Selective excitatory amino acid uptake in glutamatergic nerve terminals and in glia in the rat striatum: quantitative electron microscopic immunocytochemistry of exogenous (D)-aspartate and endogenous glutamate and GABA
- PMID: 9081627
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.1996.tb01261.x
Selective excitatory amino acid uptake in glutamatergic nerve terminals and in glia in the rat striatum: quantitative electron microscopic immunocytochemistry of exogenous (D)-aspartate and endogenous glutamate and GABA
Abstract
To characterize glutamate/aspartate uptake activity in various cellular and subcellular elements in the striatum, rat striatal slices were exposed to 10 and 50 mu M exogenous (D)-aspartate. After fixation with glutaraldehyde/formaldehyde the distribution of (D)-aspartate was analysed by postembedding immunocytochemistry and the ultrastructural distribution was compared with the distributions of endogenous glutamate and GABA. Light microscopically, (D)-aspartate-like immunoreactivity was localized in conspicuous dots along very weakly labelled dendritic profiles and neuron cell bodies. At the electron microscope level gold particles signalling (D)-aspartate occurred at highest density in nerve terminals making asymmetrical contacts with postsynaptic spines (i.e. resembling synapses of cortical afferents). Astrocytic processes also contained gold particles, but at a lower density than nerve endings. In contrast, dendritic spines were only weakly (D)-aspartate-positive. The difference in labelling at 10 and 50 mu M (D)-aspartate was consistent with 'high-affinity' uptake. Neighbouring sections processed with other antibodies showed that the D-aspartate labelling. Occurred in nerve terminals strongly immunoreactive for glutamate, rather than in terminals very weakly glutamate-immunopositive or in nerve endings immunoreactive for GABA. Glutamate labelling of perfusion-fixed striatum confirmed that terminals forming asymmetrical synaptic contacts with spines were enriched with gold particles, suggesting that these terminals use glutamate as a transmitter. This study demonstrates that high-affinity uptake sites for excitatory amino acids in the striatum are most strongly expressed on presumed glutamatergic nerve terminals and on astrocytes.
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