首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Glutamate (Glu) is the primary excitatory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system and plays a critical role in the neuroplasticity of nociceptive networks. We aimed to examine the role of spinal astroglia in the modulation of glutamatergic neurotransmission in a model of chronic psychological stress-induced visceral hyperalgesia in male Wistar rats. We assessed the effect of chronic stress on different glial Glu control mechanisms in the spinal cord including N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDARs), glial Glu transporters (GLT1 and GLAST), the Glu conversion enzyme glutamine synthetase (GS), and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). We also tested the effect of pharmacological inhibition of NMDAR activation, of extracellular Glu reuptake, and of astrocyte function on visceral nociceptive response in naive and stressed rats. We observed stress-induced decreased expression of spinal GLT1, GFAP, and GS, whereas GLAST expression was upregulated. Although visceral hyperalgesia was blocked by pharmacological inhibition of spinal NMDARs, we observed no stress effects on NMDAR subunit expression or phosphorylation. The glial modulating agent propentofylline blocked stress-induced visceral hyperalgesia, and blockade of GLT1 function in control rats resulted in enhanced visceral nociceptive response. These findings provide evidence for stress-induced modulation of glia-controlled spinal Glu-ergic neurotransmission and its involvement in chronic stress-induced visceral hyperalgesia. The findings reported in this study demonstrate a unique pattern of stress-induced changes in spinal Glu signaling and metabolism associated with enhanced responses to visceral distension.  相似文献   

2.
This study aims to determine whether the regulation of extracellular glutamate is altered during aging and its possible consequences on synaptic transmission and plasticity. A decrease in the expression of the glial glutamate transporters GLAST and GLT‐1 and reduced glutamate uptake occur in the aged (24–27 months) Sprague–Dawley rat hippocampus. Glutamatergic excitatory postsynaptic potentials recorded extracellularly in ex vivo hippocampal slices from adult (3–5 months) and aged rats are depressed by DL‐TBOA, an inhibitor of glutamate transporter activity, in an N‐Methyl‐d‐ Aspartate (NMDA)‐receptor‐dependent manner. In aged but not in young rats, part of the depressing effect of DL‐TBOA also involves metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluRs) activation as it is significantly reduced by the specific mGluR antagonist d‐methyl‐4‐carboxy‐phenylglycine (MCPG). The paired‐pulse facilitation ratio, a functional index of glutamate release, is reduced by MCPG in aged slices to a level comparable to that in young rats both under control conditions and after being enhanced by DL‐TBOA. These results suggest that the age‐associated glutamate uptake deficiency favors presynaptic mGluR activation that lowers glutamate release. In parallel, 2 Hz‐induced long‐term depression is significantly decreased in aged animals and is fully restored by MCPG. All these data indicate a facilitated activation of extrasynaptic NMDAR and mGluRs in aged rats, possibly because of an altered distribution of glutamate in the extrasynaptic space. This in turn affects synaptic transmission and plasticity within the aged hippocampal CA1 network.  相似文献   

3.
Astrocytes play a major role in the removal of glutamate from the extracellular compartment. This clearance limits the glutamate receptor activation and affects the synaptic response. This function of the astrocyte is dependent on its positioning around the synapse, as well as on the level of expression of its high-affinity glutamate transporters, GLT1 and GLAST. Using Western blot analysis and serial section electron microscopy, we studied how a change in sensory activity affected these parameters in the adult cortex. Using mice, we found that 24 h of whisker stimulation elicited a 2-fold increase in the expression of GLT1 and GLAST in the corresponding cortical column of the barrel cortex. This returns to basal levels 4 d after the stimulation was stopped, whereas the expression of the neuronal glutamate transporter EAAC1 remained unaltered throughout. Ultrastructural analysis from the same region showed that sensory stimulation also causes a significant increase in the astrocytic envelopment of excitatory synapses on dendritic spines. We conclude that a period of modified neuronal activity and synaptic release of glutamate leads to an increased astrocytic coverage of the bouton–spine interface and an increase in glutamate transporter expression in astrocytic processes.  相似文献   

