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1.
We have previously provided evidence for ATP-dependent glutamate uptake into synaptic vesicles, and, based upon the unique properties of the vesicular uptake system, we have proposed that the vesicular glutamate translocator plays a crucial role in selecting glutamate for neurotransmission. In this study, we have solubilized the vesicular glutamate uptake system, proposed to consist of at least a glutamate translocator and a proton pump Mg-ATPase, from rat brain synaptic vesicles, and reconstituted the functional ATP-dependent glutamate uptake system into liposomes. The glutamate uptake in the reconstituted system is dependent upon ATP, markedly potentiated by low millimolar concentrations of chloride and inhibited by agents known to dissipate electrochemical proton gradients. Moreover, it exhibited low affinity for glutamate (Km = 2 mM), yet high specificity for glutamate; thus, it did not recognize aspartate and other agents known to interact with glutamate receptors. These properties are indistinguishable from those observed in intact synaptic vesicles. The solubilized functional components of the glutamate uptake system, alone or as a complex, have been estimated to have a Stokes radius in the range of 69 to 84 A. The reconstitution experiments described here provide a functional assay for the solubilized vesicular glutamate uptake system and represent an initial step towards the purification of the glutamate translocator.  相似文献   

2.
The ATP-dependent uptake of L-glutamate into synaptic vesicles has been well characterized, implicating a key role for synaptic vesicles in glutamatergic neurotransmission. In the present study, we provide evidence that vesicular glutamate uptake is selectively inhibited by the peptide-containing halogenated ergot bromocriptine. It is the most potent inhibitor of the agents tested: the IC50 was determined to be 22 microM. The uptake was also inhibited by other ergopeptines such as ergotamine and ergocristine, but with less potency. Ergots devoid of the peptide moiety, however, such as ergonovine, lergotrile, and methysergide, had little or no effect. Although bromocriptine is known to elicit dopaminergic and serotonergic effects, its inhibitory effect on vesicular glutamate uptake was not mimicked by agents known to interact with dopamine and serotonin receptors. Kinetic data suggest that bromocriptine competes with glutamate for the glutamate binding site on the glutamate translocator. It is proposed that this inhibitor could be useful as a prototype probe in identifying and characterizing the vesicular glutamate translocator, as well as in developing a more specific inhibitor of the transport system.  相似文献   

3.
We have demonstrated previously that L-glutamate is taken up into isolated synaptic vesicles in an ATP-dependent manner, supporting the neurotransmitter role of this acidic amino acid. We now report that a nerve terminal cytosolic factor inhibits the ATP-dependent vesicular uptake of glutamate in a dose-dependent manner. This factor appears to be a protein with a molecular weight greater than 100,000, as estimated by size exclusion chromatography, and is precipitated by ammonium sulfate (40% saturation). The inhibitory factor is inactivated by heating to 100 degrees C. Proteolytic digestion of the ammonium sulfate fraction by trypsin or chymotrypsin did not reduce, but rather increased slightly, the inhibition of glutamate uptake. Unlike the native factor, the digest retained inhibitory activity after heating, suggesting that proteolytic digestion may generate active fragments. The inhibition of ATP-dependent vesicular glutamate uptake is not species-specific, as the factor obtained from both rat and bovine brains produced an equal degree of inhibition of glutamate uptake into vesicles of each species. These observations raise the possibility that vesicular uptake of glutamate may be regulated by an endogenous factor in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
The dependence of glutamate uptake on ATP-generated proton electrochemical potential was studied in a highly purified preparation of synaptic vesicles from rat brain. At low chloride concentration (4 mM), the proton pump present in synaptic vesicles generated a large membrane potential (inside-positive), associated with only minor acidification. Under these conditions, the rate of L-[3H]glutamate uptake was maximal. In addition, L-glutamate induced acidification of the vesicle interior. D-Glutamate produced only 40% of the effect, and L-aspartate or gamma-aminobutyric acid produced less than 5%. The initial rate of glutamate-induced acidification increased with increasing glutamate concentration. It was saturable and showed first-order kinetics (KM = 0.32 mM). Correspondingly, L-glutamate induced a small reduction in the membrane potential. The rate of ATP hydrolysis was unaffected. In comparison, glutamate had no effect on acidification or membrane potential in resealed membranes of chromaffin granules. At high chloride concentration (150 mM), the vesicular proton pump generated a large pH difference, associated with a small change in membrane potential. Under these conditions, uptake of L-[3H]glutamate by synaptic vesicles was low. For reconstitution, vesicle proteins were solubilized with the detergent sodium cholate, supplemented with brain phospholipids, and incorporated into liposomes. Proton pump and glutamate uptake activities of the proteoliposomes showed properties similar to those of intact vesicles indicating that the carrier was reconstituted in a functionally active form. It is concluded that glutamate uptake by synaptic vesicles is dependent on the membrane potential and that all components required for uptake are integral parts of the vesicle membrane.  相似文献   

