Publication | Open Access
Oligodendrocyte progenitor cell proliferation and lineage progression are regulated by glutamate receptor-mediated K+ channel block
405
Citations
63
References
1996
Year
Glur ActivationLineage ProgressionCell DeathCellular NeurobiologyCellular PhysiologyOxidative StressNeurochemistryCell SignalingMembrane Ionic ChannelsMolecular PhysiologyNeuroprotectionPharmacologyCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionAmpa-preferring GlursMolecular NeurobiologyMedicineNeural Stem Cell
We have analyzed the role of glutamate and its receptors (GluRs) in regulating the development of oligodendrocytes. Activation of AMPA-preferring GluRs with selective agonists inhibited proliferation of purified cortical oligodendrocyte progenitor (O-2A) cells cultured with different mitogens, as measured by [3H]thymidine incorporation or bromodeoxyuridine staining. In contrast, activation of GABA or muscarinic receptors did not affect O-2A proliferation. Cell viability and apoptosis assays demonstrated that the inhibition of O-2A proliferation was not attributable to a cytotoxic action of GluR agonists, and was reversible. Activation of GluRs prevented lineage progression from the O-2A (GD3+/nestin+) stage to the prooligodendroblast (O4+) stage, but did not affect O-2A migration. Additional experiments examined the membrane ionic channels mediating these GluR activation effects. We found that proliferating O-2A cells expressed functional delayed rectifier K+ channels, which were absent in pro-oligodendroblasts. GluR agonists and the K+ channel blocker tetraethylammonium (TEA) strongly inhibited delayed rectifier K+ currents in O-2A cells. TEA reproduced the effects of GluR activation on O-2A proliferation and lineage progression in the same concentration range that blocked delayed rectifier K+ currents. These results indicate that glutamate regulates oligodendrogenesis specifically at the O-2A stage by modulating K+ channel activity.
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