Abstract

The release of preaccumulated gamma-amino[3H]butyric acid ([3H]GABA) from putative GABAergic amacrine cells was studied in neuronal monolayer cultures made from embryonic chick retina. Release was specifically stimulated by excitatory amino acid agonists. N-Methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA; EC50, 19.1 +/- 5.0 microM), kainic acid (EC50, 15.6 +/- 2.3 microM), and the presumptive endogenous ligand glutamate (EC50, 3.6 +/- 0.5 microM) showed the same efficacy. Quisqualic acid, although the most potent agonist (EC50, 0.56 +/- 0.12 microM), was only half as efficacious. The time course of [3H]GABA release and autoradiographic visualization of responsive GABA-accumulating cells suggest that approximately 50% of the [3H]GABA-accumulating cells possess no or very low responsiveness to quisqualic acid. Depolarization (56 mM KCl)-induced release was fivefold lower than the maximal effect elicited by excitatory amino acids. Release of [3H]GABA and of endogenous GABA was entirely independent of extracellular Ca2+ but was completely abolished after replacement of Na+ by choline or Li+. The effects of NMDA and low concentrations of glutamate (up to 10 microM) were blocked by 2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid, by MK 801, and (in a voltage-dependent manner) by Mg2+. The reduction of NMDA responses by kynurenic acid was reversed by D-serine, and quisqualic acid competitively inhibited kainic acid-evoked release. Our results show that the cultured [3H]GABA-accumulating neurons, which probably represent the in vitro counterparts of GABAergic amacrine cells, express at least two types of excitatory amino acid receptors (of the NMDA and non-NMDA type), both of which can mediate a Ca2(+)-independent but Na2(+)-dependent release of GABA.

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