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Somatostatin, a Presynaptic Modulator of Glutamatergic Signal in the Central Nervous System

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22115864

Keywords

somatostatin; glutamate; noradrenaline; metamodulation; volume diffusion; NMDA receptors; sst2 receptors; sst5 receptors

Funding

  1. Italian Ministery of Research, program PRIN [201779W93T_004]

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Somatostatin plays a role in controlling synaptic transmission efficiency in the central nervous system, mainly by modulating presynaptic glutamate exocytosis or by modulating glutamate receptors that are functionally coupled with somatostatin receptors.
Somatostatin is widely diffused in the central nervous system, where it participates to control the efficiency of synaptic transmission. This peptide mainly colocalizes with GABA, in inhibitory, GABA-containing interneurons from which it is actively released in a Ca2+ dependent manner upon application of depolarizing stimuli. Once released in the synaptic cleft, somatostatin acts locally, or it diffuses in the extracellular space through volume diffusion, a mechanism(s) of distribution which mainly operates in the cerebrospinal fluid and that assures the progression of neuronal signalling from signal-secreting sender structures towards receptor-expressing targeted neurons located extrasynaptically, in a non-synaptic, inter-neuronal form of communication. Somatostatin controls the efficiency of central glutamate transmission by either modulating presynaptically the glutamate exocytosis or by metamodulating the activity of glutamate receptors colocalized and functionally coupled with somatostatin receptors in selected subpopulations of nerve terminals. Deciphering the role of somatostatin in the mechanisms of volume diffusion and in the receptor-receptor interaction unveils new perspectives in the central role of this fine tuner of synaptic strength, paving the road to new therapeutic approaches for the cure of central disorders.

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