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1.
An excised patch membrane sensor for arachidonic acid (AA) is described, whose response stems from AA-induced channel-type transport of ions across the excised patch membrane. The patch membrane sensor was prepared in situ by excising mouse hippocampal cell membranes with patch pipets having a tip diameter of < 0.5 microm. The sensor responds to AA, giving rise to a channel-type current, and its magnitude (apparent conductance) increased with increasing AA concentration in the range from 10 to 30 nM. The detection limit was 2.1 nM (S/N = 3). The induction of channel-type currents was selective to AA over fatty acids such as palmitic acid, stearic acid, oleic acid, gamma-linolenic acid, and docosahexaenoic acid and AA metabolites such as 12-HETE, 5-HETE, and prostaglandin D(2). The sensor was applied to quantification of AA released from various neuronal regions (CA1, CA3, and DG) of mouse hippocampus under stimulation of 100 microM L-glutamate. The release of AA from each region was observed 1 min after the stimulation and the concentration of AA 5 min after the stimulation varied among the neuronal sites, i.e., 8+/-1 nM (n = 5) for CA1, 15+/-3 nM (n = 3) for CA3, and 6+/-2 nM (n = 9) for DG. The L-glutamate-evoked release of AA was partly inhibited by ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonists (APV and DNQX) and completely blocked by phospholipase A2 (PLA2) inhibitor (MAFP), suggesting that the release of AA occurred by glutamate receptor-mediated activation of PLA2. The potential use of the present sensor for detecting local concentration of AA at various neuronal sites is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Simultaneous monitoring of amperometric currents at a glass capillary sensor based on recombinant GluOx and field excitatory postsynaptic potentials (fEPSPs) were performed in region CA1 of mouse hippocampal slices. A transient increase in the glutamate current relative to the basal one at control stimulation (0.052Hz) was evoked by stimulation at 2 Hz for 2 min. The magnitude of the glutamate current was dependent on the intensity (current) of a 2 Hz stimulus and reflected the slope of the fEPSP. The in situ calibration of the L-glutamate sensor revealed that the extracellular concentration of L-glutamate released by 2 Hz stimulation before tetanus is in the range from 0.8 to 2.2 μM and it is enhanced after tetanic stimulation. The L-glutamate level at a test stimulus (0.052 Hz) was estimated to be 32 nM. The recombinant GluOx-based sensor exhibited weak responses to glutamine above 300 μM and L-aspartic acid above 200 μM. The potential use of a glass capillary sensor in combination with fEPSP measurements for electrophysiological study is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Hippocampal noradrenergic and cerebellar glutamatergic granule cell axon terminals possess GABA(A) receptors mediating enhancement of noradrenaline and glutamate release, respectively. The hippocampal receptor is benzodiazepine-sensitive, whereas the cerebellar one is not affected by benzodiazepine agonists, indicating the presence of an alpha6 subunit. We tested here the effects of Zn2+ on these two native GABA(A) receptor subtypes using superfused rat hippocampal and cerebellar synaptosomes. In the cerebellum, zinc ions strongly inhibited (IC50 approximately 1 microM) the potentiation of the K(+)-evoked [3H]D-aspartate release induced by GABA. In contrast, the GABA-evoked release of [3H]noradrenaline from hippocampal synaptosomes was much less sensitive to Zn2+ (IC50 > 30 microM). The effects of Zn2+ were then studied in two rat lines selected for high (ANT) and low (AT) alcohol sensitivity because granule cell GABA(A) receptors in ANT, but not AT, rats respond to benzodiazepine agonists due to a critical mutation in the alpha6 subunit. GABA increased the K(+)-evoked release of [3H]DCNS REGIONS-aspartate from cerebellar synaptosomes of AT and ANT rats, an effect prevented by the GABAA selective antagonist bicuculline. In AT rat cerebellum, the effect of GABA was strongly inhibited by Zn2+ (IC50 < or = 1 microM), whereas in ANT rats, the divalent cation was about 100-fold less potent. Thus, native benzodiazepine-sensitive GABAA receptors appear largely insensitive to functional inhibition by Zn2+ and vice versa. Changes in sensitivity to Zn2+ inhibition consequent to mutations in cerebellar granule cell GABA(A) receptor subunits may lead to changes in glutamate release from parallel fibers onto Purkinje cells and may play important roles in cerebellar dysfunctions.  相似文献   

