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1.
2.
In an attempt to estimate the pool size of glutamate and other amino acids in γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-containing neurons, we determined the content of 12 amino acids in the bilateral substantia nigra of rats, in which unilateral striatal lesions had been made with kainic acid two weeks earlier. The assay of the amino acids (including glutamate, aspartate, glutamine, asparagine, glycine, and GABA) and ethanolamine was based on HPLC and fluorimetric detection after precolumn derivatization with o-phthaldialdehyde. The levels of all measured amino acids (except those of tyrosine, threonine, and ethanolamine) were decreased in the affected striatum, but only the levels of aspartate, taurine, and GABA were lowered in the ipsilateral substantia nigra. These results indicate that the pool size of the various amino acids in the striatonigral GABAergic pathway is small compared to their nigral content, and that in addition to GABA a significant fraction of aspartate and taurine may be confined to nerve terminals in the substantia nigra.  相似文献   

3.
Glutamate, the main excitatory neurotransmitter in the mammalian central nervous system (CNS), plays important role in brain physiological and pathological events. Quinolinic acid (QA) is a glutamatergic agent that induces seizures and is involved in the etiology of epilepsy. Guanine-based purines (GBPs) (guanosine and GMP) have been shown to exert neuroprotective effects against glutamatergic excitotoxic events. In this study, the influence of QA and GBPs on synaptosomal glutamate release and uptake in rats was investigated. We had previously demonstrated that QA “in vitro” stimulates synaptosomal L-[3H]glutamate release. In this work, we show that i.c.v. QA administration induced seizures in rats and was able to stimulate synaptosomal L-[3H]glutamate release. This in vivo neurochemical effect was prevented by i.p. guanosine only when this nucleoside prevented QA-induced seizures. I.c.v. QA did not affect synaptosomal L-[3H]glutamate uptake. These data provided new evidence on the role of QA and GBPs on glutamatergic system in rat brain.  相似文献   

4.
The turnover rate of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the rat striatum was estimated by measuring its accumulation after inhibition of GABA-transaminase (GABA-T) with gabaculine. Intrastriatal injections of 100 micrograms gabaculine induced a rapid and complete inhibition of GABA-T. GABA accumulation was linear with time for at least 60 min (estimated turnover rate = 25 nmol/mg protein/h). The accumulation of GABA after gabaculine administration in animals that had been treated with kainic acid (5 nmol intrastriatally, 7 days) was only 40% of the control value, indicating that a major fraction of the net increase in GABA content induced by gabaculine originates in kainic acid-sensitive neurons. Intrastriatal injection of a mixture of kainic acid (5 nmol) and gabaculine caused a net increase in striatal GABA content significantly greater than that observed in controls, suggesting that neuronal death induced by kainic acid is preceded by a period of increased neuronal activity. Glutamic acid, the putative neurotransmitter for the excitatory corticostriatal pathway, also produced a significant increase in striatal GABA accumulation when injected together with gabaculine. This effect was blocked by the administration of the glutamate receptor antagonist glutamic acid diethyl ester. The interactions between GABAergic neurons and other neurotransmitters present in the striatum were also analyzed.  相似文献   

5.
The influence of desmethylimipramine (DMI) on the release of endogenous gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and some other amino acids from the rat thalamus was studied with a push-pull perfusion technique. Following HPLC the amino acids were fluorimetrically estimated. Added to the perfusion medium at a concentration of 10 mumol L-1, DMI caused a 5- to 10-fold increase in the release of GABA. Similar effects were found with imipramine, trimeprimine, haloperidol, and propranolol. The elevation of GABA release induced by DMI was Ca dependent. The release of aspartate and glutamate was also increased by DMI, but in contrast to K ions, DMI did not reduce the thalamic output of glutamine.  相似文献   

