Volume 28, Number 10, 1475-1485, DOI: 10.1023/A:1025662106846

Local Differences in GABA Release Induced by Excitatory Amino Acids During Retina Development: Selective Activation of NMDA Receptors by Aspartate in the Inner Retina

Karin da Costa Calaza, Maria Christina Fialho de Mello, Fernando Garcia de Mello and Patrícia Franca Gardino

From the issue entitled "Dedicated to Dr. Arselio Pato de Carvalho"

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Abstract

Glutamate and GABA are the major excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters in the CNS. In the retina, it has been shown that glutamate and aspartate and their agonists kainate and NMDA promote the release of GABA. In the chick retina, at embryonic day 14 (E14), glutamate and kainate were able to induce the release of GABA from amacrine and horizontal cells as detected by GABA-immunoreactivity. NMDA also induced GABA release restricted to amacrine cell population and its projections to the inner plexiform layer (E14 and E18). Although aspartate reduced GABA immunoreactivity, specifically in amacrine cells of E18 retinas, it was not efficient to promote GABA release from retinas at E14. As observed in differentiated retinas, dopamine inhibited the GABA release promoted by NMDA and aspartate but not by kainate. Our data show that different retinal sites respond to distinct EAAs via different receptor systems.

GABA - excitatory amino acids - retina - development

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