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1.
Calaza  K. C.  de Mello  F. G.  Gardino  P. F. 《Brain Cell Biology》2001,30(3):181-193
Glutamate and GABA are the major excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters in the CNS, including the retina. In the chick retina, GABA is located in horizontal and amacrine cells and in some cells in the ganglion cell layer. It has been shown that glutamate and its agonists, NMDA, kainate, and aspartate, promote the release of GABA from isolated retina and from cultured retinal cells. Dopamine, the major catecholamine in the retina, inhibits the induction of GABA release by NMDA. Two to seven-day-old intact chicken retinas were stimulated with different glutamatergic agonists and the GABA remaining in the tissue was detected by immunohistochemical procedures. The exposure of retinas to 100 μ M NMDA for 30 minutes resulted in 50% reduction in the number of GABA-immunoreactive amacrine cells. Aspartate (100 μ M) treatment also resulted in 60% decrease in the number of GABA-immunoreactive amacrine cells. The number of GABA-immunoreactive horizontal cells was not affected by either NMDA or aspartate. In addition, dopamine reversed by 50% the reduction of the number of GABA-immunoreactive amacrine cells exposed to NMDA or aspartate. Kainate stimulation promoted a 50% reduction in the number of both GABA-immunoreactive amacrine and horizontal cells. Dopamine did not interfere with the kainate effect. While in control and in non-stimulated retinas a continuous and homogeneous immunolabeling was observed throughout the inner plexiform layer, retinas exposed to NMDA, kainate and aspartate displayed only a faint punctate labeling in the inner plexiform layer. It is concluded that, under our experimental conditions, both NMDA and aspartate induce the release of GABA exclusively from amacrine cells, and that the release is modulated by dopamine. On the other hand, kainate stimulates GABA release from both amacrine and horizontal cells with no interference of dopamine.  相似文献   

2.
The hybridoma technology of Kohler and Milstein (1975) was utilized to produce monoclonal antibodies against the enkephalins. Two hybridomas, AD4 and DB4, produced monoclonal antibodies of the IgG type 1 class against Leu5-enkephalin that were highly specific for Leu5- and Met5-enkephalin. AD4 exhibited almost equal reactivity with either Leu5- or Met5-enkephalin, whereas DB4 exhibited only a 20% cross-reactivity with Met5-enkephalin. The IC50 of these monoclonal antibodies were approximately two orders of magnitude greater than the IC50 a polyclonal antiserum against enkephalins (A206; Miller et al 1978) used routinely in many immunochemical and immunocytochemical studies.The monoclonal antibodies, AD4 and DB4, exhibited specific sequence and size requirements for binding enkephalin-related peptides. The amino acid sequence Gly-Gly-Phe-Leu or Gly-Gly-Phe-Met was essential for recognition by AD4 and DB4. However, Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe which lacks Leu or Met in the fifth position did not react with our monoclonal antibodies. Moreover, enkephalin-related peptides in which the enkephalin sequence was situated at the amino terminus and which contained six or more amino acids did not react significantly with AD4 or DB4. In particular, unlike the polyclonal antiserum A206, our monoclonal antibodies do not react with dynorphins 1–6 or 1–13. However, when the monoclonal antibody (AD4) was used to localize immunohistochemically the population of enkephalinergic amacrine cells in the chicken retina, it provided a staining pattern quite comparable to that observed in previous studies (Watt et al., 1983) using the polyclonal enkephalin antiserum A206. This finding therefore demonstrates that the immunoreactive products visualized in the enkephalin-immunoreactive amacrine cells of the chicken retina with the polyclonal antiserum correspond to authentic enkephalin or peptides very closely related to the enkephalins.  相似文献   