6.
By means of the push-pull cannula method, the outflow of endogenous amino acids was studied in the striatum of halothane-anesthetized rats. Addition of K+ ions (30 mM for 4 min) to the superfusion fluid increased the release of aspartate (+116%), glutamate (+217%), taurine (+109%), and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) (+429%) whereas a prolonged decrease in the outflow of glutamine (-28%) and a delayed reduction in the efflux of tyrosine (-25%) were observed. In the absence of Ca2+, the K+-induced release of aspartate, glutamate, and GABA was blocked whereas the K+-induced release of taurine was still present. Under these conditions, the decrease in glutamine efflux was reduced and that of tyrosine was abolished. Local application of tetrodotoxin (5 microM) decreased only the outflow of glutamate (-25%). One week following lesion of the ipsilateral sensorimotor cortex the spontaneous outflow of glutamine and of tyrosine was enhanced. Despite the lack of change in their spontaneous outflow, the K+-evoked release of aspartate and glutamate was less pronounced in lesioned than in control animals, whereas the K+-evoked changes in GABA and glutamine efflux were not modified. Our data indicate that the push-pull cannula method is a reliable approach for the study of the in vivo release of endogenous amino acids. In addition, they provide further evidence for a role for glutamate and aspartate as neurotransmitters of corticostriatal neurons.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of the excitotoxin kainic acid on glutamate and glutamine metabolism was studied in cerebellar slices incubated with D-[2-14C]glucose, [U-14C]gamma-aminobutyric acid, [3H]acetate, [U-14C]glutamate, and [U-14C]glutamine as precursors. Kainic acid (1 mM) strongly inhibited the labeling of glutamine relative to that of glutamate from all precursors except [2-14C]glucose and [U-14C]glutamine. Kainic acid did not inhibit glutamine synthetase directly. The data indicate that in the cerebellum kainic acid inhibits the synthesis of glutamine from the small pool of glutamate that is thought to be associated with glial cells. Kainic acid also markedly stimulated the efflux of glutamate from cerebellar slices and this release was not sensitive to tetrodotoxin. Kainic acid stimulated efflux of both glucose- and acetate-labeled glutamate. In contrast, veratridine released glucose-labeled glutamate preferentially via a tetrodotoxin-sensitive mechanism. Kainic acid did not release [U-14C]glutamate from synaptosomal fractions. These results suggest that the bulk of the glutamate released from cerebellar slices by kainic acid comes from nonsynaptic pools.  相似文献   

8.
Kainate inhibits the exchange of D-aspartate into guinea-pig cerebrocortical synaptosomes. Kainate inhibits the Ca2+-independent efflux of endogenous glutamate in the presence of a trapping system for the released amino acid but potentiates a Ca2+-independent net efflux of endogenous and labelled glutamate and aspartate in the absence of the trap. Dihydrokainate has a similar effect. No discrepancy is seen between the release of endogenous and exogenously accumulated amino acid. These results are consistent with the presence of a slow leak of glutamate or aspartate from the cytoplasm independent of the kainate-sensitive Na+-cotransport pathway. In the presence of the trap, glutamate effluxes by both pathways, whereas in the absence of the trap, the Na+-cotransport pathway opposes the leak. Neither in the presence or absence of the glutamate trap does kainate induce, inhibit, or otherwise affect the Ca2+-dependent release of endogenous glutamate. The results enable many of the apparent complexities in the presynaptic actions of kainate to be resolved.  相似文献   