5.
Rat brain synaptic vesicles exhibit ATP-dependent uptake of gamma-[3H]amino-n-butyric acid ([3H]GABA) and L-[3H]glutamate. After hypotonic shock, the highest specific activities of uptake of both L-glutamate and GABA were recovered in the 0.4 M fraction of a sucrose gradient. The uptakes of L-glutamate and GABA were inhibited by similar, but not identical, concentrations of the mitochondrial uncoupler carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone and the ionophores nigericin and gramicidin, but they were not inhibited by the K+ carrier valinomycin. N,N'-Dicyclohexyl-carbodiimide and N-ethylmaleimide, Mg2+-ATPase inhibitors, inhibited the GABA and L-glutamate uptakes similarly. Low concentrations of Cl- stimulated the vesicular uptake of L-glutamate but not that of GABA. The uptakes of both L-glutamate and GABA were inhibited by high concentrations of Cl-. These results indicate that the vesicular GABA and L-glutamate uptakes are driven by an electrochemical proton gradient generated by a similar Mg2+-ATPase. The vesicular uptake mechanisms are discussed in relation to other vesicle uptake systems.  相似文献   

6.
The ATP-dependent glutamate uptake system in synaptic vesicles prepared from mouse cerebellum was characterized, and the levels of glutamate uptake were investigated in the cerebellar mutant mice, staggerer and weaver, whose main defect is the loss of cerebellar granule cells, and the nervous mutant, whose main defect is the loss of Purkinje cells. The ATP-dependent glutamate uptake is stimulated by low concentrations of chloride, is insensitive to aspartate, and is inhibited by agents known to dissipate the electrochemical proton gradient. These properties are similar to those of the glutamate uptake system observed in the highly purified synaptic vesicles prepared from bovine cortex. The ATP-dependent glutamate uptake system is reduced by 68% in the staggerer and 57-67% in the weaver mutant; these reductions parallel the substantial loss of granule cells in those mutants. In contrast, the cerebellar levels of glutamate uptake are not altered significantly in the nervous mutant, which has lost Purkinje cells, but not granule cells. In view of evidence that granule cells are glutamatergic neurons and Purkinje cells are GABAergic neurons, these observations support the notion that the ATP-dependent glutamate uptake system is present in synaptic vesicles of glutamatergic neurons.  相似文献   

7.
Energy coupling of L-glutamate transport in brain synaptic vesicles has been studied. ATP-dependent acidification of the bovine brain synaptic vesicles was shown to require CI-, to be accelerated by valinomycin and to be abolished by ammonium sulfate, nigericin or CCCP plus valinomycin, and K+. On the other hand, ATP-driven formation of a membrane potential (positive inside) was found to be stimulated by ammonium sulfate, not to be affected by nigericin and to be abolished by CCCP plus valinomycin and K+. Like formation of a membrane potential, ATP-dependent L-[3H]glutamate uptake into vesicles was stimulated by ammonium sulfate, not affected by nigericin and abolished by CCCP plus valinomycin and K+. The L-[3H]glutamate uptake differed in specificity from the transport system in synaptic plasma membranes. Both ATP-dependent H+ pump activity and L-glutamate uptake were inhibited by bafilomycin and cold treatment (common properties of vacuolar H(+)-ATPase). ATP-dependent acidification in the presence of L-glutamate was also observed, suggesting that L-glutamate uptake lowered the membrane potential to drive further entry of H+. These results were consistent with the notion that the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase of synpatic vesicles formed a membrane potential to drive L-glutamate uptake. ATPase activity of the vesicles was not affected by the addition of Cl-, glutamate or nigericin, indicating that an electrochemical H+ gradient had no effect on the ATPase activity.  相似文献   

