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1.
Electrically evoked activity in the submuscular ventral longitudinal nerve cords of Notoplana acticola is depressed by GABA and glycine in the presence of high magnesium concentrations. This inhibition occurs with 0.001--0.01 millimolar concentrations of these putative aminergic neurotransmitters and is reversible when washed out. The action of GABA and glycine was reversed nonspecifically by picrotoxin, bicuculline, and strychnine. PTZ (Pentylenetetrazole) was shown to mimic the effects that these blocking agents had on evoked activity when they were tested alone. The release of inhibition by these blocking agents is similar to that of decerebration. Three possible mechanisms responsible for synaptic activity in high Mg2+ concentrations are discussed and the possibility that the effector site of interaction may be the chloride ionophore is explored.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract: We have studied the effect of glutamate and the glutamatergic agonists N-methyl-d -aspartate (NMDA), kainate, and α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid (AMPA) on [3H]GABA release from the external plexiform layer of the olfactory bulb. The GABA uptake blocker nipecotic acid significantly increased the basal [3H]GABA release and the release evoked by a high K+ concentration, glutamate, and kainate. The glutamate uptake blocker pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate (2,4-PDC) inhibited by 50% the glutamate-induced [3H]GABA release with no change in the basal GABA release. The glutamatergic agonists NMDA, kainate, and AMPA also induced a significant [3H]GABA release. The presence of glycine and the absence of Mg2+ have no potentiating effect on NMDA-stimulated release; however, when the tissue was previously depolarized with a high K+ concentration, a significant increase in the NMDA response was observed that was potentiated by glycine and inhibited by the NMDA receptor antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonoheptanoic acid (AP-7). The kainate and AMPA effects were antagonized by the non-NMDA receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) but not by AP-7. The glutamate effect was also inhibited by CNQX but not by the NMDA antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP-5); nevertheless, in the presence of glycine, [3H]GABA release evoked by glutamate was potentiated, and this response was significantly antagonized by AP-5. Tetrodotoxin inhibited glutamate- and kainate-stimulated [3H]GABA release but not the NMDA-stimulated release. The present results show that in the external plexiform layer of the olfactory bulb, glutamate is stimulating GABA release through a presynaptic, receptor-mediated mechanism as a mixed agonist on NMDA and non-NMDA receptors; glutamate is apparently also able to induce GABA release through heteroexchange.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The properties of calcium channels were studied at the period of neurogenesis in the early embryonic chick retina. The whole neural retina was isolated from embryonic day 3 (E3) chick and loaded with a Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent dye (Fura-2). The retinal cells were depolarized by puff application of high-K+ solutions. Increases in intracellular Ca2+ concentrations were evoked by the depolarization through calcium channels. The type of calcium channel was identified as l-type by the sensitivity to dihydropyridines. The Ca2+ response was completely blocked by 10 μM nifedipine, whereas it was remarkably enhanced by 5 μM Bay K 8644. Then we sought a factor to activate the calcium channel and found that GABA could activate it by membrane depolarization at the E3 chick retina. Puff application of 100 μM GABA raised intracellular Ca2+ concentrations, and this Ca2+ response to GABA was also sensitive to the two dihydropyridines. Intracellular potential recordings verified clear depolarization by bath-applied 100 μM GABA. The Ca2+ response to GABA was mediated by GABAA receptors, since the GABA response was blocked by 10 μgM bicuculline or 50 μM picrotoxin, and mimicked by muscimol but not by baclofen. Neither glutamate, kainate, nor glycine evoked any Ca2+ response. We conclude that l-type calcium channels and GABAA receptors are already are already expressed before differentiation of retinal cells and synapse formation in the chick retina. A possibility is proposed that GABA might act as a trophic factor by activating l-type calcium channels via GABAA receptors during the early period of retinal neurogenesis. