Abstract

Gliotic hippocampal slices were used to study glial acid secretion in a tissue largely devoid of neural elements. Rat hippocampal slices were prepared 10–28 days after sterotaxic injection of kainate. Cresyl Violet staining and immunohistochemistry for glial fibrillary acidic protein demonstrated a loss of neurons and a proliferation of reactive astrocytes in area CA3. Extracellular pH and K + shifts were recorded in CA3 in response to K + iontophoresis. Elevation of K + evoked an extracellular acid shift that was two- to three-fold larger in gliotic versus unlesioned tissue. Ba 2+ caused a slow extracellular acidification, and blocked both the depolarizing responses of the glial cells and the acid shifts evoked by K +. The K +-evoked acid shifts were abolished in Na +-free media, and diminished in HEPES-buffered solutions. Inhibition of extracellular carbonic anhydrase caused a reversible enhancement of the K +-evoked acid shifts, an effect that could be mimicked during H + iontophoresis in agarose gels. Gliotic acid shifts were unaffected by amiloride or its analogs, stilbenes, zero Cl − media, zero or elevated glucose, lactate transport inhibitors, zero Ca 2+ or Cd 2+. Smaller acid shifts could be evoked in normal slices which were also enhanced by benzolamide, and blocked by Ba 2+ and zero Na + media. It is concluded that acid secretion by reactive astrocytes is Na + and HCO 3 ∼-dependent and is triggered by depolarization. The similar pharmacological and ionic sensitivity of the acid shifts in non-gliotic tissue suggest that these properties are shared by normal astrocytes. These characteristics are consistent with the operation of an electrogenic Na +-HCO 3 − co-transporter. However, the enhancement of the acid shifts by inhibitors of extracellular carbonic anhydrase suggests that CO 3 2− rather than HCO 3 −, is the transported acid equivalent.

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