## Abstract Glutamate is thought to participate in a variety of retinal degenerative disorders. However, when exposed to glutamate at concentrations up to 1 mM, ex vivo rat retinas typically exhibit Müller cell swelling, but not excitotoxic neuronal damage. This Müller cell swelling is reversible f
Müller cell swelling, glutamate uptake, and excitotoxic neurodegeneration in the isolated rat retina
✍ Scribed by Yukitoshi Izumi; Charity O. Kirby; Ann M. Benz; John W. Olney; Charles F. Zorumski
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 410 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0894-1491
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✦ Synopsis
We characterized morphological effects of the endogenous excitotoxin, glutamate in ex vivo retinal segments prepared from 30-day-old rats. Initial changes induced by glutamate consisted of reversible, sodium-dependent Mu ¨ller cell swelling. This glial swelling was mimicked by glutamate transport substrates but not by ionotropic glutamate receptor agonists. Only very high concentrations of exogenous glutamate (3,000 µM) produced excitotoxic neuronal damage. The neuronal damage was accompanied by severe glial swelling and was blocked by an antagonist of non-N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors but not by an NMDA receptor antagonist. Because glutamate uptake can be influenced by changes in cellular energy levels, we studied the effects of oxidative and glycolytic energy depletion on glutamate-mediated Mu ¨ller cell swelling. Oxygen deprivation produced little morphological change and did not alter either glutamate-mediated Mu ¨ller cell swelling or glutamate-induced excitotoxicity. In contrast, inhibition of glycolysis by iodoacetate produced severe neuronal damage without Mu ¨ller cell swelling. In the presence of iodoacetate, exogenous glutamate failed to cause glial swelling. The neuronal damage produced by iodoacetate was inhibited by pyruvate, a substrate that sustains oxidative energy pathways. In the presence of iodoacetate plus pyruvate, glutamate failed to cause Mu ¨ller cell swelling but became neurotoxic at low concentrations through activation of non-NMDA receptors. These results indicate that glycolytic energy metabolism plays a critical role in sustaining ionic balances required for Mu ¨ller cell glutamate uptake and glial uptake helps to prevent glutamate-mediated excitotoxicity.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Glial cell swelling is a central cause of ischemic edema in the brain and retina; however, the regulation of glial cell volume by endogenous factors in situ is largely unknown. In slices of the postischemic retina of the rat, the somata of glial (Müller) cells swell upon hypotonic stress that is not