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1.
Adenosine, through activation of membrane-bound receptors, has been reported to have neuroprotective properties during strokes or seizures. The role of astrocytes in regulating brain interstitial adenosine levels has not been clearly defined. We have determined the nucleoside transporters present in rat C6 glioma cells. RT-PCR analysis, (3)H-nucleoside uptake experiments, and [(3)H]nitrobenzylthioinosine ([(3)H]NBMPR) binding assays indicated that the primary functional nucleoside transporter in C6 cells was rENT2, an equilibrative nucleoside transporter (ENT) that is relatively insensitive to inhibition by NBMPR. [(3)H]Formycin B, a poorly metabolized nucleoside analogue, was used to investigate nucleoside release processes, and rENT2 transporters mediated [(3)H]formycin B release from these cells. Adenosine release was investigated by first loading cells with [(3)H]adenine to label adenine nucleotide pools. Tritium release was initiated by inhibiting glycolytic and oxidative ATP generation and thus depleting ATP levels. Our results indicate that during ATP-depleting conditions, AMP catabolism progressed via the reactions AMP --> IMP --> inosine --> hypoxanthine, which accounted for >90% of the evoked tritium release. It was surprising that adenosine was not released during ATP-depleting conditions unless AMP deaminase and adenosine deaminase were inhibited. Inosine release was enhanced by inhibition of purine nucleoside phosphorylase; ENT2 transporters mediated the release of adenosine or inosine. However, inhibition of AMP deaminase/adenosine deaminase or purine nucleoside phosphorylase during ATP depletion produced release of adenosine or inosine, respectively, via the rENT2 transporter. This indicates that C6 glioma cells possess primarily rENT2 nucleoside transporters that function in adenosine uptake but that intracellular metabolism prevents the release of adenosine from these cells even during ATP-depleting conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Nucleoside and nucleobase transporters are important for salvage of purines and pyrimidines and for transport of their analog drugs into cells. However, the pathways for nucleobase translocation in mammalian cells are not well characterized. We identified an Na-independent purine-selective nucleobase/nucleoside transport system in the nucleoside transporter-deficient PK15NTD cells. This transport system has 1,000-fold higher affinity for nucleobases than nucleosides with K(m) values of 2.5 +/- 0.7 microM for [(3)H]adenine, 6.4 +/- 0.5 microM for [(3)H]guanine, 1.1 +/- 0.1 mM for [(3)H]guanosine, and 4.2 +/- 0.5 mM [(3)H]adenosine. The uptake of [(3)H]guanine (0.05 microM) was inhibited by other nucleobases and nucleobase analog drugs (at 0.5-1 mM in the order of potency): 6-mercaptopurine = thioguanine = guanine > adenine > thymine = fluorouracil = uracil. Cytosine and methylcytosine had no effect. Nucleoside analog drugs with modification at 2' and/or 5 positions (all at 1 mM) were more potent than adenosine in competing the uptake of [(3)H]guanine: 2-chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine > 2-chloroadenosine > 2'3'-dideoxyadenosine = 2'-deoxyadenosine > 5-deoxyadenosine > adenosine. 2-Chloro-2'-deoxyadenosine and 2-chloroadenosine inhibited [(3)H]guanine uptake with IC(50) values of 68 +/- 5 and 99 +/- 10 microM, respectively. The nucleobase/nucleoside transporter was resistant to nitrobenzylthioinosine {6-[(4-nitrobenzyl) thiol]-9-beta-D-ribofuranosylpurine}, dipyridamole, and dilazep, but was inhibited by papaverine, the organic cation transporter inhibitor decynium-22 (IC(50) of approximately 1 microM), and by acidic pH (pH = 5.5). In conclusion, we have identified a mammalian purine-selective nucleobase/nucleoside transporter with high affinity for purine nucleobases. This transporter is potentially important for transporting naturally occurring purines and purine analog drugs into cells.  相似文献   

3.
