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Ion Dependence and Receptor Mediation of Glutamate Toxicity in the Immature Rat Hippocampal Slice.

Glutamate (glu) is a major excitatory transmitter and a toxin in the brain. In the present study, the immature rat hippocampal slice was used to determine the morphology, topography, ionic mediation and receptor specificity of glu toxicity. Slices were exposed to glu for 30 min, and the damage was evaluated after 3 h of recovery in regular medium. The effects on glu toxicity of changes of [Ca2+], [Cl-] and [Na+] were determined. The receptor preference of glu was assessed by using the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonist MK-801 and the kainate (KA)/quisqualate (QA) antagonist DNQX, alone or in combination. Further, to see whether glu produces cytotoxicity via osmolysis, the effects of hyperosmolal sucrose on glu toxicity were studied. Glu toxicity was similar to the previously described NMDA toxicity with regard to cytopathology, but differed in some aspects from that caused by KA and QA. The severity of the lesion was determined by the proximity of neurons to the incubation fluid, probably as a consequence of cellular accumulation of the amino acid. Omission of Ca2+ abolished glu toxicity in all neurons except the granule cells of the outer blade. This population was completely protected when Ca2+ was omitted and [Cl-] was reduced. Elevation of [Ca2+] markedly aggravated the lesion caused by glu. Substitution of isethionate for Cl- worsened the glu-induced damage, whilst the amino acid produced qualitatively different neuropathology when choline substituted for Na+. Apparently glu did not damage hippocampal nerve cells through an osmolytic mechanism as medium supplemented with 100 mM sucrose increased the toxicity of glu. Since the lesion produced by glu was more widespread in the presence of high [Ca2+], the effects of receptor antagonists were studied under this condition. MK-801 inhibited glu toxicity whereas DNQX had no effect. Combination of MK-801 and DNQX did not offer better protection than did MK-801 alone. The results suggest that Ca2+ is the main (but not single) determinant of glu toxicity in the immature hippocampal slice. The ionic requirements of glu neurotoxicity are identical to those of NMDA, but differ from those of KA and QA. The notion that glu is a selective NMDA agonist in the present model was confirmed by the protection of MK-801, and by the lack of an effect of DNQX. This is the first report demonstrating that the toxicity of glu is mediated by NMDA receptors in brain tissue which has developed normally. The findings indicate that specific blockade of NMDA receptors may be the most rational strategy in the prevention of glu-related neuronal death occurring in certain neurological anomalies.

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