Author:
NAPPER GENEVIEVE A.,PIANTA MICHAEL J.,KALLONIATIS MICHAEL
Abstract
The high-affinity uptake of glutamate by glial
cells and neurons of the central nervous system, including
the retina, serves to inactivate synaptically released
glutamate and maintains glutamate at low concentrations
in the extracellular space. This uptake prevents accumulation
of glutamate extracellularly and thus minimizes the possibility
of glutamate neurotoxicity secondary to ischemic insult.
One mechanism whereby glutamate neurotoxicity may occur
in ischemic/hypoxic insult is through increased extracellular
K+ reversing the electrogenic glutamate uptake
into retinal glial (Müller) cells. We investigated
glial uptake of the amino acids glutamate, GABA, and D-aspartate
in the intact isolated rat retina under high extracellular
K+ conditions and under conditions simulating
ischemia. Immunocytochemical findings showed that uptake
of glutamate and GABA by Müller cells in the intact
isolated rat retina continues under conditions simulating
ischemia and high extracellular K+ conditions,
and uptake of D-aspartate also continues under high K+
conditions. However, under high K+ conditions,
the glutamate uptake system saturates at a lower concentration
of exogenous glutamate than in the normal K+
condition. These findings provide evidence that disruption
of glutamate uptake by Müller cells is likely to be
a significant contributing factor to excess glutamate accumulation
in the extracellular space which can lead to neurotoxicity.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
65 articles.
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