Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Experimental Surgery Hadassah‐Hebrew University Medical Center, Mount Scopus Jerusalem Israel
2. Faculty of Medicine Hebrew University of Jerusalem Jerusalem Israel
3. Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA
4. Department of Neurological Surgery Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA
Abstract
AbstractNeurons in sensory ganglia are wrapped completely by satellite glial cells (SGCs). One putative function of SGCs is to regulate the neuronal microenvironment, but this role has received only little attention. In this study we investigated whether the SGC envelope serves a barrier function and how SGCs may control the neuronal microenvironment. We studied this question on short‐term (<24 h) cell cultures of dorsal root ganglia and trigeminal ganglia from adult mice, which contain neurons surrounded with SGCs, and neurons that are not. Using calcium imaging, we measured neuronal responses to molecules with established actions on sensory neurons. We found that neurons surrounded by SGCs had a smaller response to molecules such as adenosine triphosphate (ATP), glutamate, GABA, and bradykinin than neurons without glial cover. When we inhibited the activity of NTPDases, which hydrolyze the ATP, and also when we inhibited the glutamate and GABA transporters on SGCs, this difference in the neuronal response was no longer observed. We conclude that the SGC envelope does not hinder diffusional passage, but acts as a metabolic barrier that regulates the neuronal microenvironment, and can protect the neurons and modulate their activity.
Funder
Israel Science Foundation
United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation
Cited by
1 articles.
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