Publication | Open Access
EAT-4, a Homolog of a Mammalian Sodium-Dependent Inorganic Phosphate Cotransporter, Is Necessary for Glutamatergic Neurotransmission in<i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>
364
Citations
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References
1999
Year
Rat CnsSynaptic TransmissionNeurotransmitterNeurotransmissionGlutamatergic NeuronsCellular NeurobiologySynaptic SignalingCaenorhabditis ElegansSocial SciencesIs NecessaryNeurochemistryNeurogeneticsMolecular NeuroscienceMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistrySodium HomeostasisPhosphate IonsIon ChannelsBiologySynaptic PlasticitySignal TransductionNeurophysiologyPhysiologyGlutamatergic NeurotransmissionNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyMedicine
The Caenorhabditis elegans gene eat-4 affects multiple glutamatergic neurotransmission pathways. We find that eat-4 encodes a protein similar in sequence to a mammalian brain-specific sodium-dependent inorganic phosphate cotransporter I (BNPI). Like BNPI in the rat CNS, eat-4 is expressed predominantly in a specific subset of neurons, including several proposed to be glutamatergic. Loss-of-function mutations in eat-4 cause defective glutamatergic chemical transmission but appear to have little effect on other functions of neurons. Our data suggest that phosphate ions imported into glutamatergic neurons through transporters such as EAT-4 and BNPI are required specifically for glutamatergic neurotransmission.
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