors by adenosine. Our work uncovers an essential role for astrocytes in the regulation of elementary synaptic communication and provides insight into fundamental aspects of brain function.  相似文献   

2.
Jean-Philippe Pin 《PSN》2005,3(3):132-142
The rapid transmission of information in the central nervous system is mostly mediated by glutamate synapses. The control of this system quickly appeared as a way to modulate, and perhaps normalize, a number of brain dysfunctions. However, the central role of glutamate receptors involved in this transmission, the ionotropic AMPA and NMDA receptors, appeared as an obstacle to the development of drugs devoid of side effects. The discovery of a second family of glutamate receptors, more than fifteen years ago, offered new possibilities to act on the glutamate system. These receptors, the metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptors which are coupled to G-proteins, modulate excitatory synaptic transmission. Eight mGlu receptors have been identified and localized either on the post-synaptic element, where they can regulate the AMPA and NMDA receptor activity, or on the presynaptic element, where they control the release of glutamate or other neurotransmitters. Recent data highlights the therapeutic potential of drugs acting at these receptors for the treatment of a variety of pathologies including anxiety, schizophrenia and Parkinson’s disease.  相似文献   

3.
Astrocytes are considered the third component of the synapse, responding to neurotransmitter release from synaptic terminals and releasing gliotransmitters--including glutamate--in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner to affect neuronal synaptic activity. Many studies reporting astrocyte-driven neuronal activity have evoked astrocyte Ca(2+) increases by application of endogenous ligands that directly activate neuronal receptors, making astrocyte contribution to neuronal effect(s) difficult to determine. We have made transgenic mice that express a Gq-coupled receptor only in astrocytes to evoke astrocyte Ca(2+) increases using an agonist that does not bind endogenous receptors in brain. By recording from CA1 pyramidal cells in acute hippocampal slices from these mice, we demonstrate that widespread Ca(2+) elevations in 80%-90% of stratum radiatum astrocytes do not increase neuronal Ca(2+), produce neuronal slow inward currents, or affect excitatory synaptic activity. Our findings call into question the developing consensus that Ca(2+)-dependent glutamate release by astrocytes directly affects neuronal synaptic activity in situ.  相似文献   

4.
In the central nervous system ATP is released from both neurones and astroglial cells acting as a homo- and heterocellular neurotransmitter. Glial cells express numerous purinoceptors of both ionotropic (P2X) and metabotropic (P2Y) varieties. Astroglial P2X receptors can be activated by ongoing synaptic transmission and can mediate fast local signalling through elevation in cytoplasmic Ca(2+) and Na(+) concentrations. These ionic signals can be translated into various physiological messages by numerous pathways, including release of gliotransmitters, metabolic support of neurones and regulation of activity of postsynaptic glutamate and GABA receptors. Ionotropic purinoceptors represent a novel pathway of glia-driven modulation of synaptic signalling that involves the release of ATP from neurones and astrocytes followed by activation of P2X receptors which can regulate synaptic activity by variety of mechanisms expressed in both neuronal and glial compartments.  相似文献   

5.
Molecular mechanisms of calcium-dependent neurodegeneration in excitotoxicity   总被引:33,自引:0,他引:33  
Arundine M  Tymianski M 《Cell calcium》2003,34(4-5):325-337
Excitotoxicity contributes to neuronal degeneration in many acute CNS diseases, including ischemia, trauma, and epilepsy, and may also play a role in chronic diseases, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Key mediators of excitotoxic damage are Ca ions (Ca(2+)), which under physiological conditions govern a multitude of cellular processes, including cell growth, differentiation, and synaptic activity. Consequently, homeostatic mechanisms exist to maintain a low intracellular Ca(2+) ion concentration so that Ca(2+) signals remain spatially and temporally localized. This permits multiple independent Ca-mediated signaling pathways to occur in the same cell. In excitotoxicity, excessive synaptic release of glutamate can lead to the disregulation of Ca(2+) homeostasis. Glutamate activates postsynaptic receptors, including the ionotropic N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), 2-amino-3-(3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazol-4-yl) proprionate (AMPA), and kainate receptors. Upon their activation, these open their associated ion channel to allow the influx of Ca(2+) and Na(+) ions. Although physiological elevations in intracellular Ca(2+) are salient to normal cell functioning, the excessive influx of Ca(2+) together with any Ca(2+) release from intracellular compartments can overwhelm Ca(2+)-regulatory mechanisms and lead to cell death. Although Ca(2+) disregulation is paramount to neurodegeneration, the exact mechanism by which Ca(2+) ions actually mediate excitotoxicity is less clear. One hypothesis outlined in this review suggests that Ca(2+)-dependent neurotoxicity occurs following the activation of distinct signaling cascades downstream from key points of Ca(2+) entry at synapses, and that triggers of these cascades are physically co-localized with specific glutamate receptors. Thus, we summarize the importance of Ca(2+) regulation in mammalian neurons and the excitotoxicity hypothesis, and focus on the molecular determinants of glutamate receptor-mediated excitotoxic mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
The wide-ranging neuronal actions of excitatory amino acids, such as glutamate, are thought to be mediated mainly by postsynaptic N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and non-NMDA receptors. We now report the existence of presynaptic glutamate receptors in isolated nerve terminals (synaptosomes) prepared from hippocampus, olfactory bulb, and cerebral cortex. Activation of these receptors by NMDA or non-NMDA agonists, in a concentration-dependent manner, resulted in Ca(2+)-dependent release of noradrenaline from vesicular transmitter stores. The NMDA-stimulated release was potentiated by glycine and was blocked by Mg2+ and selective NMDA antagonists. In contrast, release stimulated by selective non-NMDA agonists was blocked by 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3- dione, but not by Mg2+ or NMDA antagonists. Our data suggest that the presynaptic glutamate receptors can be classified pharmacologically as both the NMDA and non-NMDA types. These receptors, localized on nerve terminals of the locus ceruleus noradrenergic neurons, may play an important role in interactions between noradrenaline and glutamate.  相似文献   

