Literature DB >> 21150294

Swelling activated Cl- channels in microglia: Biophysics, pharmacology and role in glutamate release.

Lyanne C Schlichter1, Timothy Mertens, Baosong Liu.   

Abstract

Microglia have a swelling-activated Cl- current (which we call IClswell), and while some of its biophysical properties and functional roles have been elucidated, its molecular identity is unknown. To relate this current to cell functions and determine whether it is regulated by mechanisms other than cell swelling, it is important to establish both biophysical and pharmacological fingerprints. Here, we used rat microglia and a cell line derived from them (MLS-9) to study biophysical, regulatory and pharmacological properties of IClswell. The whole-cell current was activated in response to a hypo-osmotic bath solution, but not by voltage, and was time-independent during long voltage steps. The halide selectivity sequence was I->Br->Cl- (Eisenman sequence I) and importantly, the excitatory amino acid, glutamate was permeant. Current activation required internal ATP, and was not affected by the guanine nucleotides, GTPS or GDPS, or physiological levels of internal Mg2+. The same current was activated by a low intracellular ionic strength solution without an osmotic gradient. IClswell was reversibly inhibited by known Cl- channel blockers (NPPB, flufenamic acid, glibenclamide, DCPIB), and by the glutamate release inhibitor, riluzole. Cell swelling evoked glutamate release from primary microglia and MLS-9 cells, and this was inhibited by the blockers (above), and by IAA-94, but not by tamoxifen or the Na+/K+/Cl- symport inhibitor, bumetanide. Together, these results confirm the similarity of IClswell in the two cell types, and point to a role for this channel in inflammation-mediated glutamate release in the CNS.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21150294      PMCID: PMC3127054          DOI: 10.4161/chan.5.2.14310

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Channels (Austin)        ISSN: 1933-6950            Impact factor:   2.581


  48 in total

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  18 in total

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5.  Tamoxifen induces apoptosis of mouse microglia cell line BV-2 cells via both mitochondrial and death receptor pathways.

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Review 10.  Aquaporin 4: a player in cerebral edema and neuroinflammation.

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