4.
We present an overview of the long-term adaptation of hippocampal neurotransmission to cholinergic and GABAergic deafferentation caused by excitotoxic lesion of the medial septum. Two months after septal microinjection of 2.7 nmol alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate (AMPA), a 220% increase of GABA(A) receptor labelling in the hippocampal CA3 and the hilus was shown, and also changes in hippocampal neurotransmission characterised by in vivo microdialysis and HPLC. Basal amino acid and purine extracellular levels were studied in control and lesioned rats. In vivo effects of 100 mm KCl perfusion and adenosine A(1) receptor blockade with 1,3-dipropyl-8-cyclopentylxanthine (DPCPX) on their release were also investigated. In lesioned animals GABA, glutamate and glutamine basal levels were decreased and taurine, adenosine and uric acid levels increased. A similar response to KCl infusion occurred in both groups except for GABA and glutamate, which release decreased in lesioned rats. Only in lesioned rats, DPCPX increased GABA basal level and KCl-induced glutamate release, and decreased glutamate turnover. Our results evidence that an excitotoxic septal lesion leads to increased hippocampal GABA(A) receptors and decreased glutamate neurotransmission. In this situation, a co-ordinated response of hippocampal retaliatory systems takes place to control neuron excitability.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid on extracellular glutamate levels in the hippocampus was studied by microdialysis in freely moving rats and in isolated hippocampal synaptosomes. Intra-hippocampal (CA1) perfusion with gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (10 nM-1 mM) concentration-dependently influenced glutamate levels: gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (100 and 500 nM) increased glutamate levels; 100 and 300 microM concentrations were ineffective; whereas the highest 1 mM concentration reduced local glutamate levels. The stimulant effect of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (100 nM) was suppressed by the locally co-perfused gamma-hydroxybutyric acid receptor antagonist NCS-382 (10 microM) but not by the GABA(B) receptor antagonist CGP-35348 (500 microM). Furthermore, the gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (1 mM)-induced reduction in CA1 glutamate levels was counteracted by NCS-382 (10 microM), and it was also reversed into an increase by CGP-35348. Given alone, neither NCS-382 nor CGP-35348 modified glutamate levels. In hippocampal synaptosomes, gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (50 and 100 nM) enhanced both the spontaneous and K(+)-evoked glutamate efflux, respectively, both effects being counteracted by NCS-382 (100 nM), but not by CGP-35348 (100 microM). These findings indicate that gamma-hydroxybutyric acid exerts a concentration-dependent regulation of hippocampal glutamate transmission via two opposing mechanisms, whereby a direct gamma-hydroxybutyric acid receptor mediated facilitation is observed at nanomolar gamma-hydroxybutyric acid concentrations, and an indirect GABA(B) receptor mediated inhibition predominates at millimolar concentrations.  相似文献   

6.
Previous observations have shown that gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor mechanisms modulate the release of noradrenaline (NA) in the median peptic nucleus (MnPO). The present study was carried out to investigate whether neural inputs from the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (OVLT) to the MnPO are involved in the GABAergic modulation of NA release in the MnPO area using in vivo microdialysis techniques. In urethane-anesthetized rats, electrical stimulation (5 and 10 microA, 10Hz) of the OVLT region, but not its surrounding region, significantly enhanced dialysate NA concentration in the MnPO area. The enhancement in the NA level caused by the OVLT region stimulation was significantly increased by perfusion with either bicuculline (10 microM), a GABA(A) receptor antagonist, or phaclofen (10 microM), a GABA(B) receptor antagonist, through a microdialysis probe. The amount of the antagonist-induced increase was much greater in the phaclofen-treated group than in the bicuculline-treated group. These results show that the OVLT region may exert both excitatory and inhibitory influences on the release of NA in the MnPO area, and imply that the inhibitory influence may be mediated through GABA(B) receptors rather than GABA(A) receptors.  相似文献   