9.
The excitatory action of kainic and glutamic acids in chick whole retina was demonstrated as an immediate stimulation of the release of labeled gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glycine in a superfusion system. This stimulatory effect was 3-10 times greater than that produced by a depolarizing K+ concentration; in addition, it was independent of Ca2+ in the medium, but notably inhibited when Na+ was omitted from the medium. Under identical experimental conditions, neither kainic nor glutamic acid had any effect on the release of labeled dopamine or alpha-aminoisobutyric acid, thus indicating that their effect is not unspecific or due to cell damage. Similar although less marked stimulation of labeled GABA and glycine release by kainic acid was obtained in subcellular retinal fractions, particularly in fraction P1, which contained photoreceptor terminals and outer segments. This stimulation was also Ca2+ independent and greatly reduced when Na+ was omitted from the medium. It is suggested that the stimulation of GABA release by kainic and glutamic acids is probably due to a Na+-dependent, carrier-mediated mechanism that responds to the entry of Na+ produced by the interaction of glutamic and kainic acids with retinal membranes. In cortical or striatal slices from mouse brain, these acids had a negligible stimulatory effect on GABA and dopamine release.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: Evidence from in vitro studies suggests that excitotoxic neuronal degeneration can occur by either an acute or delayed mechanism. Studies of the acute mechanism in isolated chick embryo retina using histological methods indicate that this process is rapidly triggered by activation of glutamate receptors of either the N-methyl-d -aspartate (NMDA) or non-NMDA subtypes. The delayed mechanism, studied primarily in cortical and hippocampal cell cultures prepared from embryonic rodent brain, requires activation of NMDA receptors. In these cell culture systems, stimulation of non-NMDA receptors does not rapidly trigger delayed neuronal degeneration, or does so only indirectly, via activation of NMDA receptors secondary to glutamate release. To provide a more valid basis for comparison of these two mechanisms, we have modified the isolated chick embryo retina model to permit studies of delayed as well as acute excitotoxic neurodegeneration. Retinas maintained for 24 h exhibited no morphological or biochemical signs of damage. Retinal damage was assessed by measuring lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) present in the medium at various times after exposure to agonists and normalized to total LDH in each retina. Glutamate exposure (1 mM, 30 min) did not result in LDH release by the end of the exposure period, but LDH was released over the following 24 h. Briefer periods also led to substantial LDH release. Incubation in the presence of NMDA, or the non-NMDA agonists kainate (KA) or α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA), led rapidly to delayed LDH release. NMDA and AMPA were more potent than glutamate, but high concentrations of glutamate led to more LDH release than high concentrations of these agonists. KA was a powerful excitotoxin, providing more LDH release than glutamate, NMDA, or AMPA at every concentration tested. The delayed LDH release induced by glutamate involved activation of both NMDA and non-NMDA receptors, as a combination of receptor-selective antagonists was necessary to provide complete blockade. These results indicate that glutamate, NMDA, AMPA, and KA all cause delayed as well as acute excitotoxic damage in the retina. It is interesting that brief exposure to the non-NMDA receptor agonists, in relatively low concentrations, led to delayed LDH release. This is different than in other in vitro models of delayed excitotoxic neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

11.
Efflux of various amino acids from slices of rat cerebellar hemispheres was determined under resting or depolarizing conditions. It was increased under high K+(50 mM) as compared to low K+ (5 mM) conditions by 1258 pmol/mg protein for aspartate, 478 for gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), 44,693 for glutamate, and 615 for glycine. These were significantly higher than the corresponding values obtained under low-Ca2+ (0.1 mM), high-Mg2+ (12 mM) conditions, whereas for 11 other amino acids the K+-induced efflux was similar under normal and low-Ca2+ concentrations. The K+-induced efflux of exogenously accumulated L-[3H]aspartate, D-[3H]aspartate, and L-[3H]glutamate was higher by factors of 2, 5.8, and 6.3, respectively, under normal Ca2+ conditions, as compared with low-Ca2+, high-Mg2+ conditions. After climbing fibre degeneration induced by destruction of the inferior olive with 3-acetylpyridine, release of endogenous aspartate and exogenous L-[3H]glutamate and D-[3H]aspartate was significantly reduced, by 26%, 38%, and 27%, respectively. These results support the hypothesis that climbing fibres may use aspartate or a related compound as a neurotransmitter. In rat cerebellar tissue, L-[3H]glutamate and L-[3H]aspartate differ in several aspects: (1) L-[3H]glutamate uptake was 4 times higher than that of L-[3H]aspartate; (2) fractional rate constant of K+- evoked release of L-[3H]aspartate was 7% X 2.5 min-1, and of L-[3H]glutamate 36% X 2.5 min-1; and (3) specific activity of L-[3H]glutamate in the eluate collected during K+ stimulation was 3.5 times the value in the tissue, whereas for L-[3H]aspartate, specific activities in the eluate and tissue were similar.  相似文献   

