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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Pharmacological characterization of postsynaptic receptors for excitatory amino acids in Purkinje cell dendrites in the guinea pig cerebellum.

The responses of Purkinje cell dendrites to iontophoretically applied L-glutamate, L-aspartate, kainate and quisqualate were intradendritically recorded in the in vitro slice preparation of the guinea pig cerebellum. Kainate and quisqualate were found to be very potent excitants, while N-methyl-DL-aspartic acid (NMDLA) caused little or no effect on Purkinje cell dendrites. Thus, kainate and quisqualate receptors were certainly present, while there appeared to be no NMDA-preferring receptor in Purkinje cell dendrites in the guinea pig cerebellum. The effects of several antagonists such as 2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV), gamma-D-glutamylglycine (gamma-DGG), NMDLA and glutamic acid diethylester (GDEE) etc. on responses to L-glutamate and L-aspartate were compared in order to search for potent and selective antagonists capable of differentiating the response to L-glutamate from that to L-aspartate. Among these compounds tested, APV and gamma-DGG were found to be potent and selective antagonists to the L-aspartate-induced depolarization without affecting responses to L-glutamate. These two agents may be useful, at least in the in vitro study, to the identification of the excitatory amino acid which function as a neurotransmitter at the synapses formed by the climbing fiber or parallel fiber with Purkinje cell dendrites.[1]

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