4.
This article aimed to reveal the mechanism of long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) urothelial cancer-associated 1 (UCA1) regulated astrocyte activation in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) rats via mediating the activation of the JAK/STAT signaling pathway. A model of TLE was established based on rats via kainic acid (KA) injection. All rats were divided into the Sham group (without any treatments), KA group, normal control (NC; injection with empty vector) + KA group, and UCA1 + KA group. The Morris water maze was used to test the learning and memory ability of rats, and the expression of UCA1 in the hippocampus was determined by quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Surviving neurons were counted by Nissl staining, and expression levels of glial cells glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), p-JAK1, and p-STAT3 and glutamate/aspartate transporter (GLAST) were analyzed by immunofluorescence and Western blot analysis. A rat model of TLE was established by intraperitoneal injection of KA. qRT-PCR and fluorescence analyses showed that UCA1 inhibited astrocyte activation in the hippocampus of epileptic rats. Meanwhile, the Morris water maze analysis indicated that UCA1 improved the learning and memory in epilepsy rats. Moreover, the Nissl staining showed that UCA1 might have a protective effect on neuronal injury induced by KA injection. Furthermore, the immunofluorescence and Western blot analysis revealed that the overexpression of UCA1 inhibited KA-induced abnormal elevation of GLAST, astrocyte activation of the JAK/STAT signaling pathway, as well as hippocampus of epilepsy rats. UCA1 inhibited hippocampal astrocyte activation and JAK/STAT/GLAST expression in TLE rats and improved the adverse reactions caused by epilepsy.  相似文献   

5.
There is growing evidence that the loss of the nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurones induces an overactivity of the corticostriatal glutamatergic pathway which seems to be central to the physiopathology of parkinsonism. Moreover, glutamatergic mechanisms involving NMDA receptors have been shown to interfere with the therapeutical action of levodopa. Given the key role played by uptake processes in glutamate neurotransmission, this study examined the effects of nigrostriatal deafferentation and of levodopa treatment on the striatal expression of the glutamate transporters GLT1, GLAST and EAAC1 in the rat. No significant changes in striatal mRNA levels of these transporters were detected after either levodopa treatment (100 mg/kg; i.p., twice a day for 21 days) or unilateral lesion of the nigrostriatal pathway by intranigral 6-hydroxydopamine injection. In contrast, animals with the lesion subsequently treated with levodopa showed a selective increase (36%) in GLT1 mRNA levels in the denervated striatum versus controls. These animals also showed increased GLT1 protein expression, as assessed by immunostaining and western blotting. These data provide the first evidence that levodopa therapy may interfere with striatal glutamate transmission through change in expression of the primarily glial glutamate transporter GLT1. We further suggest that levodopa-induced GLT1 overexpression may represent a compensatory mechanism preventing neurotoxic accumulation of endogenous glutamate.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract: The glutamate transporters in the plasma membranes of neural cells secure termination of the glutamatergic synaptic transmission and keep the glutamate levels below toxic concentrations. Astrocytes express two types of glutamate transporters, GLAST (EAAT1) and GLT1 (EAAT2). GLT1 predominates quantitatively and is responsible for most of the glutamate uptake activity in the juvenile and adult brain. However, GLT1 is severely down-regulated in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a progressive neurodegenerative disease. Furthermore, selective loss of this transporter occurs in cultured astroglia. Expression of GLAST, but not of GLT1, seems to be regulated via the glutamate receptor signalling. The present study was undertaken to examine whether neuronal factors, other than glutamate, influence the expression of astroglial glutamate transporters. The expression of GLT1 and GLAST was examined in primary cultures of cerebellar granule neurons, cortical neurons, and astrocytes under different experimental conditions, including those that mimic neuron-astrocyte interactions. Pure astroglial cultures expressed only GLAST, whereas astrocytes grown in the presence of neurons expressed both GLAST (at increased levels) and GLT1. The induction of GLT1 protein and its mRNA was reproduced in pure cortical astroglial cultures supplemented with conditioned media from cortical neuronal cultures or from mixed neuron-glia cultures. This treatment did not change the levels of GLAST. These results suggest that soluble neuronal factors differentially regulate the expression of GLT1 and GLAST in cultured astroglia. Further elucidation of the molecular nature of the secreted neuronal factors and corresponding signalling pathways regulating the expression of the astroglial glutamate transporters in vitro may reveal mechanisms important for the understanding and treatment of neurological diseases.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract: Excess activation of NMDA receptors is felt to participate in secondary neuronal damage after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Increased extracellular glutamate is active in this process and may result from either increased release or decreased reuptake. The two high-affinity sodium-dependent glial transporters [glutamate transporter 1 (GLT-1) and glutamate aspartate transporter (GLAST)] mediate the bulk of glutamate transport. We studied the protein levels of GLT-1 and GLAST in the brains of rats after controlled cortical impact-induced TBI. With use of subtype-specific antibodies, GLT-1 and GLAST proteins were quantitated by immunoblotting in the ipsilateral and contralateral cortex at 2, 6, 24, 72, and 168 h after the injury. Sham-operated rats served as control. TBI resulted in a significant decrease in GLT-1 (by 20–45%; p < 0.05) and GLAST (by 30–50%; p < 0.05) protein levels between 6 and 72 h after the injury. d -[3H]Aspartate binding also decreased significantly (by 30–50%; p < 0.05) between 6 and 72 h after the injury. Decreased glial glutamate transporter function may contribute to the increased extracellular glutamate that may mediate the excitotoxic neuronal damage after TBI. This is a first report showing altered levels of glutamate transporter proteins after TBI.  相似文献   

