Heterocarrier-mediated reciprocal modulation of glutamate and glycine release in rat cerebral cortex and spinal cord synaptosomes

Autor: Maurizio Raiteri, Francesca Donadini, Giovanni Fontana, Giambattista Bonanno, F. Vallebuona, Ernesto Fedele
Rok vydání: 1994
Předmět:
Zdroj: European Journal of Pharmacology. 252:61-67
ISSN: 0014-2999
DOI: 10.1016/0014-2999(94)90575-4
Popis: The effects of glutamic acid (Glu) and glycine (Gly) on each others release were studied using rat brain cortex and spinal cord synaptosomes. Previously taken up [3H]Gly and [3H] d -aspartic acid ([3H] d -Asp) was employed as markers for Gly and Glu/Asp release, respectively. Glu enhanced the release of [ 3 H ] Gly ( EC 50 = 8.4 μ M ) from cortical synaptosomes. The effect of Glu was not mimicked by the glutamate receptor agonists N- methyl- d - aspartic acid (NMDA), kainic or quisqualic acid. The Glu effect was abolished by the Glu/Asp uptake inhibitor d -threo-hydroxy-aspartic acid and it was Na+ sensitive. d -Asp also increased [3H]Gly release (EC50 = 9.9 μM) and the effect was blocked by the Glu/Asp uptake inhibitor. In contrast to its effect in the cortex, Glu failed to increase the release of [3H]Gly from spinal cord synaptosomes. Gly enhanced the outflow of [3H] d -Asp from rat cerebral cortex and spinal cord synaptosomes (EC50 = 75.0 and 99.5 μM, respectively). Gly was much more potent a releaser of [3H] d -Asp in the spinal cord than in the cortex. The Gly effects were insensitive to strychnine or to 7-Cl-kynurenic acid, antagonists at the two known Gly receptors, but they were strongly Na+ dependent. Our results are compatible with the idea that high-affinity uptake systems specific for Glu/Asp or Gly are colocalized on the same nerve terminal in rat spinal cord and cerebral cortex. Activation of the Glu/Asp heterocarrier sited on glycinergic terminals may promote the release of Gly, at least in brain cortex, while activation of the Gly heterocarrier sited on Glu/Asp nerve terminals may lead to excitatory amino acid release.
Databáze: OpenAIRE