|
|
|
|
Vol. 58, Issue 6, 1204-1212, December 2000
-Amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic Acid Receptor
Desensitization by Extracellular Protons
Committee on Neurobiology and Department of Neurobiology,
Pharmacology and Physiology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
The interstitial milieu of the brain is buffered to an average pH of
7.3, but synaptic activation produces a temporal sequence of events
that can affect pH in the synaptic cleft. Furthermore, pathophysiological processes such as ischemia and seizures produce global and prolonged acidification of interstitial pH. Changes in pH,
in turn, can affect neuronal excitability by modulating receptors and
channels. Patch-clamp recordings were made from cultured rat
hippocampal neurons to determine whether physiologically relevant
changes in interstitial pH (6.5-7.8) significantly affect AMPA
receptor function. Acidic pH, such as that typically associated with
ischemia (pH 6.5), significantly inhibited AMPA receptor-mediated responses in neurons. The effect of pH was agonist-dependent, with
2-fold greater inhibition of responses evoked by the strongly desensitizing agonists glutamate and quisqualate than the weakly desensitizing agonist kainate. Additional experiments tested the hypothesis that protons modulate AMPA receptor desensitization. In the
presence of drugs that block AMPA receptor desensitization, pH 6.5 had
no effect on glutamate-evoked responses. In neuronal macropatches,
protons increased equilibrium desensitization without affecting
macroscopic desensitization or deactivation kinetics. The mechanisms
and molecular determinants of pH-mediated effects were further
investigated using human embryonic kidney 293 cells expressing
recombinant AMPA receptors. Inhibition of kainate-evoked responses
varied with subunit and isoform composition, ranging from 10% to
>40%. Flop isoforms, which exhibit faster and more extensive desensitization, were most strongly inhibited. These findings
suggest that interstitial acidification can modulate AMPA
receptor-mediated synaptic transmission and that differences in
receptor sensitivity to proton modulation may underlie the selective
vulnerability of certain neuronal populations to ischemia.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
D. D. Mott, M. S. Washburn, S. Zhang, and R. J. Dingledine Subunit-Dependent Modulation of Kainate Receptors by Extracellular Protons and Polyamines J. Neurosci., February 15, 2003; 23(4): 1179 - 1188. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
D. Bowie External anions and cations distinguish between AMPA and kainate receptor gating mechanisms J. Physiol., March 15, 2002; 539(3): 725 - 733. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||