The subsynaptic distribution of kainate receptors is still a matter of much debate given its importance to understand the way they influence neuronal communication. Here, we show that, in synapses of the rat hippocampus, presynaptic kainate receptors are localized within the presynaptic active zone close to neurotransmitter release sites. The activation of these receptors with low concentrations of agonists induces the release of [(3)H]glutamate in the absence of a depolarizing stimulus. Furthermore, this modulation of [(3)H]glutamate release by kainate is more efficient when compared with a KCl-evoked depolarization that causes a more than two-fold increase in the intra-terminal calcium concentration but no apparent release of [(3)H]glutamate, suggesting a direct receptor-mediated process. Using a selective synaptic fractionation technique that allows for a highly efficient separation of presynaptic, postsynaptic and non-synaptic proteins we confirmed that, presynaptically, kainate receptors are mainly localized within the active zone of hippocampal synapses where they are expected to be in a privileged position to modulate synaptic phenomena.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Adenosine, a neuromodulator of the CNS, activates inhibitory-A1 receptors and facilitatory-A2A receptors; its synaptic levels are controlled by the activity of bi-directional equilibrative nucleoside transporters. To study the relationship between the extracellular formation/inactivation of adenosine and the activation of adenosine receptors, we investigated how A1 and A2A receptor activation modifies adenosine transport in hippocampal synaptosomes. The A2A receptor agonist, CGS 21680 (30 nm), facilitated adenosine uptake through a PKC-dependent mechanism, but A1 receptor activation had no effect. CGS 21680 (30 nm) also increased depolarization-induced release of adenosine. Both effects were prevented by A2A receptor blockade. A2A receptor-mediated enhancement of adenosine transport system is important for formatting adenosine neuromodulation according to the stimulation frequency, as: (1) A1 receptor antagonist, DPCPX (250 nm), facilitated the evoked release of [(3)H]acetylcholine under low-frequency stimulation (2 Hz) from CA3 hippocampal slices, but had no effect under high-frequency stimulation (50 Hz); (2) either nucleoside transporter or A2A receptor blockade revealed the facilitatory effect of DPCPX (250 nm) on [3H]acetylcholine evoked-release triggered by high-frequency stimulation. These results indicate that A2A receptor activation facilitates the activity of nucleoside transporters, which have a preponderant role in modulating the extracellular adenosine levels available to activate A1 receptors.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of nerve stimulation pattern on transmitter release inhibition by L-citrulline, the co-product of NO biosynthesis by nitric oxide synthase (NOS), was studied in the rat phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm. We also investigated the putative interactions between NOS pathway and the adenosine system. L-citrulline (10-470 microM), the NOS substrate L-arginine (10-470 microM) and the NO donor 3-morpholinylsydnoneimine (SIN-1, 1-10 microM), concentration-dependently inhibited [(3)H]-acetylcholine ([(3)H]-ACh) release from rat motor nerve endings. Increasing stimulus frequency from 5 Hz-trains to 50 Hz-bursts enhanced [(3)H]-ACh release inhibition by l-arginine (47 microM) and L-citrulline (470 microM), whereas the effect of SIN-1 (10 microM) remained unchanged. NOS inhibition with N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine (100 microM) prevented the effect of L-arginine, but not that of L-citrulline. Adenosine deaminase (2.5 U/ml) and the adenosine transport inhibitor, S-(p-nitrobenzyl)-6-thioinosine (10 microM), attenuated release inhibition by L-arginine and L-citrulline. With 5 Hz-trains, blockade of A(1) receptors with 1,3-dipropyl-8-cyclopentyl xanthine (2.5 nM), but not of A(2A) receptors with ZM241385 (10nM), reduced the inhibitory action of l-arginine and L-citrulline; the opposite was verified with 50 Hz-bursts. Blockade of muscarinic M(2) autoreceptors with AF-DX116 (10 nM) also attenuated the effects of L-arginine and L-citrulline with 50 Hz-bursts. L-citrulline (470 microM) increased basal adenosine outflow via the equilibrative nucleoside transport system sensitive to NBTI (10 microM), without significantly (P>0.05) changing the nucleoside release subsequent to nerve stimulation. Data indicate that NOS-derived L-citrulline negatively modulates [(3)H]-ACh release by increasing adenosine outflow channelling to A(1) and A(2A) receptors activation depending on the stimulus paradigm. While adenosine acts predominantly at inhibitory A(1) receptors during 5 Hz-trains, inhibition of ACh release by L-citrulline at 50 Hz-bursts depends on the interplay between adenosine A(2A) and muscarinic M(2) receptors.  相似文献   

7.
