4.3 Article

On the special role of NCX in astrocytes: Translating Na+-transients into intracellular Ca2+ signals

Journal

CELL CALCIUM
Volume 86, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceca.2019.102154

Keywords

Sodium; Calcium; Synapse; Neurone-glia interaction; Astroglial ionic excitability

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [FOR 2795: Ro2327/13-1]

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As a solute carrier electrogenic transporter, the sodium/calcium exchanger (NCX1-3/SLC8A1-A3) links the transplasmalemmal gradients of sodium and calcium ions (Na+, Ca2+) to the membrane potential of astrocytes. Classically, NCX is considered to serve the export of Ca2+ at the expense of the Na+ gradient, defined as a forward mode operation. Forward mode NCX activity contributes to Ca2+ extrusion and thus to the recovery from intracellular Ca2+ signals in astrocytes. The reversal potential of the NCX, owing to its transport stoichiometry of 3 Na+ to 1 Ca2+, is, however, close to the astrocytes' membrane potential and hence even small elevations in the astrocytic Na+ concentration or minor depolarisations switch it into the reverse mode (Ca2+ import/Na+ export). Notably, transient Na+ elevations in the millimolar range are induced by uptake of glutamate or GABA into astrocytes and/or by the opening of Na+-permeable ion channels in response to neuronal activity. Activity-related Na+ transients result in NCX reversal, which mediates Ca2+ influx from the extracellular space, thereby generating astrocyte Ca2+ signalling independent from InsP(3)-mediated release from intracellular stores. Under pathological conditions, reverse NCX promotes cytosolic Ca2+ overload, while dampening Na+ elevations of astrocytes. This review provides an overview on our current knowledge about this fascinating transporter and its special functional role in astrocytes. We shall delineate that Na+-driven, reverse NCX-mediated astrocyte Ca2+ signals are involved neurone-glia interaction. Na+ transients, translated by the NCX into Ca2+ elevations, thereby emerge as a new signalling pathway in astrocytes.

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