7.
GABA(A)-mediated toxicity of hippocampal neurons in vitro   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In the present study, we examined whether the elevation of GABA by gamma-vinyl-GABA protects cultured rat fetal hippocampal neurons against toxicity induced by a 20-min incubation with 100 microM L-glutamate. Neither a 24-h pretreatment nor posttreatment with gamma-vinyl-GABA (100 microM) had any neuroprotective effects, as determined by counting microtubule-associated protein-2 positive cells and lactate dehydrogenase assay 24 h after the glutamate treatment. Unexpectedly, gamma-vinyl-GABA alone induced a 20% loss of microtubule-associated protein-2-positive cells in a culture that was grown in medium containing 25 mM KCl. The toxic effect of gamma-vinyl-GABA was mimicked by a 24-h treatment with GABA (100 microM) and the GABA(A) receptor agonist, muscimol (10 microM), but not the GABA(B) receptor agonist, baclofen (10 microM). The GABA(A) receptor antagonist, bicuculline (10 microM), protected against gamma-vinyl-GABA and GABA-evoked toxicity. Neither gamma-vinyl-GABA nor GABA was toxic in culture medium containing 15 mM KCl. These data indicate that, under depolarizing conditions, an increased GABA level is toxic for a subpopulation of developing hippocampal neurons in vitro. The effect is GABA(A) receptor-mediated. These data provide a new view for understanding neurodegenerative processes, and raise a question of the safety of therapies aimed at increasing GABA concentration following brain insults, especially in immature brains.  相似文献   

8.
In the assay of glutamate and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) with a high-performance liquid chromatography, spontaneous release of glutamate and GABA from rat hippocampal slices was significantly enhanced by mecamylamine, an inhibitor of non-alpha7 ACh receptors, or alpha-bungarotoxin, an inhibitor of alpha7 ACh receptors in the absence of tetrodotoxin (TTX), but not in the presence of TTX. Nicotine significantly enhanced glutamate and GABA release in the absence of TTX, that is abolished by mecamylamine or alpha-bungarotoxin, while it had no effect on the release in the presence of TTX. In the recording of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid (AMPA) receptor-mediated excitatory postsynaptic currents (AMPA-EPSCs) and GABA(A) receptor-mediated inhibitory postsynaptic currents (GABA(A)-IPSCs) from CA1 pyramidal neurons of rat hippocampal slices, nicotine did not affect the rate and amplitude of AMPA-EPSCs and AMPA-miniature EPSCs. In contrast, nicotine significantly increased the rate of GABA(A)-IPSCs, without affecting the amplitude, but such effect was not obtained with GABA(A)-miniature IPSCs. The collective results suggest that alpha7 and non-alpha7 ACh receptors expressed in the hippocampus, activated under the basal conditions, inhibit release of glutamate and GABA controlled through multi-synaptic relays, but that otherwise, those receptors, highly activated by nicotine, stimulate both the release, with a part of GABA released from interneurons transmitting to CA1 pyramidal neurons. Furthermore, the results also suggest that alpha7 and non-alpha7 ACh receptors do not have potency sufficiently to modulate glutamate and GABA release controlled by single synapses.  相似文献   

