During volume regulation in hypotonic media, glial cells release a large portion of their amino acids. These amino acid losses appear to be mediated by a diffusion type of transport and a swelling-activated chloride channel seems to be involved. The objective of this project was to provide direct ev
Chloride/anion channels in glial cell membranes
β Scribed by Wolfgang Walz
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 82 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0894-1491
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
At least seven different chloride/anion currents have now been identified in astrocytes, oligodendrocytes/Schwann cells, and microglia. Only for two of these currents is the corresponding gene known. One of these genes is not encoding for a chloride channel, but for a class of mitochondriaβlike pores also found in cell membranes. Astrocytes and oligodendrocytes differ in their resting properties: astrocytes accumulate chloride but do not have a significant permeability. Oligodendrocytes have a close to passive distribution and a significant permeability. Under certain circumstances, astrocytes can express a resting chloride conductance. Reactive and neoplastic astrocytes as well as astrocytes with an altered shape exhibit a resting conductance. The function of these channels certainly involves volume regulation. Other possible functions are potassium homeostasis, migration, proliferation (in microglia), and involvement in spreading depression waves. Of greatest interest are two phenomena discovered in situ: The ClCβ2 channel is only found in astrocytic endfeet near blood capillaries adjacent to neuronal GABA~A~ receptors. In the supraoptic nucleus of the hypothalamus, there is an osmosensitive astrocytic taurine release. This released taurine interacts with glycine receptors in neighboring neurons, causing inhibition. It is assumed that with the future availability of more in situ, rather than in vitro, studies, an increased number of such complex interactions between glial cells, neurons, and blood vessels will be discovered. GLIA 40:1β10, 2002. Β© 2002 WileyβLiss, Inc.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Unitary currents through single ion channels in the glial cells, which ensheath the abdominal stretch receptor neurons of the crayfish, were characterized with respect to their basic kinetic properties. In cell-attached and excised patches two types of Ca+ +-independent K+ channels were observed wit
Hypotonic challenge induces transient swelling in glial cells, which is typically followed by a regulatory volume decrease (RVD). In contrast, lactic acidosis (lactacidosis) induces persistent cell swelling in astrocytes without an accompanying RVD. In the present study, we studied the mechanisms by
The Cl(-) energy gradient across the luminal membrane of Aplysia foregut epithelial cells is directed downhill from the lumen to the cellular cytosol. No primary or secondary active transporters had been shown to be involved in Cl(-) translocation across the luminal membrane. Cl(-) channel blockers
Glial cell swelling in hypotonic media activates an anionic channel that was found previously to be permeable to amino acids. It is possible that the same channel is also activated when glial cells swell in pathologic conditions, like ischemia or hypoxia, and it could be partly responsible for the r