Functional Microdomains Control Glutamate Exocytosis from Astrocytes

Détails

ID Serval
serval:BIB_EA45E552BD40
Type
Actes de conférence (partie): contribution originale à la littérature scientifique, publiée à l'occasion de conférences scientifiques, dans un ouvrage de compte-rendu (proceedings), ou dans l'édition spéciale d'un journal reconnu (conference proceedings).
Sous-type
Abstract (résumé de présentation): article court qui reprend les éléments essentiels présentés à l'occasion d'une conférence scientifique dans un poster ou lors d'une intervention orale.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Functional Microdomains Control Glutamate Exocytosis from Astrocytes
Titre de la conférence
9th European Meeting on Glial Cells in Health and Disease
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Bezzi P., Marchaland J., Cali C., Spagnuolo P., Gremion J., Voglmaier S., Sala C., Edwards R. H.
Adresse
Paris, France, September 08-12, 2009
ISBN
0894-1491
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
2009
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
57
Série
Glia
Pages
23
Langue
anglais
Notes
Meeting Abstract
Résumé
The discovery that astrocytes possess a non-electrical form of excitability (Ca21-excitability) that leads to the release of chemical transmitters, an activity called ''gliotransmission'', indicates that these cells may have additional important roles in brain function. Elucidating the stimulus-secretion coupling leading to the exocytic release of chemical transmitters (such as glutamate, Bezzi et al., Nature Neurosci, 2004) may therefore clarify i) whether astrocytes represent in full a new class of secretory cells in the brain and ii) whether they can participate to the fast brain signaling in the brain. We have recently discovered the existence in astrocytes of functional sub-membrane microdomains of Ca21 release from the internal stores in response to mGluR5 activation (Marchaland et al., J of Neurosci., 2008). Such Ca21 microdomains control exocytosis of astrocytic glutamate signalling to neurons. Homer proteins are scaffold proteins controlling Ca21 signalling in different cellular microdomains, including dendritic spines in neurons (Sala et al., J of Neurosci., 2005). Thus, similarly to dendritic pines, Homer1 could be implicated in the coupling between astrocytic mGluR5 and IP3Rs on the ER. Here, by using a recently developed approach for studying vesicle recycling dynamics at synapses (Voglmaier et al., Neuron, 2006; Balaji and Ryan, PNAS, 2007) combined with epifluorescence and total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) imaging, we have investigated the involvement of Homer1 proteins in the Ca21-dependent stimulus-secretion coupling leading glutamate exocytosis of synaptic-like microvesicles (SLMVs) in astrocytes.
Web of science
Création de la notice
03/12/2009 17:40
Dernière modification de la notice
20/08/2019 17:12
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