9.
Glutamate and/or aspartate is the probable transmitter released from synaptic terminals of the CA3-derived Schaffer collateral, commissural, and ipsilateral associational fibers in area CA1 of the rat hippocampal formation. Slices of the CA1 area were employed to test the effects of adenosine- and gamma-aminobutyrate (GABA)-related compounds on the release of glutamate and aspartate from this projection. Under the conditions of these experiments, the release of glutamate and aspartate evoked by 50 mM K+ was more than 90% Ca2+-dependent and originated predominantly from the CA3-derived pathways. Adenosine reduced the K+-evoked release of glutamate and aspartate by a maximum of about 60%, but did not affect the release of GABA. This action was reversed by 1 microM 8-phenyltheophylline. The order of potency for adenosine analogues was as follows: L-N6-phenylisopropyladenosine greater than N6-cyclohexyladenosine greater than D-N6-phenylisopropyladenosine approximately equal to 2-chloroadenosine greater than adenosine much greater than 5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine. 8-Phenyltheophylline (10 microM) by itself enhanced glutamate/aspartate release, whereas dipyridamole alone depressed release. These results support the view that adenosine inhibits transmission at Schaffer collateral-commissural-ipsilateral associational synapses mainly by reducing transmitter release and that these effects involve the activation of an A1 receptor. Neither adenosine, L-N6-phenylisopropyladenosine, nor 8-phenyltheophylline affected the release of glutamate or aspartate evoked by 10 microM veratridine. The differing effects of adenosine compounds on release evoked by K+ and veratridine suggest that A1 receptor activation either inhibits Ca2+ influx through the voltage-sensitive channels or interferes with a step subsequent to Ca2+ entry that is coupled to the voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels in an obligatory fashion. Neither baclofen nor any other agent active at GABAB or GABAA receptors affected glutamate or aspartate release evoked by elevated K+ or veratridine. Therefore, either baclofen does not inhibit transmission at these synapses by depressing transmitter release or else it does so in a way that cannot be detected when a chemical depolarizing agent is employed.  相似文献   

10.
A strong linkage between adrenergic and glutamatergic systems exists in the CNS but it is still unclear whether the excessive release of noradrenaline under ischemic conditions is modulated by excitatory amino acids. We studied the effect of selective glutamate receptor antagonists on the release of [3H]noradrenaline evoked by glucose and oxygen deprivation in hippocampal CA1, CA3 and dentate gyrus subregions. The release of glutamate, aspartate and GABA was measured by HPLC. Omission of oxygen and glucose increased the release of [3H]noradrenaline as well as the release of amino acids. Maximum effect on noradrenaline release was observed in CA1 region. The relative increase of the release after 30 min energy deprivation (R(2)) versus the basal release under normal conditions (R(1)), i.e. the R(2)/R(1) ratio was 7.1+/-1.0, 3.87+/-0.4 and 3.26+/-0.27 for CA1, CA3 and dentate gyrus, respectively. The [3H]noradrenaline outflow in response to glucose and oxygen deprivation was abolished at low temperature, but not by Ca(2+) removal, suggesting a cytoplasmic release process. In CA1 and CA3 [3H]noradrenaline release was significantly attenuated by MK-801, an NMDA receptor antagonist. The AMPA receptor antagonist GYKI-53784 had no effect in CA3, but partly reduced noradrenaline release in CA1.Our results suggest that ionotropic glutamate receptors seem to be implicated in the massive cytoplasmic release of noradrenaline in CA1 what may contribute to its selective vulnerability.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The involvement of glutamate receptors in GABA release in ischemia was investigated in hippocampal slices from adult (3-month-old) and developing (7-day-old) mice. For in vitro ischemia, the slices were superfused in glucose-free media under nitrogen. Ionotropic glutamate receptor agonists failed to affect the ischemia-induced basal GABA release at either age. The K(+)-stimulated release in the immature hippocampus was potentiated by N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, whereas in adults this release was reduced by both kainate and 2-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazoleproprionate receptor activation. The group I metabotropic receptor agonist (1+/-)-1-aminocyclopentane-trans-1,3-dicarboxylate enhanced the basal ischemic GABA release in a receptor-mediated manner in adults, this being concordant with the positive modulation of GABAergic neurotransmission by group I metabotropic glutamate receptors. (1 +/-)-1-Aminocyclopentane-trans-1,3-dicarboxylate and (S)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine also enhanced the K(+)-stimulated release in the developing hippocampus in a receptor-mediated manner. Because group I receptors generally increase neuronal excitability, the enhanced GABA release may attenuate hyperexcitation or strengthen inhibition, being thus neuroprotective, particularly under ischemic conditions. Group III metabotropic glutamate receptors were not at all involved in ischemic GABA release in the immature mice, but in adults their activation by O-phospho-L-serine potentiated the basal release and reduced the K(+)-stimulated release. These opposite effects were abolished by the antagonist (RS)-2-cyclopropyl-4-phosphonophenylglycine. Metabotropic glutamate receptors, namely group I and III receptors, are able to modify the release of GABA from hippocampal slices under ischemic conditions, both positive and negative effects being discernible, depending on the age and type of receptor activated.  相似文献   