3.
Glutamate and GABA are the major excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters in the CNS. In the retina, it has been shown that glutamate and aspartate and their agonists kainate and NMDA promote the release of GABA. In the chick retina, at embryonic day 14 (E14), glutamate and kainate were able to induce the release of GABA from amacrine and horizontal cells as detected by GABA-immunoreactivity. NMDA also induced GABA release restricted to amacrine cell population and its projections to the inner plexiform layer (E14 and E18). Although aspartate reduced GABA immunoreactivity, specifically in amacrine cells of E18 retinas, it was not efficient to promote GABA release from retinas at E14. As observed in differentiated retinas, dopamine inhibited the GABA release promoted by NMDA and aspartate but not by kainate. Our data show that different retinal sites respond to distinct EAAs via different receptor systems.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Neurons accumulating (3H)-glycine and (3H) GABA were demonstrated with the use of autoradiography. Both were accumulated by different types of amacrine cells, similar those of goldfish. (3H)-GABA was also accumulated by horizontal cells, again similar to the goldfish. These results and physiological studies from other laboratories suggest that GABA and glycine are neurotransmitter candidates in amacrine cells of the mudpuppy.Immunoreactive neuropeptide Y (NPY), glucagon, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), somatostatin, substance P, and neurotensin were found in different types of stratified amacrine cells. Weakly immunoreactive enkephalin and bombesin processes were also seen in the inner plexiform layer. Gastrin-immunoreactive neurons were not detectable.Endogenous 5-hydroxytryptamine was visualized immunohistochemically in a population of diffuse amacrine cells and some cells in the ganglion cell layer. This suggests that 5-hydroxytryptamine may be a neurotransmitter in the retina of the mudpuppy.  相似文献   

5.
Discrete layers from frozen dried sections of Rhesus monkey retina were analyzed for each of four amino acids. Peak levels of glycine were found near the border of the inner nuclear and inner reticular layers, and were high throughout these two layers. The levels were less than 50% of the peak in the adjacent ganglion cells and outer reticular layers and fell to very low levels elsewhere. GABA was much more sharply restricted to the inner reticular layer and fell off on both sides to levels of 10% or less of the peak in the fiber and photoreceptor cell layers. Glutamate and aspartate were highest in the ganglion cell layer. On a lipid-free dry weight basis the peak aspartate level was about twice that of brain. Moderately high levels of both aspartate and glutamate were found in the inner reticular and fiber layers. Elsewhere the levels ranged from 20 to 50% of the peak, and both amino acids were relatively low in optic nerve. The amino acid distributions are compatible with a transmitter function for GABA in amacrine cells and for glycine in horizontal and amacrine cells. Glutamate and aspartate may be especially high in Müller fibers, ganglion cells or both.  相似文献   

