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Extracellular Glutamate Levels (extracellular + glutamate_level)
Selected AbstractsCocaine increases medial prefrontal cortical glutamate overflow in cocaine-sensitized rats: a time course studyEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 6 2004Jason M. Williams Abstract Excitatory amino acid transmission within mesocorticolimbic brain pathways is thought to play an important role in behavioural sensitization to psychomotor stimulants. The current studies evaluated a time course of the effects of cocaine on extracellular glutamate levels within the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) following increasing periods of withdrawal from repeated cocaine exposure. Male Sprague,Dawley rats underwent stereotaxic surgeries and were pretreated daily with saline (1 mL/kg/day × 4 days, i.p.) or cocaine (15 mg/kg/day × 4 days, i.p.) and withdrawn for 1, 7 or 30 days. After withdrawal rats were challenged with the same dose of saline or cocaine and in vivo microdialysis of the mPFC was conducted with concurrent analysis of locomotor activity. Animals that were withdrawn from repeated daily cocaine for 1 day and 7 days displayed an augmentation in cocaine-induced mPFC glutamate levels compared to saline and acute control subjects, which were similarly unaffected by cocaine challenge. At the 7 day time point, a subset of animals that received repeated cocaine did not express behavioural sensitization, nor did these animals exhibit the enhancement in mPFC glutamate in response to cocaine challenge. In contrast to these early effects, 30 days of withdrawal resulted in no significant changes in cocaine-induced mPFC glutamate levels regardless of the pretreatment or behavioural response. These data suggest that repeated cocaine administration transiently increases cocaine-induced glutamate levels in the mPFC during the first week of withdrawal, which may play an important role in the development of behavioural sensitization to cocaine. [source] High level of mGluR7 in the presynaptic active zones of select populations of GABAergic terminals innervating interneurons in the rat hippocampusEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 12 2003Peter Somogyi Abstract The release of neurotransmitters is modulated by presynaptic metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs), which show a highly selective expression and subcellular location in glutamatergic terminals in the hippocampus. Using immunocytochemistry, we investigated whether one of the receptors, mGluR7, whose level of expression is governed by the postsynaptic target, was present in GABAergic terminals and whether such terminals targeted particular cells. A total of 165 interneuron dendritic profiles receiving 466 synapses (82% mGluR7a-positive) were analysed. The presynaptic active zones of most GAD-(77%) or GABA-positive (94%) synaptic boutons on interneurons innervated by mGluR7a-enriched glutamatergic terminals (mGluR7a-decorated) were immunopositive for mGluR7a. GABAergic terminals on pyramidal cells and most other interneurons in str. oriens were mGluR7a-immunonegative. The mGluR7a-decorated cells were mostly somatostatin- and mGluR1,-immunopositive neurons in str. oriens and the alveus. Their GABAergic input mainly originated from VIP-positive terminals, 90% of which expressed high levels of mGluR7a in the presynaptic active zone. Parvalbumin-positive synaptic terminals were rare on mGluR7a-decorated cells, but on these neurons 73% of them were mGluR7a-immunopositive. Some type II synapses innervating interneurons were immunopositive for mGluR7b, as were some type I synapses. Because not all target cells of VIP-positive neurons are known it has not been possible to determine whether mGluR7 is expressed in a target-cell-specific manner in the terminals of single GABAergic cells. The activation of mGluR7 may decrease GABA release to mGluR7-decorated cells at times of high pyramidal cell activity, which elevates extracellular glutamate levels. Alternatively, the presynaptic receptor may be activated by as yet unidentified endogenous ligands released by the GABAergic terminals or the postsynaptic dendrites. [source] Behavioral and neurochemical phenotyping of Homer1 mutant mice: possible relevance to schizophreniaGENES, BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR, Issue 5 2005K. K. Szumlinski Homer proteins are involved in the functional assembly of postsynaptic density proteins at glutamatergic synapses and are implicated in learning, memory and drug addiction. Here, we report that Homer1 -knockout (Homer1 -KO) mice exhibit behavioral and neurochemical abnormalities that are