12.
The in vivo effects of kainate (1 mM) on fluxes of 45Ca2+, and endogenous amino acids, were examined in the rat striatum using the brain microdialysis technique. Kainate evoked a rapid decrease in dialysate 45Ca2+, and an increase in the concentration of amino acids in dialysates in Ca2+-free dialysates. Taurine was elevated six- to 10-fold, glutamate two- to threefold, and aspartate 1.5- to twofold. There was also a delayed increase in phosphoethanolamine, whereas nonneuroactive amino acids were increased only slightly. The kainic acid-evoked reduction in dialysate 45Ca2+ activity was attenuated in striata lesioned previously with kainate, suggesting the involvement of intrinsic striatal neurons in this response. The increase in taurine concentration induced by kainate was slightly smaller under these conditions. Decortication did not affect the kainate-evoked alterations in either dialysate 45Ca2+ or amino acids. These data suggest that kainate does not release acidic amino acids from their transmitter pools located in corticostriatal terminals.  相似文献   

13.
Endogenous amino acid release was measured in developing cerebellar neuronal cells in primary culture. In the presence of 25 mM K+ added to the culture medium, cerebellar cells survived more than 3 weeks and showed a high level of differentiation. These cultures are highly enriched in neurons, and electron-microscopic observation of these cells after 12 days in vitro (DIV) confirmed the presence of a very large proportion of cells with the morphological characteristics of granule cells, making synapses containing many synaptic vesicles. Synaptogenesis was also confirmed by immunostaining the cells with antisera against synapsin I and synaptophysin, two proteins associated with synaptic vesicles. From these cultures, endogenous glutamate release stimulated by 56 mM K+ was already detected after only a few days in culture, the maximal release value (1,579% increase over basal release) being reached after 10 DIV. In addition to that of glutamate, the release of aspartate, asparagine, alanine, and, particularly, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) was stimulated by 56 mM K+ after 14 DIV, but to a lesser extent. No increase in serine, glutamine, taurine, or tyrosine release was observed during K+ depolarization. The effect of K+ on amino acid release was strictly Ca2+-dependent. Stimulation of the cells with veratridine resulted in a qualitatively similar effect on endogenous amino acid release. In the absence of Ca2+, 30% of the veratridine effect persisted. The Ca2+-dependent release was quantitatively similar after stimulation by veratridine and K+. Treatment of cerebellar cells with tetanus toxin (5 micrograms/ml) for 24 h resulted in a total inhibition of the Ca2+-dependent component of the glutamate release evoked by K+ or veratridine. It is concluded that glutamate is the main amino acid neurotransmitter of cerebellar cells developed in primary culture under the present conditions and that glutamate is probably mainly released through the exocytosis of synaptic vesicles.  相似文献   