6.
To examine the role of delta-opioid receptors in the modulation of striatal acetylcholine (ACh) release, the action of D-Pen2,L-Pen5-enkephalin, a selective delta-opioid receptor agonist, was tested on [3H]ACh release from slices of the rat caudate-putamen. Slices, incubated with [3H]choline, were superfused with a physiological buffer and stimulated twice by exposure to a high potassium (K+) concentration. In the absence of a cholinesterase inhibitor, 1 microM D-Pen2,L-Pen5-enkephalin produced a 46 and 35% decrease in the release of [3H]ACh evoked by 15 and 25 mM K+, respectively. The depressant action of the enkephalin analogue was concentration dependent, with a maximal effect on K+-evoked [3H]ACh release occurring at 1.0 microM, and was completely blocked in the presence of the delta-opioid receptor selective antagonist, ICI 174864 (1 microM). In the presence of the cholinesterase inhibitors physostigmine (10 microM) and neostigmine (10 microM), or the muscarinic receptor agonist oxotremorine (10 microM), D-Pen2,L-Pen5-enkephalin did not depress the K+-evoked release of [3H]ACh. Atropine (1 microM) blocked the inhibitory effect of physostigmine on the depressant action of D-Pen2,L-Pen5-enkephalin. The results of this study indicate that delta-opioid receptor activation is associated with an inhibition of striatal ACh release, but this opioid-cholinergic interaction is not apparent under conditions of presynaptic muscarinic receptor activation.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The localization of -aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurons in the goldfish and the rabbit retina has been studied by immunocytochemical localization of the GABA-synthesizing enzyme L-glutamate decarboxylase (GAD, L-glutamate 1-carboxy-lase, EC 4.1.1.15) and by [3H] GABA uptake autoradiography. In the goldfish retina, GAD is localized in some horizontal cells (H1 type), a few amacrine cells and sublamina b of the inner plexiform layer. Results from immunocytochemical studies of GAD-containing neurons and autoradiographic studies of GABA uptake reveals a marked similarity in the labeling pattern suggesting that in goldfish retina, the neurons which possess a high-affinity system for GABA uptake also contain significant levels of GAD. In the rabbit retina, when Triton X-100 was included in immunocytochemical incubations with a modified protein A-peroxidase-antiperoxidase method, reaction product was found in four broad, evenly spaced laminae within the inner plexiform layer. In the absence of the detergent, these laminae were seen to be composed of small, punctate deposits. When colchicine was injected intravitreally before glutamate decarboxylase staining, cell bodies with the characteristic shape and location of amacrine cells were found to be immunochemically labeled. Electron microscopic examination showed that these processes were presynaptic to ganglion cell dendrites (infrequently), amacrine cell telodendrons, and bipolar cell terminals. Often, bipolar cell terminals were found which were densely innervated by several GAD-positive processes. No definite synapses were observed in which a GAD-positive process represented the postsynaptic element. In autoradiographic studies by intravitreal injection of [3H] GABA a diffuse labeling of the inner plexiform layer and a dense labeling of certain amacrine cell bodies in the inner nuclear layer was observed. Both immunocytochemical and autoradiographic results support the notion that certain, if not all, amacrine cells use GABA as their neurotransmitter.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The localisation of GABA immunoreactive neurones in retinas of a variety of animals was examined. Immunoreactivity was associated with specific populations of amacrine neurones in all species examined, viz. rat, rabbit, goldfish, frog, pigeon and guinea-pig. All species, with the exception of the frog, possessed immunoreactive perikarya in their retinal ganglion cell layers. These perikarya are probably displaced amacrine cells because GABA immunoreactivity was absent from the optic nerves and destruction of the rat optic nerve did not result in degeneration of these cells. GABA immunoreactivity was also associated with the outer plexiform layers of all the retinas studied; these processes are derived from GABA-positive horizontal cells in rat, rabbit, frog, pigeon and goldfish retinas, from bipolar-like cells in the frog, and probably from interplexiform cells in the guinea-pig retina.The development of GABA-positive neurones in the rabbit retina was also analysed. Immunoreactivity was clearly associated with subpopulations of amacrine and horizontal cells on the second postnatal day. The immunoreactivity at this stage is strong, and fairly well developed processes are apparent. The intensity of the immunoreactivity increases with development in the case of the amacrine cells. The immunoreactive neurones appear fully developed at about the 8th postnatal day, although the immunoreactivity in the inner plexiform layer becomes more dispersed as development proceeds. The immunoreactive horizontal cells become less apparent as development proceeds, but they can still be seen in the adult retina.The GABA immunoreactive cells in rabbit retinas can be maintained in culture. Cultures of retinal cells derived from 2-day-old animals can be maintained for up to 20 days and show the presence of GABA-positive cells at all stages. In one-day-old cultures the GABA immunoreactive cells lacked processes but within three days had clearly defined processes. After maintenance for 10 days a meshwork of GABA-positive fibres could also be seen in the cultures.  相似文献   

9.
1. Gamma-aminobutryic acid (GABA), a major inhibitory transmitter of the vertebrate retina, is synthesized from glutamate by L-glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) and mediates neuronal inhibition at GABAA receptors. GAD consists of two distinct molecular forms, GAD65 and GAD67, which have similar distribution patterns in the nervous system (Feldblum et al., 1990; Erlander and Tobin, 1991). GABAA receptors are composed of several distinct polypeptide subunits, of which the GABAA alpha 1 variant has a particularly extensive and widespread distribution in the nervous system. The aim of this study was to determine the cellular localization patterns of GAD and GABAA alpha 1 receptor mRNAs to define GABA- and GABAA receptor-synthesizing neurons in the rat retina. 2. GAD and GABAA alpha 1 mRNAs were localized in retinal neurons by in situ hybridization histochemistry with 35S-labeled antisense RNA probes complementary to GAD67 and GABAA alpha 1 mRNAs. 3. The majority of neurons expressing GAD67 mRNA is located in the proximal inner nuclear layer (INL) and ganglion cell layer (GCL). Occasional GAD67 mRNA-containing neurons are present in the inner plexiform layer. Labeled neurons are not found in the distal INL or in the outer nuclear layer (ONL). 4. GABAA alpha 1 mRNA is expressed by neurons distributed to all regions of the INL. Some discretely labeled cells are present in the GCL. Labeled cells are not observed in the ONL. 5. The distribution of GAD67 mRNA demonstrates that numerous amacrine cells (conventional, interstitial, and displaced) and perhaps interplexiform cells synthesize GABA. These cells are likely to employ GABA as a neurotransmitter. 6. The distribution of GABAA alpha 1 mRNA indicates that bipolar, amacrine, and perhaps ganglion cells express GABAA receptors having an alpha 1 polypeptide subunit, suggesting that GABA acts directly upon these cells.  相似文献   