8.
P R Maycox  T Deckwerth    R Jahn 《The EMBO journal》1990,9(5):1465-1469
Active accumulation of neurotransmitters by synaptic vesicles is an essential component of the synaptic transmission cycle. Isolated vesicles show energy-dependent uptake of several transmitters by processes which are apparently mediated by a proton electrochemical potential across the vesicle membrane. Although this energy gradient is probably generated by a proton ATPase, the functional separation of ATP cleavage and transmitter uptake activity has only been shown clearly for monoamine transport. We report here that the light-driven proton pump, bacteriorhodopsin, can replace the endogenous proton ATPase in proteoliposomes reconstituted from vesicular detergent extracts. The system shows light-dependent uptake of glutamate with properties very similar to those observed in intact vesicles, e.g. chloride dependence or stimulation by NH4+. Our experiments show that the proton pump and the glutamate transporter are separate entities and provide a powerful tool for further characterization of the glutamate carrier.  相似文献   

9.
Glutamate is the major excitatory neurotransmitter in the mammalian central nervous system. Packaging and storage of glutamate into glutamatergic neuronal vesicles requires ATP-dependent vesicular glutamate uptake systems, which utilize the electrochemical proton gradient as a driving force. VGLUT1, the first identified vesicular glutamate transporter, is only expressed in a subset of glutamatergic neurons. We report here the molecular cloning and functional characterization of a novel glutamate transporter, VGLUT2, from mouse brain. VGLUT2 has all major functional characteristics of a synaptic vesicle glutamate transporter, including ATP dependence, chloride stimulation, substrate specificity, and substrate affinity. It has 75 and 79% amino acid identity with human and rat VGLUT1, respectively. However, expression patterns of VGLUT2 in brain are different from that of VGLUT1. In addition, VGLUT2 activity is dependent on both membrane potential and pH gradient of the electrochemical proton gradient, whereas VGLUT1 is primarily dependent on only membrane potential. The presence of VGLUT2 in brain regions lacking VGLUT1 suggests that the two isoforms together play an important role in vesicular glutamate transport in glutamatergic neurons.  相似文献   

10.
Glutamate, the major excitatory neurotransmitter in the mammalian central nervous system, is transported into bovine synaptic vesicles in a manner that is ATP dependent and requires a vesicular electrochemical proton gradient. We studied the electrical and chemical elements of this driving force and evaluated the effects of chloride on transport. Increasing concentrations of Cl- were found to increase the steady-state ATP-dependent vesicular pH gradient (delta pH) and were found to concomitantly decrease the vesicular membrane potential (delta psi). Low millimolar chloride concentrations, which cause 3-6-fold stimulation of vesicular glutamate uptake, caused small but measurable increases in delta pH and decreases in delta psi, when compared to control vesicles in the absence of chloride. Nigericin in potassium buffers was used to alter the relative proportions of delta pH and delta psi. Compared to controls, at all chloride concentrations tested, nigericin virtually abolished delta pH and increased the vesicle interior positive delta psi. Concomitantly, nigericin increased ATP-dependent glutamate uptake in 0-1 mM chloride but decreased glutamate uptake in 4 mM (45%), 20 mM (80%), and 140 mM (75%) Cl- (where delta pH in the absence of nigericin was large). These findings suggest that either delta psi, delta pH, or a combination can drive glutamate uptake, but to different degrees. In the presence of 4 mM Cl-, where uptake is optimal, both delta psi and delta pH contribute to the driving force for uptake. When the extravesicular pH was increased from 7.4 to 8.0, more Cl- was required to stimulate vesicular glutamate uptake. In the absence of Cl-, as extravesicular pH was lowered to 6.8, uptake was over 3-fold greater than it was at pH 7.4. As extravesicular pH was reduced from 8.0 toward 6.8, less Cl- was required for maximal stimulation. Decreasing the extravesicular pH from 8.0 to 6.8 in the absence of Cl- significantly increased glutamate uptake activity, even though proton-pumping ATPase activity actually decreased about 45% under identical conditions. In the absence of chloride, nigericin increased glutamate uptake at all the pH values tested except pH 8.0. Glutamate uptake at pH 6.8 in the presence of nigericin was over 6-fold greater than uptake at pH 7.4 in the absence of nigericin. We conclude from these experiments that optimal ATP-dependent glutamate uptake requires a large delta psi and a small delta pH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Glutamate uptake into synaptic vesicles is driven by a proton electrochemical gradient generated by a vacuolar H(+)-ATPase and stimulated by physiological concentrations of chloride. This uptake plays an important role in glutamatergic transmission. We show here that vesicular glutamate uptake is selectively inhibited by guanine derivatives, in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Guanosine, GMP, GDP, guanosine-5'-O-2-thiodiphosphate, GTP, or 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate (GppNHp) inhibited glutamate uptake in 1.5 and 3 min incubations, however, when incubating for 10 min, only GTP or GppNHp displayed such inhibition. By increasing ATP concentrations, the inhibitory effect of GTP was no longer observed, but GppNHp still inhibited glutamate uptake. In the absence of ATP, vesicular ATPase can hydrolyze GTP in order to drive glutamate uptake. However, 5mM GppNHp inhibited ATP hydrolysis by synaptic vesicle preparations. GTP or GppNHp decreased the proton electrochemical gradient, whereas the other guanine derivatives did not. Glutamate saturation curves were assayed in order to evaluate the specificity of inhibition of the vesicular glutamate carrier by the guanine derivatives. The maximum velocity of the initial rate of glutamate uptake was decreased by all guanine derivatives. These results indicate that, although GppNHp can inhibit ATPase activity, guanine derivatives are more likely to be acting through interaction with vesicular glutamate carrier.  相似文献   

