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J Neurophysiol (February 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00904.2002
Submitted on Submitted 9 October 2002; accepted in final form 24 October 2002
Civitan International Research Center and Department of Neurobiology, The University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama 35294
Bordey, Angélique and
Harald Sontheimer.
Modulation of Glutamatergic Transmission by Bergmann Glial Cells
in Rat Cerebellum In Situ. J. Neurophysiol. 89: 979-988, 2003. We obtained patch-clamp recordings from
neuron-glial cell pairs in cerebellar brain slices to examine the
contribution of glutamate (Glu) uptake by Bergmann glial cells to
shaping excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) at the parallel fiber
to Purkinje cell synapse. We show that electrical stimulation of
parallel fibers not only activates EPSCs in Purkinje cells but also
activates inward currents in antigenically identified Bergmann glial
cells that invest Purkinje cell synapse with their processes. The
inward current is partially due to 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxalene-2,3-dione (CNQX)- and 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP5)-sensitive ionotropic Glu receptors, but
70% of the current was mediated by
D,L-threo-beta-hydroxyaspartate (THA)-sensitive Glu
transporters. Glu inward currents were completely and reversibly
inhibited by depolarization of Bergmann glial cells to positive
membrane potentials allowing biophysical inhibition of Glu uptake into
a single glial cell. Inhibition of Glu transport into Bergmann glial
cells by voltage-clamping the cell to depolarized potentials caused a
reversible increase in spontaneous EPSC frequency in the Purkinje cell.
This increase could also be achieved by pharmacological inhibition of
Glu transport with the Glu transport inhibitor THA, suggesting that
inhibition of Glu uptake into Bergmann glial cells is responsible for
the modulation of postsynaptic EPSCs. THA modulation of spontaneous EPSCs could only be observed in the absence of TTX, suggesting primarily a presynaptic effect. Taken together these data suggest that
glial Glu uptake can profoundly affect excitatory transmission in the
cerebellum, most likely by regulating presynaptic glutamate release.
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