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. 1985 Oct;317(6039):717-9.
doi: 10.1038/317717a0.

Glutamate stimulates inositol phosphate formation in striatal neurones

Glutamate stimulates inositol phosphate formation in striatal neurones

F Sladeczek et al. Nature. 1985 Oct.

Abstract

The major excitatory amino acids, glutamate (Glu) and aspartate (Asp), are thought to act at three receptor subtypes in the mammalian central nervous system (CNS). These are termed quisqualate (QA), N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and kainate (KA) receptors according to the specific agonist properties of these compounds revealed by electrophysiological studies. Although Glu has been shown to stimulate cyclic GMP formation in brain slices, direct regulation of second messenger systems (cyclic AMP, Ca2+ or inositol phosphates) subsequent to activation of excitatory amino-acid receptors, has not been extensively studied. Here we demonstrate that in striatal neurones, excitatory amino acids, but not inhibitory or non-neuroactive amino acids, induce a three- to fourfold increase in inositol mono-, di- and triphosphate (IP, IP, IP) formation with the relative potency QA greater than Glu greater than NMDA, KA. The Glu-evoked formation of inositol phosphates appears to result principally from actions at QA as well as NMDA receptors on striatal neurones. Our results suggest that excitatory amino acids stimulate inositol phosphate formation directly, rather than indirectly by the evoked release and subsequent actions of adenosine or acetylcholine.

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