The inhibitory effect of an adenosine analogue, R-N6-phenylisopropyl adenosine (R-PIA), of the cholinergic agonist carbachol, and of morphine on 3H efflux from [3H]choline-labeled field-stimulated rat hippocampal slices was compared with that produced by two inhibitors of N- and L-type Ca2+ channels, omega-conotoxin (CgTx; conotoxin GVIA) and cadmium chloride. 4-Aminopyridine (4-AP) caused a dose-dependent increase in evoked transmitter release, with a maximal effect (an almost threefold increase) at 100 microM. 4-AP (100 microM) did not affect the actions of CgTx, cadmium chloride, and R-PIA but almost abolished the effect of carbachol and morphine. The present results indicate that presynaptic muscarinic and opiate receptors reduce acetylcholine release by a mechanism that is somewhat different from that used by adenosine A1 receptors. Furthermore, the results indicate that presynaptic A1 receptors on hippocampal cholinergic neurons do not primarily regulate 4-AP-dependent potassium channels, but that they might act directly on a Ca2+ conductance.  相似文献   

8.
L-Glutamate (10 microM-1 mM) released endogenous adenosine from rat cortical synaptosomes. Studies with excitatory amino acid antagonists, (+)-5-methyl-16,11,dihydro-5H- dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten-5,10-imine maleate (MK-801), 6,7-dinitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (DNQX), Mg2+, and agonists N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), kainate, and quisqualate, indicated that this release was not receptor mediated. D,L-2-Amino-4-phosphonobutanoic acid (APB) also did not affect glutamate-evoked adenosine release. Inhibition of glutamate uptake by dihydrokainate or replacement of extracellular Na+ blocked glutamate-evoked adenosine release. D-aspartate, which is a substrate for the glutamate transporter but is not metabolized, also released adenosine, suggesting that release was due to amino acid transport and not to its subsequent metabolism. D-Glutamate, a relatively poor substrate for the transporter, was correspondingly less potent than L-glutamate at releasing adenosine. Glutamate-evoked adenosine release was not Ca2+ dependent or tetrodotoxin sensitive and did not appear to occur on the bidirectional nucleoside transporter. Inhibition of ecto-5'-nucleotidase virtually abolished glutamate-evoked adenosine release, indicating that adenosine was derived from extracellular metabolism of released nucleotide(s). However, L-glutamate did not release ATP and did not appear to release cyclic AMP. Therefore, transport of glutamate into presynaptic terminals releases some other nucleotide which is converted extracellularly to adenosine. This adenosine could act at P1-purinoceptors to modulate glutamatergic neurotransmission.  相似文献   

9.