14.
Using cerebellar, neuron-enriched primary cultures, we have studied the glutamate receptor subtypes coupled to neurotransmitter amino acid release. Acute exposure of the cultures to micromolar concentrations of kainate and quisqualate stimulated D-[3H]aspartate release, whereas N-methyl-D-aspartate, as well as dihydrokainic acid, were ineffective. The effect of kainic acid was concentration dependent in the concentration range of 20-100 microM. Quisqualic acid was effective at lower concentrations, with maximal releasing activity at about 50 microM. Kainate and dihydrokainate (20-100 microM) inhibited the initial rate of D-[3H]aspartate uptake into cultured granule cells, whereas quisqualate and N-methyl-DL-aspartate were ineffective. D-[3H]Aspartate uptake into confluent cerebellar astrocyte cultures was not affected by kainic acid. The stimulatory effect of kainic acid on D-[3H]aspartate release was Na+ independent, and partly Ca2+ dependent; the effect of quisqualate was Na+ and Ca2+ independent. Kynurenic acid (50-200 microM) and, to a lesser extent, 2,3-cis-piperidine dicarboxylic acid (100-200 microM) antagonized the stimulatory effect of kainate but not that of quisqualate. Kainic and quisqualic acid (20-100 microM) also stimulated gamma-[3H]-aminobutyric acid release from cerebellar cultures, and kynurenic acid antagonized the effect of kainate but not that of quisqualate. In conclusion, kainic acid and quisqualic acid appear to activate two different excitatory amino acid receptor subtypes, both coupled to neurotransmitter amino acid release. Moreover, kainate inhibits D-[3H]aspartate neuronal uptake by interfering with the acidic amino acid high-affinity transport system.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract: The effect of anoxia and ischemia on the release of amino acid transmitters from cerebellar slices induced by veratridine or high [K+] was studied. Synaptic specificity was tested by examining the tetradotoxin (TTX)-sensitive and the Ca2+-dependent components of stimulated release. Evoked release of endogenous amino acids was investigated in addition to more detailed studies on the stimulated efflux of preloaded [14C]GABA and d -[3H]aspartate (a metabolically more stable anologue of acidic amino acids).[14C]GABA release evoked by either method of stimulation was unaffected by periods of up to 35 min of anoxia and declined moderately by 45 min. In contrast, induced release of d -[3H]Asp increased markedly during anoxia to a peak at about 25 min, followed by a decline when anoxia was prolonged to 45 min. Evidence was obtained that the increased evoked efflux of d -[3H]Asp from anoxic slices was not due to impaired reuptake of the released amino acid and that it was completely reversible by reoxygenation of the slices. Results of experiments examining the evoked release of endogenous amino acids in anoxia were consistent with those obtained with the exogenous amino acids. Only 4 of the 10 endogenous amino acids studied exhibited TTX-sensitive veratridine-induced release under aerobic conditions (glutamate, aspartate, GABA, and glycine). Anoxia for 25 min did not affect the stimulated efflux of these amino acids with the exception of glutamate, which showed a significant increase. Compared with anoxia, effects of ischemia on synaptic function appeared to be more severe. Veratridine-evoked release of [14C]GABA was already depressed by 10 min and that of d -[3H]Asp showed a modest elevation only at 5 min. Stimulated release of d -Asp and labelled GABA declined progressively after 5 min. These findings were compared with changes in tissue ATP concentrations and histology. The latter studies indicated that in anoxia the earliest alterations are detectable in glia and that nerve terminals were the structures by far the most resistant to anoxic damage. The results thus indicated that evoked release of amino acid transmitters in the cerebellum is compromised only by prolonged anoxia in vitro. In addition, it would appear that the stimulated release of glutamate is selectively accentuated during anoxia. This effect may have a bearing on some hypoxic behavioral changes and, perhaps, also on the well-known selective vulnerability of certain neurons during hypoxia.  相似文献   

16.
An excess release of excitatory amino acids (EAA) is an important factor for postischemic brain damage. In the present communication, we demonstrate that cultured hippocampal cells release EAA after hypoxic-hypoglycemic treatment. The amounts of EAA released from astrocytes were appreciably above those released from neurons. Furthermore, the amount of aspartate released from astrocytes was comparable to that of glutamate, although the endogenous content of aspartate was one-fifth that of glutamate. The endogenous content of aspartate in astrocytes increased even after hypoxic-hypoglycemic treatment. These results suggests that ischemic neuronal death is due, at least in part, to the excitotoxicity of aspartate and glutamate derived from surrounding astrocytes.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: Slices of hippocampal area CA1 were used to test inhibitors of arachidonic acid metabolism for their effects on glutamate/aspartate release from the CA3-derived Schaffer collateral, commissural, and ipsilateral associational terminals. Test compounds [3 µ M nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA) and 1 µ M 3-[3-(4-chlorobenzyl)-3- tert -butylthio-5-isopropylindol-2-yl]-2,2-dimethyl-propanoic acid (MK-886)] that reduced the production and release of 5-lipoxygenase metabolites also selectively reduced the K+-evoked release of aspartate. In contrast, the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin (100 µ M ) selectively enhanced the release of glutamate. At a concentration (100 µ M ) that nonselectively depressed the release of arachidonic acid and its metabolites, NDGA markedly depressed the release of aspartate, glutamate, and GABA. An inhibitor of the 12-lipoxygenase and an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase did not affect the K+-evoked release of any transmitter amino acid. These results suggest that a 5-lipoxygenase product selectively enhances aspartate release and a cyclooxygenase product selectively depresses glutamate release. They are also consistent with previous evidence that arachidonic acid and/or platelet-activating factor enhances the release and depresses the uptake of glutamate and aspartate. The K+-evoked release of excitatory amino acids is much more sensitive to modulation by lipid mediators than is GABA release. Activation of NMDA receptors may enhance the K+-evoked release of glutamate and aspartate from CA1 slices by stimulating the production and release of lipid modulators.  相似文献   

