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Publication : High-density presynaptic transporters are required for glutamate removal from the first visual synapse.

First Author  Hasegawa J Year  2006
Journal  Neuron Volume  50
Issue  1 Pages  63-74
PubMed ID  16600856 Mgi Jnum  J:297342
Mgi Id  MGI:6478079 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2006.02.022
Citation  Hasegawa J, et al. (2006) High-density presynaptic transporters are required for glutamate removal from the first visual synapse. Neuron 50(1):63-74
abstractText  Reliable synaptic transmission depends not only on the release machinery and the postsynaptic response mechanism but also on removal or degradation of transmitter from the synaptic cleft. Accumulating evidence indicates that postsynaptic and glial excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) contribute to glutamate removal. However, the role of presynaptic EAATs is unclear. Here, we show in the mouse retina that glutamate is removed from the synaptic cleft at the rod to rod bipolar cell (RBC) synapse by presynaptic EAATs rather than by postsynaptic or glial EAATs. The RBC currents evoked by electrical stimulation of rods decayed slowly after pharmacological blockade of EAATs. Recordings of the evoked RBC currents from EAAT subtype-deficient mice and the EAAT-coupled anion current reveal that functional EAATs are localized to rod terminals. Model simulations suggest that rod EAATs are densely packed near the release site and that rods are equipped with an almost self-sufficient glutamate recollecting system.
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