13.
Li H  Nowak LM  Gee KR  Hess GP 《Biochemistry》2002,41(15):4753-4759
Ionotropic glutamate receptors are members of a large family of plasma membrane proteins expressed by cells of the nervous system. Upon binding glutamate, the receptors transiently open transmembrane channels that allow the entry of sodium ions. The resulting changes in the transmembrane potential of the cell initiates a process that is involved in signal transmission to another cell. The binding of glutamic acid triggers the channel opening in the microsecond time domain and the reversible inactivation (desensitization) of the receptors in the millisecond time region. The channel-opening mechanism of glutamate receptors was investigated in rat hippocampal neurons voltage-clamped to -60 mV at room temperature and pH 7.4. Two rapid chemical reaction techniques were used: (1) a cell-flow method with a 4-10 ms time resolution to apply L-glutamate and (2) a laser-pulse photolysis technique to release glutamate from gamma-O-(alpha-carboxy-2-nitrobenzyl)glutamate (alphaCNB-caged L-glutamate) with a time constant of 30 micros. The rate and equilibrium constants for channel opening were determined. The results are consistent with the receptor binding two molecules of glutamic acid before the channel opens, with an apparent dissociation constant of 600 microM. Channel opening and closing rate constants, k(op) and k(cl), were determined to be (9.5 +/- 1) x 10(3) s(-1) and (1.1 +/- 0.1) x 10(3) s(-1), respectively. The value of the channel-opening equilibrium constant, Phi (=k(op)/k(cl)), was 8.6 when determined by laser-pulse photolysis and 6.6 in cell-flow experiments. The results suggest that there are at least two forms of glutamate receptors in rat hippocampal neurons that desensitize with different rates. At a concentration of 500 microM glutamate, 80% of the receptors desensitized with a rate of approximately 200 s(-1) and 20% with a rate of approximately 50 s(-1).  相似文献   

14.
T Mennini  A Miari 《Life sciences》1991,49(4):283-292
Serotonin (5-HT) added in vitro (10 microM) increased [3H]-glutamate specific binding in the rat hippocampus, reaching statistical significance in layers rich in N-Methyl-D-Aspartate sensitive glutamate receptors. This effect was explained by a significant increase in the apparent affinity of [3H]-glutamate when 5-HT is added in vitro. Two days after lesion of serotonergic afferents to the hippocampus with 5,7-Dihydroxytryptamine [3H]-glutamate binding was significantly decreased in the CA3 region and stratum lacunosum moleculare of the hippocampus, this reduction being reversed by in vitro addition of 10 microM 5-HT. The decrease observed is due to a significant reduction of quisqualate-insensitive (radiatum CA3) and kainate receptors (strata oriens, radiatum, pyramidal of CA3). Five days after lesion [3H]-glutamate binding increased significantly in the CA3 region of the hippocampus but was not different from sham animals in the other hippocampal layers. Two weeks after lesion [3H]-glutamate binding to quisqualate-insensitive receptors was increased in all the hippocampal layers, while kainate and quisqualate-sensitive receptors were not affected. These data are consistent with the possibility that 5-HT is a direct positive modulator of glutamate receptor subtypes.  相似文献   

