期刊
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-REGULATORY INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY
卷 290, 期 3, 页码 R568-R576出版社
AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00618.2005
关键词
sodium sensor; salt homeostasis; glial sodium channel; Na(v)2; astrocyte; ependymal cell; GABAergic neuron; neuron-glia interaction
类别
Na-x is an atypical sodium channel that is assumed to be a descendant of the voltage-gated sodium channel family. Our recent studies on the Na-x-gene-targeting mouse revealed that Nax channel is localized to the circumventricular organs (CVOs), the central loci for the salt and water homeostasis in mammals, where the Nax channel serves as a sodium-level sensor of the body fluid. To understand the cellular mechanism by which the information sensed by Nax channels is transferred to the activity of the organs, we dissected the subcellular localization of Nax in the present study. Double-immunostaining and immunoelectron microscopic analyses revealed that Nax is exclusively localized to perineuronal lamellate processes extended from ependymal cells and astrocytes in the organs. In addition, glial cells isolated from the subfornical organ, one of the CVOs, were sensitive to an increase in the extracellular sodium level, as analyzed by an ion-imaging method. These results suggest that glial cells bearing the Nax channel are the first to sense a physiological increase in the level of sodium in the body fluid, and they regulate the neural activity of the CVOs by enveloping neurons. Close communication between inexcitable glial cells and excitable neural cells thus appears to be the basis of the central control of the salt homeostasis.
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