Literature DB >> 10947825

SDF-1alpha-mediated modulation of synaptic transmission in rat cerebellum.

C Limatola1, A Giovannelli, L Maggi, D Ragozzino, L Castellani, M T Ciotti, F Vacca, D Mercanti, A Santoni, F Eusebi.   

Abstract

The functional expression of the seven-transmembrane domain G protein-coupled chemokine receptor CXCR-4/fusin in rat nerve cell was demonstrated by staining with a polyclonal anti-CXCR-4 Ab, and by evaluating the calcium responses to the physiological agonist stromal-derived cell factor-1alpha (SDF-1alpha) in both cerebellar granule cells in culture and Purkinje neurons (PNs) in cerebellar slices. Cerebellar glial, granule and Purkinje cells showed a pronounced staining for CXCR-4. Furthermore, cultured granule cells exhibited Ca2+ transients elicited by the application of SDF-1alpha, both in cell bodies and in neuronal processes. Whole-cell patch-clamped PNs in cerebellar slices responded to SDF-1alpha application by a slow inward current followed by an increase of both intracellular Ca2+ level and spontaneous synaptic activity. In particular, the SDF-1alpha-induced slow inward current was considerably reduced by ionotropic glutamate receptor blockers, but developed fully in a medium in which synaptic transmission was inhibited, indicating that this current might be, at least in part, mediated by extrasynaptic glutamate, possibly released from the surrounding glial and/or nerve cells. Taken together, these findings indicate a functional involvement of CXCR-4 in the modulation of synaptic transmission, adding another member to the repertoire of the chemokine receptors exerting a neuromodulatory role in the cerebellum.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10947825     DOI: 10.1046/j.1460-9568.2000.00139.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Neurosci        ISSN: 0953-816X            Impact factor:   3.386


  32 in total

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Review 9.  Neuronal chemokines: versatile messengers in central nervous system cell interaction.

Authors:  A H de Haas; H R J van Weering; E K de Jong; H W G M Boddeke; K P H Biber
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10.  Reduced CXCL12/CXCR4 results in impaired learning and is downregulated in a mouse model of Alzheimer disease.

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