15.
The excitatory glutamate analogs quisqualate and ibotenate were employed to distinguish multiple binding sites for L-[3H]glutamate on freshly prepared hippocampal synaptic membranes. The fraction of bound radioligand that was displaceable by 5 microM quisqualate was termed GLU A binding. That which persisted in the presence of 5 microM quisqualate, but was displaceable by 100 microM ibotenate, was termed GLU B binding. GLU A binding equilibrated within 5 min and remained unchanged for up to 80 min. GLU B binding appeared to equilibrate at least as rapidly, but incubation with ligand unmasked latent binding sites. Saturation binding curves were best fitted by single exponentials, which yielded KD values of about 200 nM (GLU A) and 1 microM (GLU B). On the average, GLU B binding sites were about twice as abundant in these membranes as were GLU A sites. Rapid freezing of the membranes, followed by storage at -26 degrees C and rapid thawing markedly diminished GLU A binding, but nearly tripled GLU B binding. Both site bound L-glutamate with 10-30 times the affinity of D-glutamate. The GLU A site also bound L-glutamate with about 10 times the affinity of L-aspartate and discriminated poorly between L- and D-aspartate. In contrast, the GLU B site bound L-aspartate with an affinity similar to that for L-glutamate, and with an order-of-magnitude greater affinity than D-aspartate. The structural specificities of the GLU A and GLU B binding sites suggest that these sites may correspond to receptors on hippocampal pyramidal cell dendrites that are activated by iontophoretically applied L-glutamate.  相似文献   

16.
In order to assess a role of 5-HT(1B) receptors for regulation of GABA transmission in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), VTA slices from the rat were incubated with [(3)H]GABA and beta-alanine, and superfused in the presence of nipecotic acid and aminooxyacetic acid. [(3)H]GABA release was induced by exposures to the medium containing 30 mM potassium for 2 min. The results showed that high potassium-evoked [(3)H]GABA release was sensitive to calcium withdrawal or blockade of sodium channels by tetrodotoxin, suggesting that tritium overflow induced by high potassium derived largely from neuronal stores. Administration of CP 93129 (0.15 and 0.45 microM), a 5-HT(1B) receptor agonist, or RU 24969 (0.15 and 0.45 microM), a 5-HT(1B/1A) receptor agonist, but not 8-OH-DPAT (0.45 microM), a 5-HT(1A) receptor agonist, inhibited high potassium-evoked [(3)H]GABA release in a concentration-related manner. The RU 24969-induced inhibition of [(3)H]GABA release was antagonized by either SB 216641, a 5-H(1B) receptor antagonist, or cyanopindolol, a 5-HT(1B/1A) receptor antagonist, but not by WAY 100635, a 5-HT(1A) receptor antagonist. Pre-treatment with SB 216641 also antagonized CP 93129-induced inhibition of [(3)H]GABA release. The results support the hypothesis that 5-HT(1B) receptors within the VTA can function as heteroreceptors to inhibit GABA release.  相似文献   

17.
The purinergic P2X(7) receptor (P2X(7)R) can mediate glutamate release from cultured astrocytes. Using patch clamp recordings, we investigated whether P2X(7)Rs have the same action in hippocampal astrocytes in situ. We found that 2- and 3-O-(4-benzoylbenzoyl)ATP (BzATP), a potent, although unselective P2X(7)R agonist, triggers two different glutamate-mediated responses in CA1 pyramidal neurons; they are transient inward currents, which have the kinetic and pharmacological properties of previously described slow inward currents (SICs) due to Ca(2+)-dependent glutamate release from astrocytes, and a sustained tonic current. Although SICs were unaffected by P2X(7)Rs antagonists, the tonic current was inhibited, was amplified in low extracellular Ca(2+), and was insensitive to glutamate transporter and hemichannel inhibitors. BzATP triggered in astrocytes a large depolarization that was inhibited by P2X(7)R antagonists and amplified in low Ca(2+). In low Ca(2+) BzATP also induced lucifer yellow uptake into a subpopulation of astrocytes and CA3 neurons. Our results demonstrate that purinergic receptors other than the P2X(7)R mediate glutamate release that evokes SICs, whereas activation of a receptor that has features similar to the P2X(7)R, mediates a sustained glutamate efflux that generates a tonic current in CA1 neurons. This sustained glutamate efflux, which is potentiated under non-physiological conditions, may have important pathological actions in the brain.  相似文献   