12.
Protein I is a neuron-specific, synaptic phosphoprotein highly localized on the surface of synaptic vesicles. We have recently isolated anti-Protein I IgG by affinity chromatography and shown that these antibodies inhibit specifically the phosphorylation of Protein I (Naito, S., and Ueda, T. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 10657-10663). In an effort to characterize Protein I-associated synaptic vesicles with respect to the types of neurotransmitters, we have now developed a procedure, using the affinity-purified anti-Protein I IgG, which allows immunoprecipitation of those synaptic vesicles which contain Protein I. The isolated vesicles are largely free of contamination from other intracellular organelles and plasma membranes. We present evidence that these vesicles isolated from bovine cortex are able to accumulate L-glutamate specifically in an ATP-dependent, temperature-dependent but Na-independent manner. Thus, the structurally similar aminoacid neurotransmitters aspartate and gamma-aminobutyric acid, as well as other neurotransmitters such as dopamine, norepinephrine, serotonin, acetylcholine, and glycine, failed to show a significant ATP-dependent uptake into these vesicles. Moreover, the ATP-dependent glutamate uptake was not inhibited effectively by glutamine, aspartate, or gamma-aminobutyric acid. The ATP-dependent glutamate uptake requires ATP hydrolysis; thus there was little accumulation of glutamate in the absence of ATP or Mg2+, or when ATP was replaced by an unhydrolyzable beta, gamma-methylene ATP analog. The glutamate uptake appears to be driven at least in part by a membrane potential generated by Mg2+-ATPase, similar to that of the catecholamine and serotonin uptakes into storage granules. These observations suggest that Protein I may be involved in some aspect of the function of glutamate-containing synaptic vesicles in the brain.  相似文献   

13.
The energy dependence of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) uptake was characterized in rat brain synaptic vesicles and in proteoliposomes reconstituted with a new procedure from vesicular detergent extracts. The proteoliposomes displayed high ATP-dependent GABA uptake activity with properties virtually identical to those of intact vesicles. GABA uptake was similar at chloride concentrations of 0 and 150 mM, i.e. conditions under which either the membrane potential (delta psi) or the pH difference (delta pH) predominates. Delta psi was gradually dissipated by increasing the concentration of SCN-. GABA uptake was reduced by 10 mM SCN-, showing less sensitivity to delta psi reduction than glutamate uptake but more than dopamine uptake. Dissipation of delta pH with NH+4 abolished GABA uptake at pH 7.3, whereas no significant inhibition occurred at pH 6.5. In contrast, dopamine uptake was inhibited more strongly, even at pH 6.5, and glutamate uptake was not reduced in either condition. We conclude that GABA uptake is driven by both components of the proton electrochemical gradient, delta pH and delta psi, and that this is different from the uptake of both dopamine and glutamate, which is more strongly dependent on delta pH and delta psi, respectively. Thus, our data suggest that GABA uptake is electrogenic and occurs in exchange for protons.  相似文献   