10.
Marc  Robert E.  Cameron  David 《Brain Cell Biology》2001,30(7):593-654
The rasborine cyprinid Danio rerio (the zebrafish) has become a popular model of retinal function and development. Its value depends, in part, on validation of homologies with retinal cell populations of cyprinine cyprinids. This atlas provides raw and interpreted molecular phenotype data derived from computationally classified sets of small molecule signals from different cell types in the zebrafish retina: L-alanine, L-aspartate, L-glutamine, L-glutamate, glutathione, glycine, taurine and γ-aminobutyrate. This basis set yields an 8-dimensional signature for every retinal cell and formally establishes molecular signature homologies with retinal neurons, glia, epithelia and endothelia of other cyprinids. Zebrafish photoreceptor classes have been characterized previously: we now show their metabolic profiles to be identical to those of the corresponding photoreceptors in goldfish. The inner nuclear layer is partitioned into precise horizontal, bipolar and amacrine cell layers. The horizontal cell layer contains at least three and perhaps all four known classes of cyprinine horizontal cells. Homologues of cyprinid glutamatergic ON-center and OFF-center mixed rod-cone bipolar cells are present and it appears likely that all five classes are present in zebrafish. The cone bipolar cells defy simple analysis but comprise the largest fraction of bipolar cells, as in all cyprinids. Signature analysis reveals six molecular phenotypes in the bipolar cell cohort: most are superclasses. The amacrine cell layer is composed of ≈64% GABA+ and 35% glycine+ amacrine cells, with the remainder being sparse dopaminergic interplexiform cells and other rare unidentified neurons. These different amacrine cell types are completely distinct in the dark adapted retina, but light adapted retinas display weak leakage of GABA signals into many glycinergic amacrine cells, suggesting widespread heterocellular coupling. The composition of the zebrafish ganglion cell layer is metabolically indistinguishable from that in other cyprinids, and the signatures of glial and non-neuronal cells display strong homologies with those in mammals. As in most vertebrates, zebrafish Müller cells possess a high glutamine, low glutamate signature and contain the dominant pool of glutathione in the neural retina. The retinal pigmented epithelium shows a general mammalian signature but also has exceptional glutathione content (5–10 mM), perhaps required by the unusually high oxygen tensions of teleost retinas. The optic nerve and the marginal zone of the retina reveal characteristic metabolic specializations. The marginal zone is strongly laminated and its nascent neurons display their characteristic signatures before taking their place in the retina proper.  相似文献   

11.
1. The uptake of [3H] adenosine into specific populations of cells in the inner retina has been demonstrated. In mammalian retina, the exogenous adenosine that is transported into cells is phosphorylated, thereby maintaining a gradient for transport of the purine into the cell. 2. Endogenous stores of adenosine have been demonstrated by localization of cells that are labeled for adenosine-like immunoreactivity. In the rabbit retina, certain of these cells, the displaced cholinergic, GABAergic amacrine cells, are also labeled for adenosine. 3. Purines are tonically released from dark-adapted rabbit retinas and cultured embryonic chick retinal neurons. Release is significantly increased with K+ and neurotransmitters. The evoked release consists of adenosine, ATP, and purine metabolites, and while a portion of this release is Ca2+ dependent, one other component may occur via the bidirectional purine nucleoside transporter. 4. Differential distributions of certain enzymes involved in purine metabolism have also been localized to the inner retina. 5. Heterogeneous distributions of the two subtypes of adenosine receptors, A1 and A2, have been demonstrated in the mammalian retina. Coupling of receptors to adenylate cyclase has also been demonstrated. 6. Adenosine A1 receptor agonists significantly inhibit the K(+)-stimulated release of [3H]-acetylcholine from the rabbit retina, suggesting that endogenous adenosine may modulate the light-evoked or tonic release of ACh.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of excitatory amino acids and some analogues on the release of GABA and ACh from amacrine cells were studied. The release of endogenous GABA from the isolated rat retina was measured by HPLC. When animals were pretreated with γ-vinyl-GABA (GVG), glutamate evoked a large efflux of GABA but kainate, quisqualate and (NMDA) were relatively ineffective. The glutamate evoked release of GABA was calcium dependent and was blocked by the antagonist, piperidine-dicarboxylic acid (PDA) indicating that activation of excitatory amino acid receptors was involved in the response. The release of [3H]ACh from the rabbit retina was strikingly increased by homocysteate and this effect was blocked by NMDA. Since NMDA also blocked the light evoked release of [3H]ACh but not the effects of exogenous glutamate or aspartate, it is possible that homocysteate may be a bipolar cell transmitter released onto cholinergic amacrine cells.  相似文献   