8.
There is extensive experimental evidence indicating a crucial role for glutamate in epileptogenesis and epileptic activity. The glial glutamate transporters GLT1 and GLAST are proposed to account for the majority of extracellular glutamate re-uptake. In the present study, polyclonal antibodies specific to GLT1 and GLAST were generated and characterized, revealing distribution patterns for the two transporters confirming those previously reported. In situ hybridization and immunoblotting were then used to compare levels of these two transporters in the parietal cortex and hippocampus of unstimulated and stimulated EL mice with DDY control mice. Additionally, HPLC determined tissue glutamate concentrations in the same regions of these animals. These experiments revealed reductions in GLT1 mRNA and protein in the parietal cortex of unstimulated and stimulated EL mice compared with DDY controls, accompanied by an increase in tissue glutamate concentration in the stimulated EL mice group. GLT1 mRNA was also reduced in the CA3 hippocampal subfield of both unstimulated and stimulated EL mice. GLAST protein was reduced in the hippocampus of the stimulated EL mice group, while no changes in GLAST mRNA or protein were detected in the parietal cortex of EL mice when compared with DDY controls. The glial glutamate transporter down-regulation reported here may play a role in seizure initiation, spread and maintenance in the EL mouse.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The activity of high-affinity glutamate transporters is essential for the normal function of the mammalian central nervous system. Using a combined pharmacological, confocal immunocytochemical, enzyme-based microsensor and fluorescence imaging approach, we examined glutamate uptake and transporter protein localization in single astrocytes of neuron-containing and neuron-free microislands prior to pre-synaptic transmitter secretion and during functional neuronal activity. Here, we report that the presence or absence of neurons strikingly affects the uptake capacity of the astroglial glutamate transporters GLT1 and GLAST1. Induction of transporter function is activated by neurons and this effect is mimicked by pre-incubation of astrocytes with micromolar concentrations of glutamate. Moreover, increased glutamate transporter activation is reproduced by endogenous release of glutamate via activation of neuronal nicotinic receptors. The increase in transport activity is dependent on neuronal release of glutamate, is associated with the local redistribution (clustering) of GLT1 and GLAST1 but is independent of transporter synthesis and of glutamate receptor activation. Together, these results suggest an activity-dependent neuronal feedback system for rapid astroglial glutamate transporter regulation where neuron-derived glutamate is the physiological signal that triggers transporter function.  相似文献   

11.
In absence epilepsy, epileptogenic processes are suspected of involving an imbalance between GABAergic inhibition and glutamatergic excitation. Here, we describe alteration of the expression of glutamate transporters in rats with genetic absence (the Genetic Absence Epilepsy Rats from Strasbourg: GAERS). In these rats, epileptic discharges, recorded in the thalamo-cortical network, appear around 40 days after birth. In adult rats no alteration of the protein expression of the glutamate transporters was observed. In 30-day-old GAERS protein levels (quantified by western blot) were lower in the cortex by 21% and 35% for the glial transporters GLT1 and GLAST, respectively, and by 32% for the neuronal transporter EAAC1 in the thalamus compared to control rats. In addition, the expression and activity of GLAST were decreased by 50% in newborn GAERS cortical astrocytes grown in primary culture. The lack of modification of the protein levels of glutamatergic transporters in adult epileptic GAERS, in spite of mRNA variations (quantified by RT-PCR), suggests that they are not involved in the pathogeny of spike-and-wave discharges. In contrast, the alteration of glutamate transporter expression, observed before the establishment of epileptic discharges, could reflect an abnormal maturation of the glutamatergic neurone-glia circuitry.  相似文献   