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Production of the compatible solute glycine betaine from its precursors choline or glycine betaine aldehyde confers a considerable level of tolerance against high osmolarity stress to the soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis. The glycine betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase GbsA is an integral part of the osmoregulatory glycine betaine synthesis pathway. We strongly overproduced this enzyme in an Escherichia coli strain that expressed a plasmid-encoded gbsA gene under T7φ10 control. The recombinant GbsA protein was purified 23-fold to apparent homogeneity by fractionated ammonium sulfate precipitation, ion-exchange chromatography on Q-Sepharose, and subsequent hydrophobic interaction chromatography on phenyl-Sepharose. Molecular sieving through Superose 12 and sedimentation centrifugation through a glycerol gradient suggested that the native enzyme is a homodimer with 53.7-kDa subunits. The enzyme was specific for glycine betaine aldehyde and could use both NAD+ and NADP+ as cofactors, but NAD+ was strongly preferred. A kinetic analysis of the GbsA-mediated oxidation of glycine betaine aldehyde to glycine betaine revealed K m values of 125 μM and 143 μM for its substrates glycine betaine aldehyde and NAD+, respectively. Low concentrations of salts stimulated the GbsA activity, and the enzyme was highly tolerant of high ionic conditions. Even in the presence of 2.4 M KCl, 88% of the initial enzymatic activity was maintained. B. subtilis synthesizes high levels of proline when grown at high osmolarity, and the presence of this amino acid strongly stimulated the GbsA activity in vitro. The enzyme was stimulated by moderate concentrations of glycine betaine, and its activity was highly tolerant against molar concentrations of this osmolyte. The high salt tolerance and its resistance to its own reaction product are essential features of the GbsA enzyme and ensure that B. subtilis can produce high levels of the compatible solute glycine betaine under conditions of high osmolarity stress. Received: 2 May 1997 / Accepted: 2 July 1997  相似文献   

6.
GABAergic activity is regulated by rapid, high affinity uptake of GABA from the synapse. Perturbation of GABA reuptake has been implicated in neurological disease and inhibitors of GABA transporters (GAT) have been used therapeutically but little detail is known about the ramifications of GAT inhibition on brain neurochemistry. Here, we incubated Guinea pig cortical tissue slices with [3-13C]pyruvate and major, currently available GABA uptake inhibitors. Metabolic fingerprints were generated from these experiments using 13C/1H NMR spectroscopy. These fingerprints were analyzed using multivariate statistical approaches and compared with an existing library of fingerprints of activity at GABA receptors. This approach identified five distinct clusters of metabolic activity induced by blocking GABA uptake. Inhibition of GABA uptake via GAT1 produced patterns similar to activity at mainstream GABAergic synapses in particular those containing α1-subunits but still statistically separable. This indicated that inhibition of GABA uptake, an indirect method of activating GABA receptors, produces different effects to direct receptor activation or to exogenous GABA. The mechanism of inhibitor function also produced different outcomes, with the channel blocker SKF 89976A yielding a unique metabolic response. Blocking GAT1 and GAT3 simultaneously induces a large metabolic response consistent with induction of tonic inhibition via high affinity GABA receptors. Blocking BGT produces patterns similar to activity at less common receptors such as those containing α5 subunits. This approach is useful for determining where in the spectrum of GABAergic responses a particular GABA transport inhibitor is effective.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: To see the effect of a γ-aminobutyric acid GABA uptake inhibitor on the efflux and content of endogenous and labeled GABA, rat cortical slices were first labeled with [3H]GABA and then superfused in the absence or presence of 1 mM nipecotic acid. Endogenous GABA released or remaining in the slices was measured with high performance liquid chromatography, which was also used to separate [3H]GABA from its metabolites. In the presence of 3 mM K+, nipecotic acid released both endogenous and [3H]GABA, with a specific activity four to five times as high as that present in the slices. The release of labeled metabolite(s) of [3H]GABA was also increased by nipecotic acid. The release of endogenous GABA evoked by 50 mM K+ was enhanced fourfold by nipecotic acid but that of [3H]GABA was only doubled when expressed as fractional release. In a medium containing no Ca2+ and 10 mM Mg2+, the release evoked by 50 mMK+ was nearly suppressed in either the absence or the presence of nipecotic acid. In the absence of nipecotic acid electrical stimulation (bursts of 64 Hz) was ineffective in evoking release of either endogenous