Lateral olfactory tract transmitter: Glutamate, aspartate, or neither?
- 1 March 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology
- Vol. 1 (1) , 115-120
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00736043
Abstract
Aspartate and glutamate are the principal candidates for the excitatory neurotransmitter released by the lateral olfactory tract (LOT) in prepyriform cortex of the rat. Identity of action of the natural transmitter with exogenous glutamate and/or aspartate, however, has not yet been demonstrated. We show that bath-applied 2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid, a presumed specific glutamate antagonist, blocks LOT-stimulated prepyriform field potentials and single unit activity but not the single unit response to ionophoretically applied glutamate or aspartate in rat olfactory cortex slices. These results suggest that neither aspartate nor glutamate is the LOT transmitter. Responses to ionophoretically applied N-methyl-DL-aspartate, kainic acid, and DL-homocysteate were clearly decreased by 2-amino-4-phosphono-butyric acid. This suggests that these agents, usually presumed to be aspartate or glutamate agonists, act at different receptors than aspartate and glutamate.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mechanisms of augmented field potential responses in the rat olfactory bulbBrain Research, 1979
- Synaptic transmission is required for initiation of long-term potentiationBrain Research, 1978
- Glutamate as transmitter of hippocampal perforant pathNature, 1977
- 2-Amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid as a glutamate antagonist on locust muscleNature, 1976
- Aspartate and glutamate as possible transmitters of excitatory hippocampal afferentsNature, 1976
- Specific release of endogenous glutamate from piriform cortex stimulated in vitroBrain Research, 1976
- EFFECT OF STIMULATION OF EXCITATORY NERVE TRACT ON RELEASE OF GLUTAMIC ACID FROM OLFACTORY CORTEX SLICES IN VITROJournal of Neurochemistry, 1976
- PUTATIVE TRANSMITTERS IN DENERVATED OLFACTORY CORTEXJournal of Neurochemistry, 1975
- The distribution of glutamate and total free amino acids in thirteen specific regions of the cat central nervous systemBrain Research, 1971
- ACTIONS OF AMINO‐ACIDS ON THE ISOLATED HEMISECTED SPINAL CORD OF THE TOADBritish Journal of Pharmacology and Chemotherapy, 1961