Literature DB >> 12562999

Glutamate modulation of GABA transport in retinal horizontal cells of the skate.

Matthew A Kreitzer1, Kristen A Andersen, Robert Paul Malchow.   

Abstract

Transport of the amino acid GABA into neurons and glia plays a key role in regulating the effects of GABA in the vertebrate retina. We have examined the modulation of GABA-elicited transport currents of retinal horizontal cells by glutamate, the likely neurotransmitter of vertebrate photoreceptors. Enzymatically isolated external horizontal cells of skate were examined using whole-cell voltage-clamp techniques. GABA (1 mM ) elicited an inward current that was completely suppressed by the GABA transport inhibitors tiagabine (10 microM) and SKF89976-A (100 microM), but was unaffected by 100 microM picrotoxin. Prior application of 100 microM glutamate significantly reduced the GABA-elicited current. Glutamate depressed the GABA dose-response curve without shifting the curve laterally or altering the voltage dependence of the current. The ionotropic glutamate receptor agonists kainate and AMPA also reduced the GABA-elicited current, and the effects of glutamate and kainate were abolished by the ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline. NMDA neither elicited a current nor modified the GABA-induced current, and metabotropic glutamate analogues were also without effect. Inhibition of the GABA-elicited current by glutamate and kainate was reduced when extracellular calcium was removed and when recording pipettes contained high concentrations of the calcium chelator BAPTA. Caffeine (5 mM) and thapsigargin (2 nM), agents known to alter intracellular calcium levels, also reduced the GABA-elicited current, but increases in calcium induced by depolarization alone did not. Our data suggest that glutamate regulates GABA transport in retinal horizontal cells through a calcium-dependent process, and imply a close physical relationship between calcium-permeable glutamate receptors and GABA transporters in these cells.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12562999      PMCID: PMC2342591          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.034421

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  47 in total

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5.  Ions required for the electrogenic transport of GABA by horizontal cells of the catfish retina.

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Review 10.  Sodium-coupled neurotransmitter transport: structure, function and regulation.

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