consistent with the animal models of schizophrenia. Relative to wild-type mice, Homer1 -KO mice exhibited deficits in radial arm maze performance, impaired prepulse inhibition, enhanced ,behavioral despair', increased anxiety in a novel objects test, enhanced reactivity to novel environments, decreased instrumental responding for sucrose and enhanced MK-801- and methamphetamine-stimulated motor behavior. No-net-flux in vivo microdialysis revealed a decrease in extracellular glutamate content in the nucleus accumbens and an increase in the prefrontal cortex. Moreover, in Homer1 -KO mice, cocaine did not stimulate a rise in frontal cortex extracellular glutamate levels, suggesting hypofrontality. These behavioral and neurochemical data derived from Homer1 mutant mice are consistent with the recent association of schizophrenia with a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the Homer1 gene and suggest that the regulation of extracellular levels of glutamate within limbo-corticostriatal structures by Homer1 gene products may be involved in the pathogenesis of this neuropsychiatric disorder. [source] The position of an arginine residue influences substrate affinity and K+ coupling in the human glutamate transporter, EAAT1JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 2 2010Renae M. Ryan J. Neurochem. (2010) 114, 565,575. Abstract Glutamate is the predominant excitatory neurotransmitter in the mammalian central nervous system and extracellular glutamate levels are controlled by a family of transporters known as excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs). The EAATs transport glutamate and aspartate with similar micromolar affinities and this transport is coupled to the movement of Na+, K+, and H+. The crystal structure of a prokaryotic homologue of the EAATs, aspartate transporter from Pyrococcus horokoshii (GltPh), has yielded important insights into the architecture of this transporter family. GltPh is a Na+ -dependent transporter that has significantly higher affinity for aspartate over glutamate and is not coupled to H+ or K+. The highly conserved carboxy-terminal domains of the EAATs and GltPh contain the substrate and ion binding sites, however, there are a couple of striking differences in this region that we have investigated to better understand the transport mechanism. An arginine residue is in close proximity to the substrate binding site of both GltPh and the EAATs, but is located in transmembrane domain (TM) 8 in the EAATs and hairpin loop 1 (HP1) of GltPh. Here we report that the position of this arginine residue can explain some of the functional differences observed between the EAATs and GltPh. Moving the arginine residue from TM8 to HP1 in EAAT1 results in a transporter that has significantly increased affinity for both glutamate and aspartate and is K+ independent. Conversely, moving the arginine residue from HP1 to TM8 in GltPh results in a transporter that has reduced affinity for aspartate. [source] Glutamate levels and transport in cat (Felis catus) area 17 during cortical reorganization following binocular retinal lesionsJOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 6 2003Ann Massie Abstract Glutamate is known to play a crucial role in the topographic reorganization of visual cortex after the induction of binocular central retinal lesions. In this study we investigated the possible involvement of the glial high-affinity Na+/K+ -dependent glutamate transporters in cortical plasticity using western blotting and intracortical microdialysis. Basal extracellular glutamate levels and the re-uptake activity for glutamate have been determined by comparing the extracellular glutamate concentration before and during the blockage of glutamate removal from the synaptic cleft with the potent transporter inhibitor l - trans -pyrrolidine-3,4-dicarboxylic acid. In cats with central retinal lesions we observed increased basal extracellular glutamate concentrations together with a decreased re-uptake activity in non-deprived, peripheral area 17, compared with the sensory-deprived, central cortex of the same animal as well as the topographically matching regions of area 17 in normal subjects. Western blotting experiments revealed a parallel decrease in the expression level of the glial glutamate transporter proteins GLT-1 and GLAST in non-deprived cortex compared with sensory-deprived cortex of lesion cats and the corresponding regions of area 17 of normal subjects. This study shows that partial sensory deprivation of the visual cortex affects the removal of glutamate from the synaptic cleft and implicates a role for glial,neuronal interactions in adult brain plasticity. [source] |