Glutamate Induces Calcium Waves in Cultured Astrocytes: Long-Range Glial Signaling
- 26 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 247 (4941) , 470-473
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1967852
Abstract
The finding that astrocytes possess glutamate-sensitive ion channels hinted at a previously unrecognized signaling role for these cells. Now it is reported that cultured hippocampal astrocytes can respond to glutamate with a prompt and oscillatory elevation of cytoplasmic free calcium, visible through use of the fluorescent calcium indicator fluo-3. Two types of glutamate receptor--one preferring quisqualate and releasing calcium from intracellular stores and the other preferring kainate and promoting surface-membrane calcium influx--appear to be involved. Moreover, glutamate-induced increases in cytoplasmic free calcium frequently propagate as waves within the cytoplasm of individual astrocytes and between adjacent astrocytes in confluent cultures. These propagating waves of calcium suggest that networks of astrocytes may constitute a long-range signaling system within the brain.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Calcium oscillations in non-excitable cellsTrends in Neurosciences, 1989
- Intercellular signaling as visualized by endogenous calcium-dependent bioluminescenceNeuron, 1989
- Multiple conductance channels in type-2 cerebellar astrocytes activated by excitatory amino acidsNature, 1989
- Facilitation of voltage-gated ion channels in frog neuroglia by nerve impulsesNature, 1989
- Glial and neuronal forms of the voltage-dependent sodium channel: characteristics and cell-type distributionNeuron, 1989
- Opening of dihydropyridine calcium channels in skeletal muscle membranes by inositol trisphosphateNature, 1988
- Repetitive spikes in cytoplasmic calcium evoked by histamine in human endothelial cellsNature, 1988
- Regulation of calcium influx by second messengers in rat mast cellsNature, 1988
- The Neuronal Microenvironment: A Comparative ViewAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1986
- The Ca2+/Cl− dependent L‐[3H]glutamate binding: a new receptor or a particular transport process?FEBS Letters, 1984