13.
Changes in retinal neuronal populations in the DBA/2J mouse   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
DBA/2J (D2) mice develop a form of progressive pigmentary glaucoma with increasing age. We have compared retinal cell populations of D2 mice with those in control C57BL/6J mice to provide information on retinal histopathology in the D2 mouse. The D2 mouse retina is characterized by a reduction in retinal thickness caused mainly by a thinning of the inner retinal layers. Immunocytochemical staining for specific inner retinal neuronal markers, viz., calbindin for horizontal cells; protein kinase C (PKC) and recoverin for bipolar cells, glycine, -aminobutyric acid (GABA), choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) for amacrine cells, and osteopontin (OPN) for ganglion cells, was performed to detect preferentially affected neurons in the D2 mouse retina. Calbindin, PKC, and recoverin immunoreactivities were not significantly altered. Amacrine cells immunoreactive for GABA, ChAT, and OPN were markedly decreased in number, whereas NOS-immunoreactive amacrine cells increased in number. However, no changes were observed in the population of glycine-immunoreactive amacrine cells. These findings indicate a significant loss of retinal ganglion and some amacrine cells, whereas glycinergic amacrine cells, horizontal, and bipolar cells are almost unaffected in the D2 mouse. The reduction in amacrine cells appears to be attributable to a loss of GABAergic and particularly cholinergic amacrine cells. The increase in nitrergic neurons with the consequent increase in NOS and NO may be important in the changes in the retinal organization that lead to glaucomain D2 mice. Thus, the D2 mouse retina represents a useful model for studying the pathogenesis of glaucoma and mechanisms of retinal neuronal death and for evaluating neuroprotection strategies.Jung-Il Moon and In-Beom Kim contributed equally to this work.This work was supported by a Korea Research Foundation Grant (FP 0005) and by BK 21 in Korea.  相似文献   

14.
In the mouse retina, dopaminergic amacrine (DA) cells synthesize both dopamine and GABA. Both transmitters are released extrasynaptically and act on neighbouring and distant retinal neurons by volume transmission. In simultaneous recordings of dopamine and GABA release from isolated perikarya of DA cells, a proportion of the events of dopamine and GABA exocytosis were simultaneous, suggesting co-release. In addition, DA cells establish GABAergic synapses onto AII amacrine cells, the neurons that transfer rod bipolar signals to cone bipolars. GABAA but not dopamine receptors are clustered in the postsynaptic membrane. Therefore, dopamine, irrespective of its site of release—synaptic or extrasynaptic—exclusively acts by volume transmission. Dopamine is released upon illumination and sets the gain of retinal neurons for vision in bright light. The GABA released at DA cells'' synapses probably prevents signals from the saturated rods from entering the cone pathway when the dark-adapted retina is exposed to bright illumination. The GABA released extrasynaptically by DA and other amacrine cells may set a ‘GABAergic tone’ in the inner plexiform layer and thus counteract the effects of a spillover of glutamate released at the bipolar cell synapses of adjacent OFF and ON strata, thus preserving segregation of signals between ON and OFF pathways.  相似文献   

15.
γ-AMINOBUTYRIC acid (GABA) is present in all layers of vertebrate retinae1–3: in the rabbit retina it seems to be most concentrated in the ganglion cell layers2 while in the frog it is concentrated primarily in cell layers which are rich in amacrine cells1. Recent autoradiographic studies of the distribution of 3H-GABA in rat brain slices after incubation in vitro suggest that the labelled amino-acid is selectively concentrated by certain neural elements4,5. In a study of the distribution of 3H-GABA in rabbit retina after injection of the labelled amino-acid into the eye, Ehinger6 found that radioactivity was accumulated principally in the inner plexiform, inner nuclear and ganglion cell and nerve fibre layers. Labelling was also concentrated in some cells occupying the same position as amacrine cells and in some nerve cells of the ganglion cell layer.  相似文献   

