4.8 Article

Incomplete removal of extracellular glutamate controls synaptic transmission and integration at a cerebellar synapse

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ELIFE
卷 10, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELIFE SCIENCES PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.63819

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  1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [NS028901, NS116798]
  2. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders [DC004450, DC016905, DC014878, DC012454]

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The study reveals that glutamate is maintained at a high level in the synaptic cleft of cerebellar unipolar brush cells, influencing their excitatory or inhibitory responses and modulating transmission. The ambient glutamate originates from spike-independent exocytosis at the MF terminal, dependent on the activity of glutamate transporters.
Synapses of glutamatergic mossy fibers (MFs) onto cerebellar unipolar brush cells (UBCs) generate slow excitatory (ON) or inhibitory (OFF) postsynaptic responses dependent on the complement of glutamate receptors expressed on the UBC's large dendritic brush. Using mouse brain slice recording and computational modeling of synaptic transmission, we found that substantial glutamate is maintained in the UBC synaptic cleft, sufficient to modify spontaneous firing in OFF UBCs and tonically desensitize AMPARs of ON UBCs. The source of this ambient glutamate was spontaneous, spike-independent exocytosis from the MF terminal, and its level was dependent on activity of glutamate transporters EAAT1-2. Increasing levels of ambient glutamate shifted the polarity of evoked synaptic responses in ON UBCs and altered the phase of responses to in vivo-like synaptic activity. Unlike classical fast synapses, receptors at the UBC synapse are virtually always exposed to a significant level of glutamate, which varies in a graded manner during transmission.

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