Author:
NAPPER GENEVIEVE A.,PIANTA MICHAEL J.,KALLONIATIS MICHAEL
Abstract
Glutamate and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) are two of the
dominant neurotransmitters in the retina and brain. The
production/degradation of glutamate and GABA involves an intricate
interrelationship between neurons and glia, as well as aerobic
and anaerobic metabolic pathways. The aim of this work was to
develop an in vitro model of retinal ischemia/anoxia
and determine the changes in cellular localization of glutamate
and GABA and the time course for such changes. After
anoxic/ischemic insult, glutamate and GABA rapidly accumulate
within glia with GABA showing a quicker time course and larger
magnitude change. The accumulation time constant for both glutamate
and GABA under anoxic conditions was dependent upon glucose
concentration: high glucose levels resulted in delayed glial
amino acid loading. The differences in time constants between
GABA and glutamate glial loading most likely reflect the multitude
of glutamate degradation pathways compared to the single
aerobically dependent GABA pathway. Oxygen availability and
reduced glucose (hypoglycemia) lead to an almost immediate increase
(within 1 min) of glutamate and GABA labelling within glia.
In addition, altered labelling patterns were found under
anoxic/ischemic conditions for amino acids involved in glutamate
transamination reactions: aspartate, leucine, alanine, and
ornithine. These changes are consistent with alterations of
equilibria of enzymatic reactions involved in glutamate metabolism,
and thus support a role for all four amino acids in glutamate
metabolism within a variety of retinal neurons.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
34 articles.
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