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Reversible Activation of Glutamate Transport in Rat Brain Glia by Protein Kinase C and an Okadaic Acid-Sensitive Phosphoprotein Phosphatase
Authors:Kellye K. Daniels  Thomas W. Vickroy
Affiliation:(1) Department of Physiological Sciences, Florida, 32610;(2) Department of Neuroscience University of Florida Gainesville, Florida> , 32610;(3) Department of Physiological Sciences, University of Florida, Box 100144 JHMHC, Gainesville, Florida, 32610-0144
Abstract:
High-affinity L-glutamate (GLU) transport is an important regulator of excitatory amino acid (EAA) concentrations in brain extracellular fluid and may play a key role in excitatory synaptic transmission. In view of evidence that EAA transporters (EAAT) are heterogenous and contain consensus sites for phosphorylation, this investigation was undertaken to contrast the effects of transporter phosphorylation in fractions derived from glia and neurons (synaptosomes) of the adult rat forebrain. Treatment with phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu), an activator of protein kinase C (PKC), increased the maximal rate of GLU transport in glial plasmalemmal vesicles by greater than 50 percent (237 ± 18 vs. 365 ± 27 pmol/mg protein/90s, p < 0.05) but caused no change in synaptosomes. The effect by PDBu was concentration and time-dependent and was inhibited completely by the PKC inhibitor calphostin C. Inhibition of serine-threonine phosphoprotein phosphatases with okadaic acid produced similar effects which were not additive with PDBu. Together, these results demonstrate that glial EAAT can be regulated by multiple phosphorylation processes.
Keywords:Glia  glutamate transporters  okadaic acid  phorbol-12  13-dibutyrate  phosphoprotein phosphatases  protein kinase C
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