In this study we evaluated the role of adenosine receptor activation on the K+-evoked D-[3H]aspartate release in cultured chick retina cells exposed to oxidant conditions. Oxidative stress, induced by ascorbate (3.5 mM)/Fe2+ (100 microM), increased by about fourfold the release of D-[3H]aspartate, evoked by KCl 35 mM in the presence and in the absence of Ca2+. The agonist of A1 adenosine receptors, N6-cyclopentyladenosine (CPA; 10 nM), inhibited the K+-evoked D-[3H]aspartate release in control in oxidized cells. The antagonist of A1 adenosine receptor, 1,3-dipropyl-8-cyclopentylxanthine (DPCPX; 50 nM), potentiated the release of D-[3H]aspartate in oxidized cells, and reverted the effect observed in the presence of CPA 10 nM. However, in oxidized cells, when DPCPX was tested together with CPA 100 nM the total release of D-[3H]aspartate increased from 5.1 +/- 0.4% to 11.4 +/- 1.0%, this increase being reverted by 3,7-dimethyl-1-propargylxanthine (DMPX; 100 nM), an antagonist of A2A adenosine receptors. In cells of both experimental conditions, the K+-evoked release of D-[3H]aspartate was potentiated by the selective agonist of A2A adenosine receptors, 2-[4-(2-carboxyethyl)phenethylamino]-5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosin e (CGS 21680; 10 nM), whereas the antagonist of these receptors, DMPX (100 nM), inhibited the release of D-[3H]aspartate in oxidized cells, but not in control cells. Adenosine deaminase (ADA; 1 U/ml), which is able to remove adenosine from the synaptic space, reduced the K+-evoked D-[3H]aspartate release, from 5.1 +/- 0.4% to 3.1 +/- 0.3% in oxidized cells, and had no significant effect in control cells. The extracellular accumulation of endogenous adenosine, upon K+-depolarization, was higher in oxidized cells than in control cells, and was reduced by the inhibitors of adenosine transporter (NBTI) and of ecto-5'-nucleotidase (AOPCP). This suggests that adenosine accumulation resulted from the outflow of adenosine mediated by the transporter, and from extracellular degradation of adenine nucleotide. Our data show that both inhibitory A1 and excitatory A2A adenosine receptors are present in cultured retina cells, and that the K+-evoked D-[3H]aspartate release is modulated by the balance between inhibitory and excitatory responses. Under oxidative stress conditions, the extracellular accumulation of endogenous adenosine seems to reach levels enough to potentiate the release of D-[3H]aspartate by the tonic activation of A2A adenosine receptors.  相似文献   

10.
Rat hippocampal glutamatergic terminals possess NMDA autoreceptors whose activation by low micromolar NMDA elicits glutamate exocytosis in the presence of physiological Mg(2+) (1.2 mM), the release of glutamate being significantly reduced when compared to that in Mg(2+)-free condition. Both glutamate and glycine were required to evoke glutamate exocytosis in 1.2 mM Mg(2+), while dizocilpine, cis-4-[phosphomethyl]-piperidine-2-carboxylic acid and 7-Cl-kynurenic acid prevented it, indicating that occupation of both agonist sites is needed for receptor activation. D-serine mimicked glycine but also inhibited the NMDA/glycine-induced release of [(3H]D-aspartate, thus behaving as a partial agonist. The NMDA/glycine-induced release in 1.2 mM Mg(2+) strictly depended on glycine uptake through the glycine transporter type 1 (GlyT1), because the GlyT1 blocker N-[3-(4'-fluorophenyl)-3-(4'-phenylphenoxy)propyl])sarcosine hydrochloride, but not the GlyT2 blocker Org 25534, prevented it. Accordingly, [(3)H]glycine was taken up during superfusion, while lowering the external concentration of Na(+), the monovalent cation co-transported with glycine by GlyT1, abrogated the NMDA-induced effect. Western blot analysis of subsynaptic fractions confirms that GlyT1 and NMDA autoreceptors co-localize at the pre-synaptic level, where GluN3A subunits immunoreactivity was also recovered. It is proposed that GlyT1s coexist with NMDA autoreceptors on rat hippocampal glutamatergic terminals and that glycine taken up by GlyT1 may permit physiological activation of NMDA pre-synaptic autoreceptors.  相似文献   

11.
The nucleoside transport systems in cultured epididymal epithelium were characterized and found to be similar between the proximal (caput and corpus) and distal (cauda) regions of the epididymis. Functional studies revealed that 70% of the total nucleoside uptake was Na(+) dependent, while 30% was Na(+) independent. The Na(+)-independent nucleoside transport was mediated by both the equilibrative nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR)-sensitive system (40%) and the NBMPR-insensitive system (60%), which was supported by a biphasic dose response to NBMPR inhibition. The Na(+)-dependent [(3)H]uridine uptake was selectively inhibited 80% by purine nucleosides, indicating that the purine nucleoside-selective N1 system is predominant. Since Na(+)-dependent [(3)H]guanosine uptake was inhibited by thymidine by 20% and Na(+)-dependent [(3)H]thymidine uptake was broadly inhibited by purine and pyrimidine nucleosides, this suggested the presence of the broadly selective N3 system accounting for 20% of Na(+)-dependent nucleoside uptake. Results of RT-PCR confirmed the presence of mRNA for equilibrative nucleoside transporter (ENT) 1, ENT2, and concentrative nucleoside transporter (CNT) 2 and the absence of CNT1. It is suggested that the nucleoside transporters in epididymis may be important for sperm maturation by regulating the extracellular concentration of adenosine in epididymal plasma.  相似文献   

12.
