CORELEASE OF ACETYLCHOLINE AND GABA BY THE STARBURST AMACRINE CELLS

被引:0
|
作者
OMALLEY, DM
SANDELL, JH
MASLAND, RH
机构
[1] HARVARD UNIV,SCH MED,DEPT PHYSIOL,BOSTON,MA 02114
[2] HARVARD UNIV,SCH MED,DEPT NEUROSURG,BOSTON,MA 02114
来源
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE | 1992年 / 12卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Rabbit retinas were isolated from the eye and maintained in vitro. When they were incubated for 60 min in the presence of H-3-GABA, subsequent autoradiography showed radioactivity to be present primarily in amacrine cells. Under these conditions, most of the radioactivity contained in the retinas remained in the chemical form of GABA. Autoradiography and immunohistochemistry of alternate sections showed the amacrine cells that accumulate H-3-GABA to be the same cells that contain endogenous GABA immunoreactivity. These include the starburst cells, the indoleamine-accumulating cells, and other, as yet unidentified amacrine cells. The localization confirms previous immunohistochemical findings. When retinas containing H-3-GABA were exposed to elevated concentrations of K+, their content of H-3-GABA decreased. Autoradiography showed a reduced H-3-GABA content in all of the cells that contained H-3-GABA. Since those include the starburst cells, previously shown to be cholinergic, the finding demonstrates that the starburst cells release both ACh and GABA. Retinas simultaneously labeled with C-14-GABA and H-3-ACh were superfused, and the release of radioactive compounds from the retina was studied. Depolarization by elevated K+ caused an increased recovery of both ACh and GABA in the superfusate, but the predominant mechanisms of their release appeared to be different. The stimulated release of ACh was entirely Ca2+ dependent, while the release of radioactivity originating from GABA was much less so. A concentration-dependent counterflux (homoexchange) of intracellular GABA was demonstrated by raising the extracellular concentration of GABA (or nipecotic acid). These results suggest that a large outward flux of GABA occurs via the GABA transporter, probably by the potential-sensitive mechanism studied by Schwartz (1982, 1987). Stimulation of double-labeled retinas by flashing light or moving bars always increased the release of ACh, and the release was entirely dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+. Stimulation with light never caused a detectable release of GABA. This was unexpected, since the two neurotransmitters are present in the same amacrine cells: stimulation adequate to release one neurotransmitter should release both. Control experiments showed the following: (1) GABA synthesized endogenously from radiolabeled glutamate was released in the same overall way as GABA accumulated from the medium; (2) inhibition of GABA-transaminase suppressed the degradation of GABA within the retina but did not unmask a light-stimulated GABA release; (3) saturating concentrations of agents that affect GABA reuptake (nipecotic acid, SKF 89976A, unlabeled GABA) increased the recovery of radioactive GABA in the perfusate but did not unmask a light-stimulated release of GABA; and (4) treatment with APB did not reveal a light-evoked response, indicating that its absence was not due to counter-balancing of the retina's ON and OFF responses. An interpretation of these results is that the carrier-mediated release of GABA is greater, overall, than GABA's secretion in synaptic vesicles, so that the carrier-mediated component overwhelms vesicular release when the whole tissue is studied. If this is so, however, the carrier-mediated release must be relatively insensitive to the membrane potential, so that release is detectably increased by the large, long-lasting depolarizations induced by rises in extracellular K+, and not to the small (and brief) depolarizations caused by stimulation of the retina with light.
引用
收藏
页码:1394 / 1408
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] GABA-mediated spatial and temporal asymmetries that contribute to the directionally selective light responses of starburst amacrine cells in retina
    Dmitriev, Andrey V.
    Gavrikov, Konstantin E.
    Mangel, Stuart C.
    JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 2012, 590 (07): : 1699 - 1720
  • [22] Blockade of alpha7-nicotinic acetylcholine receptors decreases calcium signaling in starburst amacrine cells in the mouse retina
    Bohl, Jeremy
    Sharpe, Zachary
    Ayub, Mahnoor
    Ichinose, Tomomi
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 2022, 63 (07)
  • [23] GLYCINE AND GABA IN AMACRINE CELLS OF THE CAT RETINA
    KALLONIATIS, M
    TOMISICH, G
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 1995, 36 (04) : S286 - S286
  • [24] Spatiotemporal coordination of excitation and inhibition mediated by starburst amacrine cells
    Murphy-Baum, Benjamin
    deRosenroll, Geoff
    Jain, Varsha
    Hoggarth, Alex
    Awatramani, Gautam
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 2018, 59 (09)
  • [25] RESPONSES TO LIGHT OF DISPLACED STARBURST AMACRINE CELLS IN THE RABBIT RETINA
    PETERS, BN
    MASLAND, RH
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 1995, 36 (04) : S864 - S864
  • [26] Development of starburst cholinergic amacrine cells in the retina of Tupaia belangeri
    Knabe, Wolfgang
    Washausen, Stefan
    Happel, Nicole
    Kuhn, Hans-Juerg
    JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 2007, 502 (04) : 584 - 597
  • [27] NEUROTRANSMITTER RECEPTORS OF STARBURST AMACRINE CELLS IN RABBIT RETINAL SLICES
    ZHOU, ZJ
    FAIN, GL
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 1995, 15 (07): : 5334 - 5345
  • [28] Chloride cotransporters mediate direction selectivity of starburst amacrine cells
    Gavrikov, KE
    Dmitriev, AV
    Keyser, KT
    Mangel, SC
    INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE, 2003, 44 : U449 - U449
  • [29] Spiking and nonspiking models of starburst amacrine cells in the rabbit retina
    Velte, TJ
    Miller, RF
    VISUAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1997, 14 (06) : 1073 - 1088
  • [30] Directionally selective calcium signals in dendrites of starburst amacrine cells
    Thomas Euler
    Peter B. Detwiler
    Winfried Denk
    Nature, 2002, 418 : 845 - 852