or [3H]GABA, but in the presence of nipecotic acid it increased the efflux of endogenous GABA threefold, while having much less effect on that of [3H]GABA. Tetrodotoxin (TTX) abolished the effect of electrical stimulation. Both high K+ and electrical stimulation increased the amount of endogenous GABA remaining in the slices, and this increase was reduced by omission of Ca2+ or by TTX. The results suggest that uptake of GABA released through depolarization is of major importance in removing GABA from extracellular spaces, but the enhancement of spontaneous release by nipecotic acid may involve intracellular heteroexchange. Depolarization in the presence of Ca2+ leads to an increased synthesis of GABA, in excess of its release, but the role of this excess GABA remains to be established.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract: GABA uptake and release mechanisms have been shown for neuronal as well as glial cells. To explore further neuronal versus glial components of the [3H]-γ-aminobutyric acid ([3H]GABA) release studies were performed with two different microdissected layers of the olfactory bulb of the rat: the olfactory nerve layer (ONL), consisting mainly of glial cells, and the external plexiform layer (EPL) with a high density of GABAergic dendritic terminals. In some experiments substantia nigra was used as a GABAergic axonal system and the trigeminal ganglia as a peripheral glial model. Spontaneous release of [3H]GABA was always lower in neuronal elements as compared with glial cells. A veratridine-evoked release was observed from the ONL but not from the trigeminal ganglia. Tetrodotoxin (TTX) abolished the veratridine-evoked release from the ONL, which also showed a partial inhibition when high magnesium concentrations were used in a Ca2+-free solution. β-Alanine was strongly exchanged with [3H]GABA from the ONL of animals with the olfactory nerve lesioned and from animals with no lesion; but only a small heteroexchange was found from the external plexiform layer. The β-alanine heteroexchange was able to deplete the releasable GABA store from the ONL of lesioned animals. In nonlesioned animals and the external plexiform layer, the veratridine-stimulated release of [3H]GABA was not significantly reduced after the β-alanine heteroexchange. Stimulation of the [3H]GABA release by high concentrations of potassium elicited a higher release rate from axonal terminals than from dendrites or glia. Neurones and glia showed a similar inhibition of [3H]GABA release when a high magnesium concentration was added to a calcium-free solution. When D-600 was used as a calcium-flux blocker no inhibition of the release was observed in glial cells, whereas an almost complete blockage was found in both neuronal preparations (substantia nigra and EPL). These results provide further evidence for differential release mechanisms of GABA from CNS neurones and glial cells.  相似文献   

9.
Human cerebral cortical slices preincubated with [3H]GABA, [3H]noradrenaline, or 5-[3H]hydroxytryptamine and superfused with Krebs solution or Mg2+-free Krebs solution were used to investigate the influence of increased D-glucose concentrations on the release of these [3H]-neurotransmitters evoked by high K+ content or NMDA receptor activation, respectively. An increase in level of D-glucose (normal content, 11.1 mM) by 32, 60, and/or 100 mM (a range characteristic for hyperosmolar diabetic coma) increased the [3H]GABA release and inhibited the [3H]noradrenaline release evoked by both methods of stimulation. The K+-induced 5-[3H]hydroxytryptamine release was also inhibited by high D-glucose content. Blockade of GABAB receptors by p-(3-aminopropyl)-p-diethoxymethylphosphinic acid (CGP 35348) attenuated the inhibitory effect of high D-glucose content on the K+-evoked release of [3H]noradrenaline and 5-[3H]hydroxy-tryptamine, suggesting that the effect on monoamine release is, at least to a major part, the result of the increased GABA release and, as a consequence, of an increased GABA concentration at inhibitory GABAB receptors. The membrane-impermeable sorbitol mimicked the increasing effect of D-glucose on [3H]GABA release and its inhibitory effect on 5-[3H]hydroxytryptamine release. However, dimethyl sulfoxide, which is known to permeate rapidly through biological membranes, had no effect at concentrations equiosmolar to D-glucose. It is concluded that a reduction in brain cell volume caused by increased extracellular, compared with cytoplasmic, osmolarity is crucial for the changes in neuronal function observed at high D- glucose and sorbitol content, In view of the fact that GABA is the main inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain, the increased GABA release may be assumed to contribute to the pathogenesis of hyperosmolar diabetic coma.  相似文献   

10.