Neurological symptoms are common in patients with glutaric acidemia type I (GA-I). Although the pathophysiology of this disorder is not yet fully established, 3-hydroxyglutaric acid (3-HGA), which accumulates in affected patients, has recently been demonstrated to be excitotoxic to embryonic chick and neonatal rat neurons probably via NMDA glutamate receptors. In the present study, we investigated the in vitro effects of 3-HGA on the [(3)H]glutamate and [(3)H]MK-801 (dizocilpine) binding to rat synaptic plasma membranes from cerebral cortex of young rats in order to elucidate the interactions of 3-HGA with glutamate receptors and its possible contribution to the in vitro excitotoxic properties of 3-HGA. 3-HGA (10-100 microM) significantly decreased Na(+)-dependent (up to 62%) and Na(+)-independent (up to 30%) [(3)H]glutamate binding to synaptic membranes, reflecting a possible competition between glutamate and 3-HGA for the glutamate transporter and receptor sites, respectively. Since a decrease in Na(+)-independent glutamate binding might represent an interaction of 3-HGA with glutamate receptors, we next investigated whether 3-HGA interacts with NMDA receptors by adding NMDA alone or combined with 3-HGA and measuring Na(+)-independent [(3)H]glutamate binding to synaptic membranes (binding to receptors). We verified that 3-HGA and NMDA, at 10 and 100 microM concentrations, decreased glutamate binding by up to 20 and 45%, respectively, and that the simultaneous addition of both substances did not provoke an additive effect, implying that they bind to NMDA receptors at the same site. Furthermore, the binding of the NMDA-channel blocker [(3)H ]MK-801 was significantly increased (approximately 32-40%) by 10 and 100 microM 3-HGA, implying that 3-HGA was able to open the NMDA channel allowing MK-801 binding, which is a characteristic of NMDA agonists. On the other hand, glutamate had a much higher stimulatory effect on this binding (180% increase), reflecting its strong NMDA agonist property. Furthermore, the simultaneous addition of 3-HGA and glutamate provoked an additive stimulatory effect on [(3)H]MK-801 binding to the NMDA receptor. These data indicate that, relatively to glutamate, 3-HGA is a weak agonist of NMDA receptors. Finally, we demonstrated that 3-HGA provoked a significant increase of extracellular calcium uptake by cerebral cortex slices, strengthening therefore, the view that 3-HGA activates NMDA receptors. The present study therefore, demonstrates at the molecular level that 3-HGA modulates glutamatergic neurotransmission and may explain previous findings relating the neurotoxic actions of this organic acid with excitotoxicity.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: Excitatory amino acids, acting at both N methyl- d -aspartate (NMDA) and non-NMDA receptors, release the inhibitory neuromodulator adenosine from superfused rat cortical slices. This study was initiated to investigate the possible purinergic sources and mechanisms of release for the adenosine release evoked by NMDA and non-NMDA receptor activation. Inhibition of the bidirectional nucleo-side transporter with dipyridamole greatly enhanced adenosine release evoked by glutamate, NMDA, kainate, and ( RS -α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA). Inhibition of ecto -5'-nucleotidase with α,β-methylene ADP and GMP had no effect on either kainateor AMPA-evoked adenosine release, but it decreased glutamate- and NMDA-evoked adenosine release by 23 and 68%, respectively. A similar inhibition of NMDA-evoked adenosine release was observed with α,β-methylene ADP alone, indicating that the inhibitory effect was not due to the reported competitive inhibition of NMDA receptors by GMP. Finally, NMDA-evoked adenosine release, but not kainate- or AMPA-evoked release, was Ca2+ dependent. These results indicate that activation of non-NMDA receptors releases adenosine per se in a Ca2+-independent manner. In contrast, NMDA receptor activation releases primarily a nucleotide that is subsequently converted extracellularly to adenosine; in this case, release is Ca2+ dependent. Although neither NMDA- nor non-NMDA-evoked adenosine release occurs via the nucleoside transporter, this transporter does appear to be a major route for removal of adenosine from the extracellular space.  相似文献   

14.
