The Japanese Journal of Pharmacology
Online ISSN : 1347-3506
Print ISSN : 0021-5198
ISSN-L : 0021-5198
Electrophysiological and Pharmacological Characteristics of Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors in Medial Vestibular Nucleus Neurons: A Whole Cell Patch Clamp Study in Acutely Dissociated Neurons
Norio SakaiHisamitsu UjiharaKumatoshi IshiharaMasashi SasaChikako Tanaka
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1996 Volume 72 Issue 4 Pages 335-346

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Abstract
A patch clamp study was performed to determine which subtype of ionotropic glutamate receptors is involved in the glutamate-induced excitation of the medial vestibular nucleus (MVN) neurons. Whole cell recording was performed on MVN neurons that were acutely dissociated by enzymatic and mechanical treatments. Application of glutamate at a concentration of 100 μM produced a current with a reversal potential of approximately O mV. The glutamate-induced current was completely blocked by 6-cyan0-7-nitroquinoxaline-2, 3-dione (CNQX, 10μM), a non-N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-receptor antagonist. Application of α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-isoxazole-4-propionic acid (AMPA) and kainic acid (KA), non-NMDA-receptor agonists, at concentrations of 30 and 100 μM produced a concentration-dependent depolarization concomitantly with an increase in firing rates during current clamp recording. During voltage clamp recording, glutamate, AMPA and KA elicited a concentration-dependent current with an equilibrium potential of approximately O mV. To clarify whether NMDA receptors are present in MVN neurons, the effects of glycine on the glutamate- and NMDA-induced current were examined. Two types of NMDA receptor-mediated current (types1 and 2) were obtained in terms of the difference in sensitivity to both magnesium ion and MK-801, which act on the NMDA-receptor channel. In the type I neurons, the NMDA-induced current was not apparently blocked by magnesium ion or MK-801, although a larger current was obtained in the absence of magnesium ion. In the type 2 neurons, marked blockade of the NMDA-induced current was seen in the presence of magnesium ion and MK-801, as previously reported in other neurons of the central nervous system. These findings indicate the presence of both non-NMDA and NMDA receptors, which are involved in primary afferent transmission, in the MVN neuron, and two distinct types of NMDA receptors.
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