Retinal proteins were labeled by intraocular injections of radioactive amino acids. Tissue slices of the superior colliculus (SC) were prepared 18–20 hr later, i.e., when the rapid phases of the axonal transport had reached the SC terminals. The effect of depolarizing pulses of high K and of Ca withdrawal on the secretion of radioactivity was studied in a perfusion system. The effluents were separated into a trichloroacetic acid (TCA) precipitable fraction and a TCA-soluble fraction. High K evoked a release of TCA-soluble radioactivity when [3H]glycine, [3H]leucine, or [3H]proline were used as protein precursors. Small changes occurred for TCA-precipitable fractions. The evoked release of radioactivity was Ca dependent and particularly prominent after labeling with [3H]glycine. Ca withdrawal increased the efflux of exogenous GABA, primary amines, and TCA-precipitable radioactivity but not of TCA-soluble radioactivity when normal media were used. The formation of TCA-soluble radioactivity was measured by incubating combined homogenates of SC and the lateral geniculate body (LGB), containing labeled proteins transported by the slow or rapid phase. The proteolytic activity was highly Ca dependent, for the rapidly transported proteins the half maximum was at 0.1 mM Ca. The formation of TCA-soluble radioactivity was inhibited byp-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid (PCMS). Other divalent cations could not substitute for Ca. The rate of formation of TCA-soluble radioactivity and the influence of Ca ions was smaller when proteins of the slow phase were used as substrate.  相似文献   

11.
Slices of guinea-pig cerebral cortex were used to investigate the effects of the antispastic drug β-(p-chlorophenyl)-γ-aminobutyrate (Baclofen, Lioresal) on the release and metabolism of several amino acids. Electrical stimulation of slices evoked (1) a relatively large release, probably from nerve terminals, of 14C-labelled tissue glumate, aspartate and γ-aminobutyrate (GABA) synthesized via metabolism of D-[U-14C]glucose and (2) a relatively small release, probably not from nerve terminals, of 14C-labelled tissue alanine and threonine-serine-glutamine and of exogenous radiolabeled glutamate, aspartate, GABA and α-aminoisobutyrate that had been taken up from the medium. Baclofen (4μM) preferentially inhibited the release of 14C-labelled tissue glutamate and aspartate. It had no effect on the concentrations and specific radio-activities of most of the labelled tissue amino acids in the slices. However, it increased the turnover of 14C-labelled tissue glycine approx 4-fold and elevated the specific radio activity of tissue alanine by 40%. It was concluded that Baclofen affects transmission not by modulating the release of the inhibitory amino acid GABA, but by selectively suppressing the release of the excitatory amino acids glutamate and aspartate from nerve terminals. Provided that this action obtains in the spinal cord, it may at least partly underlie the antispastic action of Baclofen as glutamate and aspartate are presumed to be the transmitters released from terminals of non-nociceptive primary afferent fibers and excitatory interneurons, respectively. The Baclofen-induced increase in glycine turnover suggests an additional effect on inhibitory glycinergic interneurons in the spinal cord.  相似文献   

12.
Crayfish glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), like the homologous enzymes from other species, is inhibited by carbonyl-trapping agents (e.g. aminooxyacetic acid; AOAA) and sulfhydryl reagents (e.g. 5,5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid); DTNB). It also is inhibited by the product GABA, many anions (e.g. SCN and Cl), and some cations (e.g. Zn+2). The inhibition by AOAA, but not that by DTNB, was prevented by increasing the concentration of the pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) coenzyme. GABA blocked the effects of PLP on enzyme activity. The inhibition by AOAA, DTNB, GABA, and chloride all were competitive with substrate. The effect of GABA occurs at physiological concentrations and may contribute to the regulation of GAD activity in vivo. The quantitative effect of anions is dependent on the cation with which they are administered. ATP stimulated GAD activity in homogenates prepared with potassium phosphate or Tris-acetate buffer, even when no exogenous PLP was provided.  相似文献   

13.
