Abstract

Glutamine and alanine are important precursors for the synthesis of glutamate. Provided to neurons by neighboring astrocytes, these amino acids are internalized by classical system A amino acid carriers. In particular, System A transporter (SAT1) is a highly efficient glutamine transporter, whereas SAT2 exhibits broad specificity for neutral amino acids with a preference for alanine. We investigated the localization and the functional relevance of SAT1 and SAT2 in primary cultures of hippocampal neurons. Both carriers have been expressed since early developmental stages and are uniformly distributed throughout all neuronal processes. However, whereas SAT1 is present in axonal growth cones and can be detected at later developmental stages at the sites of synaptic contacts, SAT2 does not appear to be significantly expressed in these compartments. The non-metabolizable amino acid analogue alpha-(methylamino)-isobutyric acid, a competitive inhibitor of system A carriers, significantly reduced miniature excitatory postsynaptic current amplitude in neurons growing on top of astrocytes, being ineffective in pure neuronal cultures. alpha-(Methylamino)-isobutyric acid did not alter neuronal responsitivity to glutamate, thus excluding a postsynaptic effect. These data indicate that system A carriers are expressed with a different subcellular distribution in hippocampal neurons and play a crucial role in controlling the astrocyte-mediated supply of glutamatergic neurons with neurotransmitter precursors.

Highlights

  • Glutamine and alanine are important precursors for the synthesis of glutamate

  • As both ␣-ketoglutarate and alanine are supplied to neurons by astrocytes [13, 14], it is conceivable that glutamatergic neurons are dependent upon neighboring astrocytes for the supply of these glutamate precursors in addition to glutamine

  • We have investigated the expression, subcellular distribution, and functional role of SAT1 and SAT2 in cultured hippocampal neurons

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Summary

Introduction

Glutamine and alanine are important precursors for the synthesis of glutamate. Provided to neurons by neighboring astrocytes, these amino acids are internalized by classical system A amino acid carriers. When tested on homogenates of rat hippocampi as well as on cell extracts of mature hippocampal cultures, the anti-SAT1 and anti-SAT2 antibodies recognized single bands with the molecular mass (about 55 kDa) previously defined for the two carrier proteins in the central nervous system (Fig. 1) [18, 21].

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