14.
Maple syrup urine disease is a metabolic disorder caused by mutations of the branched chain keto acid dehydrogenase complex, leading to accumulation of alpha-keto acids and their amino acid precursors in the brain. We now report that alpha-ketoisovaleric, alpha-keto-beta-methyl-n-valeric and alpha-ketoisocaproic acids accumulated in the disease inhibit glutamate uptake into rat brain synaptic vesicles. The alpha-keto acids did not affect the electrochemical proton gradient across the membrane, suggesting that they interact directly with the vesicular glutamate carrier. Chloride anions have a biphasic effect on glutamate uptake. Low concentrations activate the uptake (0.2 to 8 mM), while higher concentrations are inhibitory. The alpha-keto acids inhibited glutamate uptake by a new mechanism, involving a change in the chloride dependence for the activation of glutamate uptake. The activation of glutamate uptake by low chloride concentrations was shifted toward higher concentrations of the anion in the presence of alpha-keto acids. Inhibition by alpha-keto acids was abolished at high chloride concentrations (20 to 80 mM), indicating that alpha-keto acids specifically change the stimulatory effect of low chloride concentrations. High glutamate concentrations also reduced the inhibition by alpha-keto acids, an effect observed both in the absence and in the presence of low chloride concentrations. The results suggest that in addition to their possible pathophysiological role in maple syrup urine disease, alpha-keto acids are valuable tools to study the mechanism of vesicular transport of glutamate.  相似文献   

15.
It had been thought that quantal size in synaptic transmission is invariable. Evidence has been emerging, however, that quantal size can be varied under certain conditions. We present evidence that alteration in vesicular [(3)H]L-glutamate (Glu) content within the synaptosome (a pinched-off nerve ending preparation) leads to a change in the amount of exocytotically released [(3)H]Glu. We found that Rose Bengal, a polyhalogenated fluorescein derivative, is a quite potent membrane-permeant inhibitor (K(i) = 19 nM) of glutamate uptake into isolated synaptic vesicles. This vesicular Glu uptake inhibition was achieved largely without affecting H(+)-pump ATPase. We show that various degrees of reduction elicited by Rose Bengal in [(3)H]Glu in synaptic vesicles inside the synaptosome result in a corresponding decrease in the amount of [(3)H]Glu released in a depolarization- (induced by 4-aminopyridine) and Ca(2+)-dependent manner. In contrast, fluorescein, the halogen-free analog of Rose Bengal, which is devoid of inhibitory activity on vesicular [(3)H]Glu uptake, failed to change the amount of exocytotically released [(3)H]Glu. These observations suggest that glutamate synaptic transmission could be altered by pharmacological intervention of glutamate uptake into synaptic vesicles in the nerve terminal, a new mode of synaptic manipulation for glutamate transmission.  相似文献   

16.
The ATP-stimulated accumulation of L-[3H]glutamate by whole brain synaptic vesicle preparations from long-sleep and short-sleep mice, lines selectively bred for difference in sleep time response to acute ethanol administration, was examined. L-[3H]Glutamate accumulation in vesicles from short-sleep mice was approximately twice that observed in vesicles from long-sleep mice at three glutamate loading concentrations. The vesicular content of endogenous L-glutamate in crude and enriched vesicle preparations from short-sleep mice was approximately 1.5-fold higher than in vesicles from long-sleep mice. The data suggest that L-glutamate associated with synaptic vesicles may serve a role in glutamate neurosecretion.  相似文献   

17.
Glutamate accumulation into synaptic vesicles is a pivotal step in glutamate transmission. This process is achieved by a vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT) coupled to v-type proton ATPase. Normal synaptic transmission, in particular during intensive neuronal firing, would demand rapid transmitter re-filling of emptied synaptic vesicles. We have previously shown that isolated synaptic vesicles are capable of synthesizing glutamate from α-ketoglutarate (not from glutamine) by vesicle-bound aspartate aminotransferase for immediate uptake, in addition to ATP required for uptake by vesicle-bound glycolytic enzymes. This suggests that local synthesis of these substances, essential for glutamate transmission, could occur at the synaptic vesicle. Here we provide evidence that synaptosomes (pinched-off nerve terminals) also accumulate α-ketoglutarate-derived glutamate into synaptic vesicles within, at the expense of ATP generated through glycolysis. Glutamine-derived glutamate is also accumulated into synaptic vesicles in synaptosomes. The underlying mechanism is discussed. It is suggested that local synthesis of both glutamate and ATP at the presynaptic synaptic vesicle would represent an efficient mechanism for swift glutamate loading into synaptic vesicles, supporting maintenance of normal synaptic transmission.  相似文献   