Pierobon  Paola  Tino  Angela  Minei  Rosario  Marino  Giuseppe 《Hydrobiologia》2004,530(1-3):59-66
Phylogenetic studies suggest that GABA and glycine receptors derive, as a result of divergent evolution, from a common ancestral protoreceptor originated in a unicellular organism. This raises the possibility that members of the ligand-gated ion channels (LGIC) superfamily might be widely present in living organisms including bacteria and primitive invertebrates. High-affinity GABA receptors occur in the tissues of Hydra vulgaris whose pharmacological characteristics compare with those of mammalian ionotropic GABA receptors. Behavioural studies have shown that activation of these GABA A -like receptors by their allosteric modulators increases the duration of response to reduced glutathione (GSH). Recently, strychnine-sensitive glycine receptors have been shown to occur in Hydra tissues. Activation of these glyR also results in increased duration of the response to GSH. In order to investigate the contribution of endogenous transmitters to the modulation of the feeding response, we studied the effects of exposing the polyps to brief depolarizing pulses prior to the GSH test. A severe inhibition of the response was observed following exposure to KCl or veratridine. Administration of GABA or muscimol counteracted the effects of the pulses in a dose-dependent manner. The effects of GABA or muscimol were suppressed by the GABA A -specific antagonist gabazine both in pulse-untreated and treated polyps. By contrast, glycine and its agonist taurine were not able to restore the physiological duration of response in pulse-treated Hydra, while another glyR agonist, β-alanine, partially reduced the pulse-induced inhibition. We conclude that GABA appears to be the major inhibitory transmitter responsible for the regulation of the feeding response. Molecular studies aimed at identifying GABA receptor subunits are in progress.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract— The glutamic acid decarboxylase has been purified from the lobster central nervous system. Potassium ion (0-075 m ) and β-mercaptoethanol (0-025 m ) were essential for enzyme activity. Enzyme had about 60 per cent of its optimal activity in the absence of added pyridoxal phosphate. Carbonyl reagents (10?4m -hydroxylamine or amino oxyacetic acid) would abolish this residual activity. The pH optimum of the enzyme was about 8-0. Standard Michaelis-Menten kinetics were applied to the decarboxylation of glutamate and a Km of 0.02 m was calculated. GABA inhibited the reaction (Ki= 1.25 × 10?3m ), but the inhibition showed anomalous behaviour when graphed by the method of Lineweaver and Burk (1934). The GABA inhibition resembled competitive inhibition, but curves rather than straight lines intersecting at a common point on the velocity axis were obtained. This effect remains unexplained. Preliminary studies failed to reveal any subunit structure of the enzyme. The sedimentation coefficient (.S20.w) was 6-55 in a sucrose density gradient in an ultracentrifuge. This was unchanged by the addition of any of the agents that influence enzyme activity. The subcellular localization of the decarboxylase was explored in crude homogenates of lobster central nervous system prepared in various ways. The major proportion (about 90 per cent) of the enzyme activity was in the soluble fraction.‘Particulate’enzyme could be prepared, but gentle suspension of this material in buffer liberated most of the activity. A contaminant in the radioactive substrates led to the production of radioactive GABA without the simultaneous evolution of CO2. In this case, GABA production required active enzyme but was not an exclusive property of the glutamic decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

15.