12.
Obesity and high-fat (HF) diets have a deleterious impact on hippocampal function and lead to impaired synaptic plasticity and learning deficits. Because all of these processes need an adequate glutamatergic transmission, we have hypothesized that nutritional imbalance triggered by these diets might eventually concern glutamate (Glu) neural pathways within the hippocampus. Glu is withdrawn from excitatory synapses by specific uptake mechanisms involving neuronal (EAAT-3) and glial (GLT-1, GLAST) transporters, which regulate the time that synaptically released Glu remains in the extracellular space and, consequently, the duration and location of postsynaptic receptor activation. The goal of the present study was to evaluate in mouse hippocampus the effect of a short-term high-fat dietary treatment on 1) Glu uptake kinetics, 2) the density of Glu carriers and Glu-degrading enzymes, 3) the density of Glu receptor subunits, and 4) synaptic transmission and plasticity. Here, we show that HF diet triggers a 50% decrease of the Michaelis-Menten constant together with a 300% increase of the maximal velocity of the uptake process. Glial Glu carriers GLT-1 and GLAST were upregulated in HF mice (32 and 27%, respectively), whereas Glu-degrading enzymes glutamine synthase and GABA-decarboxilase appeared to be downregulated in these animals. In addition, HF diet hippocampus displayed diminished basal synaptic transmission and hindered NMDA-induced long-term depression (NMDA-LTD). This was coincident with a reduced density of the NR2B subunit of NMDA receptors. All of these results are compatible with the development of leptin resistance within the hippocampus. Our data show that HF diets upregulate mechanisms involved in Glu clearance and simultaneously impair Glu metabolism. Neurochemical changes occur concomitantly with impaired basal synaptic transmission and reduced NMDA-LTD. Taken together, our results suggest that HF diets trigger neurochemical changes, leading to a desensitization of NMDA receptors within the hippocampus, which might account for cognitive deficits.  相似文献   

13.
This study was performed to evaluate the bilateral effects of focal permanent ischemia (FPI) on glial metabolism in the cerebral cortex. Two and 9 days after FPI induction, we analyze [18F]FDG metabolism by micro-PET, astrocyte morphology and reactivity by immunohistochemistry, cytokines and trophic factors by ELISA, glutamate transporters by RT-PCR, monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs) by western blot, and substrate uptake and oxidation by ex vivo slices model. The FPI was induced surgically by thermocoagulation of the blood in the pial vessels of the motor and sensorimotor cortices in adult (90 days old) male Wistar rats. Neurochemical analyses were performed separately on both ipsilateral and contralateral cortical hemispheres. In both cortical hemispheres, we observed an increase in tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and glutamate transporter 1 (GLT-1) mRNA levels; lactate oxidation; and glutamate uptake and a decrease in brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) after 2 days of FPI. Nine days after FPI, we observed an increase in TNF-α levels and a decrease in BDNF, GLT-1, and glutamate aspartate transporter (GLAST) mRNA levels in both hemispheres. Additionally, most of the unilateral alterations were found only in the ipsilateral hemisphere and persisted until 9 days post-FPI. They include diminished in vivo glucose uptake and GLAST expression, followed by increased glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) gray values, astrocyte reactivity, and glutamate oxidation. Astrocytes presented signs of long-lasting reactivity, showing a radial morphology. In the intact hemisphere, there was a decrease in MCT2 levels, which did not persist. Our study shows the bilateralism of glial modifications following FPI, highlighting the role of energy metabolism adaptations on brain recovery post-ischemia.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
The ability of serotonin (5-HT) to influence striatal glutamatergic transmission was examined by determining changes over time in glutamate extracellular levels, transporter expression and synaptosomal uptake in rats with lesion of serotonergic neurones. By 8 days after intraraphe injections of 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine, producing 80% decreases in striatal tissue 5-HT levels, no changes were observed in the glutamatergic transmission. When 5-HT depletion was almost complete (21 days post-lesion), high affinity glutamate uptake in striatal synaptosomal preparations was significantly increased (156% of control), although no changes in striatal GLT1, GLAST and EAAC1 mRNAs, and GLT1 protein were detected by in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. Meanwhile, the serotonin lesion produced large increases in basal extracellular levels of glutamate and glutamine (364% and 259%, respectively) determined in awake rats by in vivo microdialysis, whereas no change was observed in dopamine levels as compared with control rats. High potassium depolarization as well as L-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate, also induced larger increases in extracellular levels of glutamate in lesioned rats than in controls. Finally, similar changes in glutamate transmission were observed by 3 months post-lesion. These results suggest that 5-HT has a long lasting and tonic inhibitory influence on the striatal glutamatergic input, without affecting the basal dopaminergic transmission.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Glutamate extracellular levels are regulated by specific transporters. Five subtypes have been identified. The two major ones, GLAST and GLT (glutamate transporters 1 and 2, respectively), are localized in astroglia in normal mature brain. However, in neuron-enriched hippocampal cultures, these proteins are expressed in neurons during the early in vitro development (Plachez et al., 2000). Here, we show that, in these cultures, GLAST and GLT neuronal expression is transient and no longer observed after 7 days in vitro, a stage at which the few astrocytes present in the culture are maturing. Moreover, we demonstrate that these few astrocytes are responsible for the repression of this neuronal expression. Indeed, addition of conditioned medium prepared from primary cultures of hippocampal astrocytes, to cultured hippocampal neurons, rapidly leads to the suppression of neuronal GLAST expression, without affecting neuronal GLT expression. However, when neurons are seeded and co-cultured on a layer of hippocampal astrocytes, they do not develop any immunoreactivity towards GLAST or GLT antibodies. Altogether, these results indicate that glia modulate the expression of GLAST and GLT glutamate transporters in neurons, via at least two distinct mechanisms. Neuronal GLAST expression is likely repressed via the release or the uptake of soluble factors by glia. The repression of neuronal GLT expression probably results from glia-neuron interactions. This further reinforces the fundamental role of direct or indirect neuron-glia interactions in the development of the central nervous system.  相似文献   