In addition to cytosolic efflux, reversal of excitatory amino acid (EAA) transporters evokes glutamate exocytosis from the striatum in vivo. Both kappa-opioid and muscarinic receptor agonists suppress this calcium-dependent response. These data led to the hypothesis that the calcium-independent efflux of striatal glutamate evoked by transporter reversal may activate a transsynaptic feedback loop that promotes glutamate exocytosis from thalamo- and/or corticostriatal terminals in vivo and that this activation is inhibited by presynaptic kappa and muscarinic receptors. Corollaries to this hypothesis are the predictions that agonists for these putative presynaptic receptors will selectively inhibit the calcium-dependent component of glutamate released from striatal synaptosomes, whereas the calcium-independent efflux evoked by an EAA transporter blocker, L-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylic acid (L-trans-PDC), will be insensitive to such receptor ligands. Here we report that a muscarinic agonist, oxotremorine (0.01-10 microM), and a kappa-opioid agonist, U-69593 (0.1-100 microM), suppressed the calcium-dependent release of glutamate that was evoked by exposing striatal synaptosomes to the potassium channel blocker 4-aminopyridine. The presynaptic inhibition produced by these ligands was concentration dependent, blocked by appropriate receptor antagonists, and not mimicked by the delta-opioid agonist [D-Pen2,5]-enkephalin. The finding that glutamate efflux evoked by L-trans-PDC from isolated striatal nerve endings was entirely calcium independent supports the notion that intact basal ganglia circuitry mediates the calcium-dependent effects of this agent on glutamate efflux in vivo. Furthermore, because muscarinic or kappa-opioid receptor activation inhibits calcium-dependent striatal glutamate release in vitro as it does in vivo, it is likely that both muscarinic and kappa receptors are inhibitory presynaptic heteroceptors expressed by striatal glutamatergic terminals.  相似文献   

15.
Kainate receptors are ionotropic glutamate receptors located postsynaptically, mediating frequency-dependent transmission, and presynaptically, modulating transmitter release. In contrast to the excitatory postsynaptic kainate receptors, presynaptic kainate receptor can also be inhibitory and their effects may involve a metabotropic action. Arachidonic acid (AA) modulates most ionotropic receptors, in particular postsynaptic kainate receptor-mediated currents. To further explore differences between pre- and postsynaptic kainate receptors, we tested if presynaptic kainate receptors are affected by AA. Kainate (0.3-3 microM) and the kainate receptor agonist, domoate (60-300 nM), inhibited by 19-54% the field excitatory postsynaptic potential (fEPSP) slope in rat CA1 hippocampus, and increased by 12-32% paired-pulse facilitation (PPF). AA (10 microM) attenuated by 37-72% and by 62-66% the domoate (60-300 nM)-induced fEPSP inhibition and paired-pulse facilitation increase, respectively. This inhibition by AA was unaffected by cyclo- and lipo-oxygenase inhibitors, indomethacin (20 microM) and nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA, 50 microM) or by the free radical scavenger, N-acetyl-L-cysteine (0.5 mM). The K+ (20 mM)-evoked release of [3H]glutamate from superfused hippocampal synaptosomes was inhibited by 18-39% by domoate (1-10 microM), an effect attenuated by 35-63% by AA (10 microM). Finally, the KD (40-55 nM) of the kainate receptor agonist [3H]-(2S,4R)-4-methylglutamate ([3H]MGA) (0.3-120 nM) binding to hippocampal synaptosomal membranes was increased by 151-329% by AA (1-10 microM). These results indicate that AA directly inhibits presynaptic kainate receptor controlling glutamate release in the CA1 area of the rat hippocampus.