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  4. Effects of glial glutamate transporter inhibitors on intracellular Na+ in mouse astrocytes
 
research article

Effects of glial glutamate transporter inhibitors on intracellular Na+ in mouse astrocytes

Chatton, J Y
•
Shimamoto, K
•
Magistretti, P J  
2001
Brain research

The effects of inhibitors of the glial Na+/glutamate co-transporter on the intracellular Na+ concentration (Na+) were investigated in mouse cortical astrocytes. Na+ was monitored by fluorescence microscopy on single astrocytes using the Na+-sensitive probe sodium-binding benzofuran isophtalate. Application of the competitive inhibitors threo-beta-hydroxyaspartate (THA) and trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylic acid (t-PDC) resulted in robust and reversible increases in Na+ that were comparable in shape to the response to glutamate but about twice lower in amplitude. As previously observed with glutamate, the amplitude of the Na+ response to these compounds was concentration-dependent with EC(50) values of 11.1 microM (THA) and 7.6 microM (t-PDC), as was the initial rate of Na+ rise (EC(50) values of 14.8 microM for THA and 11.5 microM for t-PDC). Both compounds diminished the response to subsequent glutamate applications, possibly because of an inhibitory effect of the intracellularly-accumulated compounds. In comparison, the newly-developed compound threo-beta-benzyloxyaspartate (TBOA) alone did not cause any significant alteration of Na+ up to a concentration of 500 microM . TBOA inhibited the Na+ response evoked by 200 microM glutamate in a concentration-dependent manner with IC(50) values of 114 and 63 microM, as measured on the amplitude and the initial rate, respectively. The maximum inhibition of glutamate-evoked Na+ increase by TBOA was approximately 70%. The residual response persisted in the presence of a non-NMDA receptor antagonist or the inhibitor of the GLT-1 glutamate transporters, dihydrokainate (DHK). In view of the complete reversibility of its effects, TBOA represents a very useful pharmacological tool for studies of glutamate transporters.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/S0006-8993(00)03286-8
PubMed ID

11222991

Author(s)
Chatton, J Y
Shimamoto, K
Magistretti, P J  
Date Issued

2001

Published in
Brain research
Volume

893

Issue

1-2

Start page

46

End page

52

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LNDC  
Available on Infoscience
January 8, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/45250
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