19.
Neuron-glia interactions are essential for synaptic function, and glial glutamate (re)uptake plays a key role at glutamatergic synapses. In knockout mice, for either glial glutamate transporters, GLAST or GLT-1, a classical metabolic response to synaptic activation (i.e., enhancement of glucose utilization) is decreased at an early functional stage in the somatosensory barrel cortex following activation of whiskers. Investigation in vitro demonstrates that glial glutamate transport represents a critical step for triggering enhanced glucose utilization, but also lactate release from astrocytes through a mechanism involving changes in intracellular Na(+) concentration. These data suggest that a metabolic crosstalk takes place between neurons and astrocytes in the developing cortex, which would be regulated by synaptic activity and mediated by glial glutamate transporters.  相似文献   

20.
Glutamate is the major excitatory neurotransmitter in the retina and is removed from the extracellular space by an energy-dependent process involving neuronal and glial cell transporters. The radial glial Müller cells express the glutamate transporter, GLAST, and preferentially accumulate glutamate. However, during an ischaemic episode, extracellular glutamate concentrations may rise to excitotoxic levels. Is this catastrophic rise in extracellular glutamate due to a failure of GLAST? Using immunocytochemistry, we monitored the transport of the glutamate transporter substrate, D-aspartate, in the retina under normal and ischaemic conditions. Two models of compromised retinal perfusion were compared: (1) Anaesthetised rats had their carotid arteries occluded for 7 days to produce a chronic reduction in retinal blood flow. Retinal function was assessed by electroretinography. D-aspartate was injected into the eye for 45 min. Following euthanasia, the retina was processed for D-aspartate, GLAST and glutamate immunocytochemistry. Although reduced retinal perfusion suppresses the electroretinogram b-wave, neither retinal histology, GLAST expression, nor the ability of Müller cells to uptake D-aspartate is affected. As this insult does not appear to cause excitotoxic neuronal damage, these data suggest that GLAST function and glutamate clearance are maintained during periods of reduced retinal perfusion. (2) Occlusion of the central retinal artery for 60 min abolishes retinal perfusion, inducing histological damage and electroretinogram suppression. Although GLAST expression appears to be normal, its ability to transport D-aspartate into Müller cells is greatly reduced. Interestingly, D-aspartate is transported into neuronal cells, i.e. photoreceptors, bipolar and ganglion cells. This suggests that while GLAST is vitally important for the clearance of excess extracellular glutamate, its capability to sustain inward transport is particularly susceptible to an acute ischaemic attack. Manipulation of GLAST function could alleviate the degeneration and blindness that result from ischaemic retinal disease.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号