18.
By monitoring changes in the cytosolic [Ca2+](i) and rates of juvenile hormone (JH) synthesis in response to L-glutamate agonists and antagonists, we identified and characterized glutamate receptor subtypes in corpus allatum (CA) cells of the cockroach, Diploptera punctata. During the first ovarian cycle, corpora allata exhibited a cycle of changes in sensitivity to L-glutamate correlated to cyclic changes in rates of JH synthesis. When exposed to 60 microM L-glutamate in vitro, the active corpora allata of day-4 mated females produced 60% more JH, while inactive corpora allata at other ages showed 10-20% stimulatory response. Pharmacological characterization using various L-glutamate receptor agonists and antagonists indicated that several ionotropic subtypes of L-glutamate receptors were present in the CA. The CA showed an increase in rates of JH synthesis in response to NMDA, kainate, and quisqualate, but not to AMPA in both L-15 medium and minimum incubation medium. In contrast, applications of the metabotropic receptor-specific agonist trans-ACPD failed to elicit a change in the cytosolic [Ca2+](i) and JH production.An elevation of cytosolic calcium concentration, followed by 20-30% rise in JH production, was observed when active CA cells were exposed to 10-40 microM kainate. Kainate had no stimulatory effect on JH synthesis in calcium-free medium. The kainate-induced JH synthesis was blocked by 20 microM CNQX but was not affected by 20 microM NBQX. Kainate-stimulated JH production was not suppressed by MK-801 (a specific blocker of NMDA-receptor channel), nor was NMDA-stimulated JH production affected by CNQX (a specific antagonist of kainate receptor). These data suggest that active CA cells are stimulated to synthesize more JH by a glutamate-induced calcium rise via NMDA-, kainate- and/or quisqualate-sensitive subtypes of ionotropic L-glutamate receptors. The metabotropic-subtype and ionotropic AMPA-subtype L-glutamate receptors are unlikely to be present on active CA cells.  相似文献   

19.
海马脑片盲法膜片钳全细胞记录技术   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Liu ZW  Li LJ  Liu CG 《生理学报》2001,53(5):405-408
本文较为详细地介绍了海马脑片盲法膜片钳全细胞记录技术,对其关键步骤和需要注意的问题进行了重点说明,同时对CA1区锥体神经元突触活动的特点,电压门控性Ca^2 通道以及谷氨酸(glutamate,Glu)γ-氨基丁酸(GABA)受体通道电流性质等进行了观察和分析,实验结果为采用海马脑片盲法膜片钳全细胞记录技术研究海马神经元离子通道动力学性质和中枢神经系统药物对突触活动的影响提供了可靠的依据。  相似文献   

20.
Na+-dependent uptake of L-[3H]proline was measured in a crude synaptosomal preparation from the entire rat hippocampal formation or from isolated hippocampal regions. Among hippocampal regions, Na+-dependent proline uptake was significantly greater in areas CA1 and CA2-CA3-CA4 than in the fascia dentata, whereas there was no marked regional difference in the distribution of Na+-dependent gamma-[14C]aminobutyric acid ([14C]GABA) uptake. A bilateral kainic acid lesion, which destroyed most of the CA3 hippocampal pyramidal cells, reduced Na+-dependent proline uptake by an average of 41% in area CA1 and 52% in area CA2-CA3-CA4, without affecting the Na+-dependent uptake of GABA. In the fascia dentata, neither proline nor GABA uptake was significantly altered. Kinetic studies suggested that hippocampal synaptosomes take up proline by both a high-affinity (KT = 6.7 microM) and a low-affinity (KT = 290 microM) Na+-dependent process, whereas L-[14C]glutamate is taken up predominantly by a high-affinity (KT = 6.1 microM) process. A bilateral kainic acid lesion reduced the Vmax of high-affinity proline uptake by an average of 72%, the Vmax of low-affinity proline uptake by 44%, and the Vmax of high affinity glutamate uptake by 43%, without significantly changing the affinity of the transport carriers for substrate. Ipsilateral-commissural projections of CA3 hippocampal pyramidal cells appear to possess nearly as great a capacity for taking up proline as for taking up glutamate, a probable transmitter of these pathways. Therefore proline may play an important role in transmission at synapses made by the CA3-derived Schaffer collateral, commissural, and ipsilateral associational fibers.  相似文献   

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