The characteristics of amino acid uptake by frog spinal cord slices was studied by in vitro incubations in appropriate media. The uptake mechanisms exhibited saturation; kinetic analysis demonstrated 2 distinct systems for the influx of the possible neurotransmitters: GABA, glycine, L-glutamic acid and L-aspartic acid. One system showed a comparatively high substrate affinity (Km values, 10-26 μM) while the other system had a lower affinity (Km, 0.4-1.6 mM).-Leucine, an amino acid presumably not a transmitter, was accumulated only by a low affinity mechanism (Km 1.6 mM). The process responsible for high affinity uptake had many of the properties of an active transport mechanism. These included temperature sensitivity, energy dependence, requirement for Na+ ions and inhibition by ouabain. GABA and glycine uptake was inhibited only by closely related amino acids or structural analogues. The influx of L-glutamic acid was competitively inhibited by the presence of L-aspartic acid in the medium; the converse was also demonstrated. Thus, the high affinity uptake system for possible transmitter amino acids in the frog spinal cord closely resembles that described for mammalian CNS tissue. These results are compatible with the assumption that GABA, glycine, L-glutamic acid and L-aspartic acid are neurotransmitters in the amphibian spinal cord.  相似文献   

16.
The lack of information on the mechanism of inactivation of the crustacean neuromuscular inhibitory transmitter compound prompted a study of the disposition of radioactive γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in lobster nerve-muscle preparations. A specific GABA transport system was found. Radioactive GABA was concentrated by the tissues to levels several times those in the medium, and net uptake could be demonstrated. The process was dependent on sodium ions in the medium; neither lithium nor choline could substitute for sodium. Incubations with increasing GABA concentrations indicated that uptake was a saturable mechanism with an apparent Km of 5.8 × 10−5m . Of many compounds tested, only desmethylimipramine, chlopromazine (and several related compounds), and certain close structural analogues (guanidinoacetic acid, β-guani-dinopropionic acid and,β-hydroxy-GAB A) were effective inhibitors of uptake. The inhibition with all these compounds, however, was at high concentrations (5 × 10−4 to 10−3m ) which limited their usefulness for physiological studies. A separate uptake mechanism for glutamate was found in the lobster nerve-muscle preparations. This process was not described in detail, but certain properties are similar to those of the GABA transport system. The cellular location of the GABA uptake system remains unknown. By analogy with noradrenaline inactivation, however, it is postulated that uptake could serve to terminate the physiological actions of GABA by rapidly removing it from its sites of action in synaptic clefts.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: Electrical stimulation of rat hippocampal slices evoked the release of excitatory amino acids and purines, as reflected by a time-dependent increase in the extracellular levels of glutamate and adenosine, as well as by the increased efflux of radioactivity in slices preloaded with both [14C]glutamate and [3H]adenosine. The evoked release of excitatory amino acids and purines was amplified when slices were exposed to 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (a selective A1 adenosine receptor antagonist), (+)-α-methyl-4-carboxyphenylglycine [a mixed antagonist of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs)], or (2S,3S,4S)-2-methyl-2-(carboxycyclopropyl)glycine (a selective antagonist of class II mGluRs). In contrast, 2-chloro-N6-cyclopentyladenosine (CCPA; a selective A1 receptor agonist) or (2S,1R,2R,3R)-(2,3-dicarboxycyclopropyl)glycine (DCG-IV; a selective agonist of class II mGluRs) reduced the evoked release of excitatory amino acids and purines. CCPA and DCG-IV also reduced the increase in cyclic AMP formation induced by either forskolin or electrical stimulation in hippocampal slices. The inhibitory effect of CCPA and DCG-IV on release or cyclic AMP formation was less than additive. We conclude that the evoked release of excitatory amino acids and purines is under an inhibitory control by A1 receptors and class II mGluRs, i.e., mGluR2 or 3, which appear to operate through a common transduction pathway. In addition, although these receptors are activated by endogenous adenosine and glutamate, they can still respond to pharmacological agonists. This provides a rationale for the use of A1 or class II mGluR agonists as neuroprotective agents in experimental models of excitotoxic neuronal degeneration.