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Glutamate and kainate increase intracellular sodium activity in leech neuropile glial cells
26
Citations
14
References
1989
Year
Na+-selective, double-barrelled microelectrodes were used to measure intracellular Na+ activity (aiNa) and membrane potential (Em) in neuropile glial cells of isolated segmental ganglia in the leech Hirudo medicinalis. Bath application of glutamate (10(-3) M) resulted in membrane depolarizations of about 5 mV and a concomitant increase of aiNa by between 2 and 10 mM. Kainate (10(-4) M) elicited depolarizations of up to 40 mV amplitude followed by a prominent after hyperpolarization. During kainate, aiNa increased by 7 to 25 mM. In contrast to glutamate, an initial decrease of aiNa was detected during the action of kainate. N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA, 10(-5)-10(-3) M) had no effect of Em and aiNa. The results indicate that leech glial cells have a kainate-preferring non-NMDA glutamate receptor.
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1987 | 422 | |
1984 | 356 | |
1984 | 208 | |
1988 | 190 | |
1969 | 130 | |
1980 | 74 | |
1988 | 67 | |
1987 | 56 | |
1984 | 56 | |
1984 | 50 |
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