Glutamate modulation of GABA transport in retinal horizontal cells of the skate
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....
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-02, Vol.546 (3), p.717-731 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 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 m m ) elicited an inward current that was completely suppressed by the GABA transport inhibitors tiagabine (10 μ m ) and SKF89976-A (100 μ m ), but was unaffected by 100 μ m picrotoxin. Prior application of 100 μ m 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 m m ) and thapsigargin (2 n m ), 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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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.034421 |