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and its agonists muscimol and 4,5,6,7-tetrahydroisoxazolo[5-4-c]pyridin-3-ol (THIP) on the development of GABA receptors on cerebellar granule cells was studied by cultivation of the cells in media containing these substances. It was found that the presence of 50 μM GABA in the culture media led to the induction of low-affinity GABA receptors (KD 546 ± 117 nM) in addition to the high-affinity receptors (KD 7 ± 0.5 nM) which were present regardless of the presence of GABA in the culture media. The functional activity of the GABA receptors was tested by investigating the ability of GABA to modulate evoked glutamate release from the cells. It was found that GABA could inhibit evoked glutamate release (ED50 10 ± 3 (μM) only when the cells had been cultured in the presence of 50 νM GABA, 50 μM muscimol, or 150 μM THIP, i.e., under conditions where low-affinity GABA receptors were present on the cells. This inhibitory effect of GABA could be blocked by 120 μM bicuculline and mimicked by 50 μM muscimol or 150 μM THIP whereas 150 μM (-)-baclofen had no effect. It is concluded that GABA acting extracellularly induces formation of low-affinity receptors on cerebellar granule cells and that these receptors are necessary for mediating an inhibitory effect of GABA on evoked glutamate release. The pharmacological properties of these GABA receptors indicate that they belong to the so-called GABAA receptors.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: γ-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) is thought to be a neurotransmitter in the vetebrate retina. We studied the voltage and Ca2+ dependency of the process of release of [3H]GABA from the retina of the teleost Eugenes plumieri, using a microsuperfusion technique. Two depolarizing agents, veratridine and high potassium, produced a concentration-dependent release of [3H]GABA. The veratridine effect was inhibited in Na+-free solution, but was not affected by 1 μM tetrodotoxin. A substantial inhibition (about 75%) of the veratridine-and potassium-stimulated release of [3H] GABA occurred in Ca2+-free medium. Inhibitors of the Ca2+ channel, such as Mg2+(20 mM), La3+ (0.1 mM), and methoxy-verapamil (4 μM-0.4 mM), inhibited the veratridine-and K+-stimulated release. However, Co2+ and Cd2+ caused a potentiation and no change of the K+-and veratridine-stimulated release, respectively. This release process is apparently specific, since both depolarizing agents were unable to release [3H]methionine, a nontransmitter amino acid, under the same experimental conditions. Autoradio-graphic studies with [3H]GABA, using the same incubation conditions as for the release experiments, showed a high density of silver grains over the horizontal cells with almost no accumulation by amacrine cells and Muller cells. β-Alanine and nipecotic acid were used as two relative specific inhibitors of the glial and neuronal GABA uptake mechanisms, respectively. Only a small heteroexchange with [3H]GABA was found with β-alanine, and no inhibition of the subsequent veratridine-stimulated release. On the other hand, nipecotic acid produced a strong heteroexchange with [3H]GABA and lacked the capacity to induce the veratridine-stimulated release of [3H]GABA. These results suggest a voltage-and Ca2+-dependent neuronal release of [3H]GABA from retina.  相似文献   

20.
Exogenously applied GABA modulates root growth by inhibition of root elongation when seedlings were grown in vitro on full-strength Murashige and Skoog (MS) salts, but root elongation was stimulated when seedlings were grown on 1/8 strength MS salts. When the concentration of single ions in MS salts was individually varied, the control of growth between inhibition and stimulation was found to be related to the level of nitrate (NO3?) in the growth medium. At NO3? concentrations below 40 mM (full-strength MS salts level), root growth was stimulated by the addition of GABA to the growth medium; whereas at concentrations above 40 mM NO3?, the addition of GABA to the growth medium inhibited root elongation. GABA promoted NO3? uptake at low NO3?, while GABA inhibited NO3? uptake at high NO3?. Activities of several enzymes involved in nitrogen and carbon metabolism including nitrate reductase (NR), glutamine synthetase (GS), glutamate synthase (NADH-GOGAT), NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (NADP-ICDH), and phosphoenol pyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) were regulated by GABA in the growth medium. Supplementing 1/8 strength MS medium with 50 mM GABA enhanced the activities of all of the above enzymes except ICDH activities in root tissues. However, at full-strength MS, GABA showed no inhibitory effect on the activities of these enzymes, except on GS in both root and shoot tissues, and PEPCase activity in shoot tissues. Exogenous GABA increased the amount of NR protein rather than its activation status in the tissues. This study shows that GABA affects the growth of Arabidopsis, possibly by acting as a signaling molecule, modulating the activity of enzymes involved in primary nitrogen metabolism and nitrate uptake.  相似文献   

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