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA), a selective glutamate receptor agonist, on the release of previously incorporated [(3)H]GABA was examined in superfused striatal slices of the rat. The slices were loaded with [(3)H]GABA in the presence of beta-alanine (1 mM) and superfused with Krebs-bicarbonate buffer containing nipecotic acid (0.1 mM) and aminooxyacetic acid (0.1 mM) to inhibit GABA uptake and metabolism. AMPA (0.01 to 3 mM) increased basal [(3)H]GABA outflow and nipecotic acid potentiated this effect. The [(3)H]GABA releasing effect of AMPA was an external Ca(2+)-dependent process in the absence but not in the presence of nipecotic acid. Cyclothiazide (0.03 mM), a positive modulator of AMPA receptors, failed to evoke [(3)H]GABA release by itself, but it dose-dependently potentiated the [(3)H]GABA releasing effect of AMPA. The AMPA (0.3 mM)-induced [(3)H]GABA release was antagonized by NBQX (0.01 mM) in a competitive fashion (pA(2) 5.08). The negative modulator of AMPA receptors, GYKI-53784 (0.01 mM) reversed the AMPA-induced [(3)H]GABA release by a non-competitive manner (pD'(2) 5.44). GYKI-53784 (0. 01-0.1 mM) also decreased striatal [(3)H]GABA outflow on its own right, this effect was stereoselective and was not influenced by concomitant administration of 0.03 mM cyclothiazide. GYKI-52466 (0. 03-0.3 mM), another negative modulator at AMPA receptors, also inhibited basal [(3)H]GABA efflux whereas NBQX (0.1 mM) by itself was ineffective in alteration of [(3)H]GABA outflow.The present data indicate that AMPA evokes GABA release from the vesicular pool in neostriatal GABAergic neurons. They also confirm that multiple interactions may exist between the agonist binding sites and the positive and negative modulatory sites but no such interaction was detected between the positive and negative allosteric modulators. Since GYKI-53784, but not NBQX, inhibited [(3)H]GABA release by itself, AMPA receptors located on striatal GABAergic neurons may be in sensitized state and phasically controlled by endogenous glutamate. It is also postulated that these AMPA receptors are located extrasynaptically on GABAergic striatal neurons.  相似文献   

17.
In the present work, we have studied the effect of ruthenium red (RuR), La3+ and 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) on the specific binding of (+)-[3H]PN200-110 to synaptosomes, as well as the effect of nitrendipine, nifedipine, and BAY K 8644 on gamma-[3H]aminobutyric acid [( 3H]GABA) release induced by potassium depolarization and by 4-AP in synaptosomes. Scatchard plots indicated that neither RuR nor 4-AP modifies the KD and Bmax of [3H]PN200-110 specific binding, whereas La3+ decreased the Bmax by about 25%; when the effect of the drugs on the total binding of PN200-110 was studied, a similar inhibition by La3+ was found. The calcium antagonists, nitrendipine and nifedipine, did not affect at all the potassium-stimulated release of [3H]GABA nor its release induced by 4-AP. The calcium agonist BAY K 8644 failed to affect both the spontaneous and the potassium-stimulated GABA release. Our results suggest that the binding sites of dihydropyridines in presynaptic membranes are not related to the calcium channels involved in neurotransmitter release with which RuR, La3+, and 4-AP interact.  相似文献   

18.
It has been proposed that (-)-nicotine can activate release-stimulating presynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) on glutamatergic nerve terminals to release glutamate, which in turn stimulates the release of noradrenaline (NA) and dopamine (DA) via presynaptic ionotropic glutamate receptors on catecholaminergic terminals. The objective of this study was to compare the function of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazide-4-propionic acid (AMPA) glutamate receptors in synaptosomes of rat hippocampus and striatum following acute and chronic (-)-nicotine administration. In hippocampal synaptosomes, prelabeled with [3H]NA, both the NMDA- and AMPA-evoked releases were higher in (-)-nicotine-treated (10 days) than in (-)-nicotine-treated (1 day) or vehicle-treated (1 or 10 days) rats. In striatal synaptosomes prelabeled with [3H]DA, the NMDA-evoked, but not the AMPA-evoked, release of [3H]DA was higher in (-)-nicotine-treated (10 days) than in nicotine-treated (1 day) or vehicle-treated (1 or 10 days) animals. Chronic (-)-nicotine did not affect catecholamine uptake, basal release and release evoked by high-K+ depolarization. Thus, chronic exposure to nicotine enhances the function of ionotropic glutamate receptors mediating noradrenaline release in the hippocampus and dopamine release in the striatum.  相似文献   

19.
