D. Becquet et al., N-METHYL-D-ASPARTIC ACID GLYCINE INTERACTIONS ON THE CONTROL OF 5-HYDROXYTRYPTAMINE RELEASE IN RAPHE PRIMARY CULTURES/, Journal of neurochemistry, 61(5), 1993, pp. 1692-1697
Glutamic acid and glycine were quantified in cells and medium of cultu
red rostral rhombencephalic neurons derived from fetal rats. In the pr
esence of 1 mM Mg2+, NMDA (50 muM) significantly stimulated (by 69%) r
elease of newly synthesized 5-[H-3]hydroxytryptamine ([H-3]5-HT). D-2-
Amino-5-phosphonopentanoate (AP-5; 50 muM) blocked the stimulatory eff
ect of NMDA. AP-5 by itself inhibited [H-3]5-HT release (by 25%), sugg
esting a tonic control of 5-HT by glutamate. In the absence of Mg2+, b
asal [H-3]5-HT release was 60% higher as compared with release with Mg
2+. AP-5 blocked the increased [H-3]5-HT release observed without Mg2, suggesting that this effect was due to the stimulation of NMDA recep
tors by endogenous glutamate. Glycine (100 muM) inhibited [H-3]5-HT re
lease in the absence of Mg2+. Strychnine (50 muM) blocked the inhibito
ry effect of glycine, indicating an action through strychnine-sensitiv
e inhibitory glycine receptors. The [H-3]5-HT release stimulated by NM
DA was unaffected by glycine. In contrast, when tested in the presence
of strychnine, glycine increased NMDA-evoked [H-3]5-HT release (by 22
%), and this eff ect was prevented by a selective antagonist of the NM
DA-associated glycine receptor, 7-chlorokynurenate (100 muM). 7-Chloro
kynurenate by itself induced a drastic decrease in [H-3]5-HT release,
indicating that under basal conditions these sites were stimulated by
endogenous glycine. These results indicate that NMDA stimulated [H-3]5
-HT release in both the presence or absence of Mg2+. Use of selective
antagonists allowed differentiation of a strychnine-sensitive glycine
response (inhibition of [H-3]5-HT release) from a 7-chlorokynurenate-s
ensitive response (potentiation of NMDA-evoked [H-3]5-HT release).