7.
J. Neurochem. (2012) 122, 891-899. ABSTRACT: Presynaptic kainate receptors (KARs) modulate the release of glutamate at synapses established between mossy fibers (MF) and CA3 pyramidal cells in the hippocampus. The activation of KAR by low, nanomolar, kainate concentrations facilitates glutamate release. KAR-mediated facilitation of glutamate release involves the activation of an adenylate cyclase/cyclic adenosine monophosphate/protein kinase A cascade at MF-CA3 synapses. Here, we studied the mechanisms by which KAR activation produces this facilitation of glutamate release in slices and synaptosomes. We find that the facilitation of glutamate release mediated by KAR activation requires an increase in Ca(2+) levels in the cytosol and the formation of a Ca(2+) -calmodulin complex to activate adenylate cyclase. The increase in cytosolic Ca(2+) underpinning this modulation is achieved, both, by Ca(2+) entering via Ca(2+) -permeable KARs and, by the mobilization of intraterminal Ca(2+) stores. Finally, we find that, congruent with the Ca(2+) -calmodulin support of KAR-mediated facilitation of glutamate release, induction of long-term potentiation at MF-CA3 synapses has an obligate requirement for Ca(2+) -calmodulin activity.  相似文献   

8.
G protein-coupled receptors mobilize neuronal signaling cascades which until now have not been shown to depend on the state of membrane depolarization. Thus we have previously shown that the metabotropic glutamate receptor type 7 (mGlu7 receptor) blocks P/Q-type Ca(2+) channels via activation of a G(o) protein and PKC, in cerebellar granule cells. We show here that the transient depolarizations used to evoke the studied Ca(2+) current were indeed permissive to activate this pathway by a mGlu7 receptor agonist. Indeed, sustained depolarization to 0 mV was sufficient to inhibit P/Q-type Ca(2+) channels. This effect involved a conformational change in voltage-gated sodium channel independently of Na(+) flux, activation of a pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein, inositol trisphosphate formation, intracellular Ca(2+) release, and PKC activity. Subliminal sustained membrane depolarization became efficient in inducing inositol trisphosphate formation, release of intracellular Ca(2+) and in blocking Ca(2+) channels, when applied concomitantly with the mGlu7a receptor agonist, d,l-aminophosphonobutyrate. This synergistic effect of membrane depolarization and mGlu7 receptor activation provides a mechanism by which neuronal excitation could control action of the mGlu7 receptor in neurons.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Based on recent experimental data, we design a model for neuronal membrane potentials that incorporates the influence of the surrounding glia (dressed neurons). A neurotransmitter released into the synaptic cleft triggers a Ca(2+) response in nearby glial cells that spreads as a Ca(2+) wave and interacts with other synapses via the release of glutamate from astrocytes. We consider the simple case of a neuron-glia circuit that consists of a single neuron that triggers a Ca(2+) response in the glial cell which in turn feeds back into synapses of the same neuron. It is shown that persistent spiking can occur if the glutamate receptors on the astrocytes are overexpressed--a condition that has been reported from patients suffering from mesial-lobe epilepsy.  相似文献   

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