Presynaptic neurotoxin alpha-latrotoxin, from the venom of Latrodectus mactans tredecimguttatus, causes massive [(3)H]GABA release from rat brain synaptosomes, irrespective of calcium presence in the extracellular medium. Whether the binding of alpha-latrotoxin to Ca(2+)-dependent (neurexin 1 alpha) or to Ca(2+)-independent (latrophilin) receptor triggers [(3)H]GABA release by the same mechanisms or different ones, inducing either exocytotic process or outflow by mobile membrane GABA transporter, is unknown. We examined alpha-latrotoxin-evoked [(3)H]GABA release from synaptosomes which cytosolic [(3)H]GABA pool was depleted either by applying competitive inhibitors of the GABA transporter, nipecotic acid and 2,4-diaminobutyric acid, or by permeation with digitonin. We also compared the effect of the GABA transporter inhibitors on depolarisation-evoked and alpha-latrotoxin-evoked [(3)H]GABA release using as depolarising agents 4-aminopyridine and high KCl in the Ca(2+)-containing and in Ca(2+)-free medium, respectively. Incubation of synaptosomes with nipecotic acid induced the essential acceleration of unstimulated [(3)H]GABA release and deep inhibition of high KCl-evoked Ca(2+)-independent [(3)H]GABA release. In contrast, at the similar conditions the effect of alpha-latrotoxin was greatly augmented with respect to the control response. Another way to assay what GABA pool was involved in alpha-latrotoxin-induced release lays in an analysis of the effects of depolarisation and alpha-latrotoxin in consecutive order. The preliminary 4-aminopyridine-stimulated [(3)H]GABA release attenuated the toxin effect. But when depolarisation occurred in Ca(2+)-free medium, no influence on alpha-latrotoxin effect was revealed. Employing digitonin-permeated synaptosomes, we have shown that alpha-latrotoxin could stimulate [3H]GABA release in the medium with 1mM EGTA, this effect of the toxin was blocked by concanavalin A and was ATP-dependent. The latter suggests that alpha-latrotoxin-released neurotransmitter has the vesicular nature. We assume that the type of the toxin membrane receptor does not determine the mechanisms of [(3)H]GABA release evoked by alpha-latrotoxin.  相似文献   

20.
The release properties of glutamatergic nerve terminals are influenced by a number of factors, including the subtype of voltage-dependent calcium channel and the presence of presynaptic autoreceptors. Group III metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) mediate feedback inhibition of glutamate release by inhibiting Ca(2+) channel activity. By imaging Ca(2+) in preparations of cerebrocortical nerve terminals, we show that voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels are distributed in a heterogeneous manner in individual nerve terminals. Presynaptic terminals contained only N-type (47.5%; conotoxin GVIA-sensitive), P/Q-type (3.9%; agatoxin IVA-sensitive), or both N- and P/Q-type (42.6%) Ca(2+) channels, although the remainder of the terminals (6.1%) were insensitive to these two toxins. In this preparation, two mGluRs with high and low affinity for l(+)-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyrate were identified by immunocytochemistry as mGluR4 and mGluR7, respectively. These receptors were responsible for 22.2 and 24.1% reduction of glutamate release, and they reduced the Ca(2+) response in 24.4 and 30.3% of the nerve terminals, respectively. Interestingly, mGluR4 was largely (73.7%) located in nerve terminals expressing both N- and P/Q-type Ca(2+) channels, whereas mGluR7 was predominantly (69.9%) located in N-type Ca(2+) channel-expressing terminals. This specific coexpression of different group III mGluRs and Ca(2+) channels may endow synaptic terminals with distinct release properties and reveals the existence of a high degree of presynaptic heterogeneity.  相似文献   

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