18.
Guinea pig cochleae were perfused with high-potassium solutions to depolarize hair cells artificially and induce the release of afferent neurotransmitter. Sequential injections of artificial perilymph containing 5 mM KCl, then 50 mM KCl, and finally 5 mM KCl were made into the scala tympani. This injection sequence was conducted under either normal divalent-cation conditions (2.0 mM CaCl2, 1.0 mM MgCl2) or calcium-deficient conditions intended to antagonize evoked transmitter release (0.1 mM CaCl2, 20.0 mM MgCl2). The levels of 21 endogenous primary amines in effluent collected from the scala vestibuli were determined by gradient-elution, reverse-phase HPLC using o-phthaldialdehyde-thiol adducts with fluorescence detection. Analyses indicated effluent concentrations of glutamate, taurine, and a coeluting taurine-gamma-aminobutyrate (GABA) fraction (but not GABA alone) increased significantly after exposure to 50 mM KC1 and returned to baseline levels after reintroduction of 5 mM KC1 under normal divalent-cation conditions. Correspondent changes in the release of these constituents were significantly attenuated under calcium-deficient conditions. This was not the case for potassium-induced changes in the release of arginine, aspartate, and isoleucine. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that the receptoneuronal transmitter is glutamate and further suggest a calcium-dependent mechanism involving taurine.  相似文献   

19.
CO2 production from exogenous glucose of cortical, whole hippocampal, and CA3 region hippocampal slices, as well as O2 consumption of whole hippocampal slices, were measured in the presence of different concentrations of kainic acid. A moderate, significant increase of CO2 production was seen only in the CA3 region hippocampal preparation at kainic acid concentrations of 10(-4)-10(-2) M. The O2 consumption, at the expense of endogenous energy stores of whole hippocampal slices, was substantially increased by 10(-3) M kainic acid when the slices were incubated without exogenous glucose. The effect was partly paralleled by the use of high (50 mM) K+ concentration. Some of the possible factors involved in the differential metabolic responses of brain slices to the action of kainic acid are discussed briefly.  相似文献   

20.
gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) synthesis was studied in rat brain synaptosomes by measuring the increase of GABA level in the presence of the GABA-transaminase inhibitor gabaculine. The basal rate of synaptosomal GABA synthesis in glucose-containing medium (25.9 nmol/h/mg of protein) was only 3% of the maximal activity of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD; 804 +/- 83 nmol/h/mg of protein), a result indicating that synaptosomal GAD operates at only a small fraction of its catalytic capacity. Synaptosomal GABA synthesis was stimulated more than threefold by adding 500 microM glutamine. Glutamate also stimulated GABA synthesis, but the effect was smaller (1.5-fold). These results indicate that synaptosomal GAD is not saturated by endogenous levels of its substrate, glutamate, and account for part of the unused catalytic capacity. The greater stimulation of GABA synthesis by glutamine indicates that the GAD-containing compartment is more accessible to extrasynaptosomal glutamine than glutamate. The strong stimulation by glutamine also shows that the rates of uptake of glutamine and its conversion to glutamate can be sufficiently rapid to support GABA synthesis in nerve terminals. Synaptosomes carried out a slow net synthesis of aspartate in glucose-containing medium (7.7 nmol/h/mg of protein). Aspartate synthesis was strongly stimulated by glutamate and glutamine, but in this case the stimulation by glutamate was greater. Thus, the larger part of synaptosomal aspartate synthesis occurs in a different compartment than does GABA synthesis.  相似文献   

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