16.
The synaptic connectivity between rod bipolar cells and GABAergic neurons in the inner plexiform layer (IPL) of the rat retina was studied using two immunocytochemical markers. Rod bipolar cells were stained with an antibody specific for protein kinase C (PKC, α isoenzyme), and GABAergic neurons were stained with an antiserum specific for glutamic-acid decarboxylase (GAD). Some amacrine cells were also labeled with the anti-PKC antiserum. All PKC-labeled amacrine cells examined showed GABA immunoreactivity, indicating that PKC-labeled amacrine cells constitute a subpopulation of GABAergic amacrine cells in the rat retina. A total of 150 ribbon synapses established by rod bipolar cells were observed in the IPL. One member of the postsynaptic dyads was always an unlabeled AII amacrine cell process, and the other belonged to an amacrine-cell process showing GAD immunoreactivity. The majority (n=92) (61.3%) of these processes made reciprocal synapses back to the axon terminals of rod bipolar cells. In addition, 78 conventional synapses onto rod bipolar axons were observed, and among them 52 (66.7%) were GAD-immunoreactive. Thus GABA provides the major inhibitory input to rod bipolar cells.  相似文献   

17.
The resting release of acetylcholine by a retinal neuron   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The cholinergic amacrine cells of the rabbit retina secrete acetylcholine by two mechanisms. One is activated by stimulation of the retina by light or depolarization of the amacrine cells by K+ ions. It requires the presence of extracellular Ca2+. The second is independent of extracellular Ca2+ and is unaffected by large depolarizations of the cells. It bears some similarity to the acetylcholine 'leakage' described at the neuromuscular junction. Although the Ca2+-independent mechanism accounts for about two thirds of the total acetylcholine release in the dark, the amount of acetylcholine released in this way is small compared with the release of acetylcholine triggered by stimulation of the retina with light. Its biological significance is unclear.  相似文献   

18.
The release of preaccumulated gamma-amino[3H]butyric acid ([3H]GABA) from putative GABAergic amacrine cells was studied in neuronal monolayer cultures made from embryonic chick retina. Release was specifically stimulated by excitatory amino acid agonists. N-Methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA; EC50, 19.1 +/- 5.0 microM), kainic acid (EC50, 15.6 +/- 2.3 microM), and the presumptive endogenous ligand glutamate (EC50, 3.6 +/- 0.5 microM) showed the same efficacy. Quisqualic acid, although the most potent agonist (EC50, 0.56 +/- 0.12 microM), was only half as efficacious. The time course of [3H]GABA release and autoradiographic visualization of responsive GABA-accumulating cells suggest that approximately 50% of the [3H]GABA-accumulating cells possess no or very low responsiveness to quisqualic acid. Depolarization (56 mM KCl)-induced release was fivefold lower than the maximal effect elicited by excitatory amino acids. Release of [3H]GABA and of endogenous GABA was entirely independent of extracellular Ca2+ but was completely abolished after replacement of Na+ by choline or Li+. The effects of NMDA and low concentrations of glutamate (up to 10 microM) were blocked by 2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid, by MK 801, and (in a voltage-dependent manner) by Mg2+. The reduction of NMDA responses by kynurenic acid was reversed by D-serine, and quisqualic acid competitively inhibited kainic acid-evoked release. Our results show that the cultured [3H]GABA-accumulating neurons, which probably represent the in vitro counterparts of GABAergic amacrine cells, express at least two types of excitatory amino acid receptors (of the NMDA and non-NMDA type), both of which can mediate a Ca2(+)-independent but Na2(+)-dependent release of GABA.  相似文献   

19.
Intracellular recordings were made from amacrine cells in the isolated, superfused carp retina, and the effects of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) on sustained and transient ON signals of these cells were studied. Exogenous GABA application partially suppressed the sustained response of ON amacrine cells, which could be completely reversed by picrotoxin (PTX), a chloride channel blocker, and by bicuculline (BCC), a specific GABAA receptor antagonist. On the other hand, suppression by GABA of the ON response which was predominantly driven by rod signals in a certain portion of transient ON-OFF amacrine cells was completely blocked by PTX, but not by BCC, indicating that GABAC recepton may be involved in the effect. These results suggest that GABAA, and GABAC receptors may be respectively involved in mediating the transmission of sustained and transient signals in the carp inner retina.  相似文献   

20.
We used a policlonal antiserum against GABA and demonstated GABA-immunoreactivity (GABA-IR) in several populations of amacrine cells in the inner nuclear layer (INL), and other cells in the inner plexiform layer (IPL) of the central and peripheral retina of the chameleon. Horizontal cells do not contain GABA-IR and the chameleon retina is therefore an exception among non-mammals. GABA-IR was not seen in cell bodies in the position of photoreceptor, bipolar and interplexiform cells suggesting that GABA is not involved in synaptic transmission in the outer plexiform layer of chameleon retina.  相似文献   

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