18.
Vesicular glutamate transporter is present in neuronal synaptic vesicles and endocrine synaptic-like microvesicles and is responsible for vesicular storage of L-glutamate. A brain-specific Na(+)-dependent inorganic phosphate transporter (BNPI) functions as a vesicular glutamate transporter in synaptic vesicles, and the expression of this BNPI defines the glutamatergic phenotype in the central nervous system (Bellocchio, E. E., Reimer, R. J., Fremeau, R. T., Jr., and Edwards, R. H. (2000) Science 289, 957-960; Takamori, S., Rhee, J. S., Rosenmund, C., and Jahn, R. (2000) Nature 407, 189-194). However, since not all glutamatergic neurons contain BNPI, an additional transporter(s) responsible for vesicular glutamate uptake has been postulated. Here we report that differentiation-associated Na(+)-dependent inorganic phosphate cotransporter (DNPI), an isoform of BNPI (Aihara, Y., Mashima, H., Onda, H., Hisano, S., Kasuya, H., Hori, T., Yamada, S., Tomura, H., Yamada, Y., Inoue, I., Kojima, I., and Takeda, J. (2000) J. Neurochem. 74, 2622-2625), also transports L-glutamate at the expense of an electrochemical gradient of protons established by the vacuolar proton pump when expressed in COS7 cells. Molecular, biological, and immunohistochemical studies have indicated that besides its presence in neuronal cells DNPI is preferentially expressed in mammalian pinealocytes, alphaTC6 cells, clonal pancreatic alpha cells, and alpha cells of Langerhans islets, these cells being proven to secrete L-glutamate through Ca(2+)-dependent regulated exocytosis followed by its vesicular storage. Pancreatic polypeptide-secreting F cells of Langerhans islets also expressed DNPI. These results constitute evidence that DNPI functions as another vesicular transporter in glutamatergic endocrine cells as well as in neurons.  相似文献   

19.
2-(4-Phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol (AH-5183) and 2-bromo-alpha-ergocryptine, known inhibitors of the transport of acetylcholine and L-glutamate, respectively, into synaptic vesicles, inhibited the ATP-dependent uptake of dopamine in parallel with the dissipation of the electrochemical gradient of protons in chromaffin granule membrane vesicles. These compounds induced the release of accumulated dopamine from the vesicles. They also inhibited the ATP-dependent formation of the electrochemical gradient of protons in liposomes reconstituted with chromaffin H(+)-ATPase without affecting the activities for ATP hydrolysis, and ATP-dependent uptakes of dopamine, gamma-aminobutyrate, and glutamate into synaptic vesicles. These results indicated that 2-(4-phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol and 2-bromo-alpha-ergocryptine acted as uncouplers in the secretory vesicles.  相似文献   

20.
Osteoclasts are involved in the catabolism of the bone matrix and eliminate the resulting degradation products through transcytosis, but the molecular mechanism and regulation of transcytosis remain poorly understood. Upon differentiation, osteoclasts express vesicular glutamate transporter 1 (VGLUT1), which is essential for vesicular storage and subsequent exocytosis of glutamate in neurons. VGLUT1 is localized in transcytotic vesicles and accumulates L-glutamate. Osteoclasts secrete L-glutamate and the bone degradation products upon stimulation with KCl or ATP in a Ca2+-dependent manner. KCl- and ATP-dependent secretion of L-glutamate was absent in osteoclasts prepared from VGLUT1-/- knockout mice. Osteoclasts express mGluR8, a class III metabotropic glutamate receptor. Its stimulation by a specific agonist inhibits secretion of L-glutamate and bone degradation products, whereas its suppression by a specific antagonist stimulates bone resorption. Finally, it was found that VGLUT1-/- mice develop osteoporosis. Thus, in bone-resorbing osteoclasts, L-glutamate and bone degradation products are secreted through transcytosis and the released L-glutamate is involved in autoregulation of transcytosis. Glutamate signaling may play an important role in the bone homeostasis.  相似文献   

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