Abstract

Excitatory amino-acid transporters (EAATs) in the central nervous system maintain extracellular glutamate concentrations below excitotoxic levels and may limit the activation of glutamate receptors. Here we report the cloning of a novel human aspartate/glutamate transporter, EAAT4, which is expressed predominantly in the cerebellum. The transport activity encoded by EAAT4 has high apparent affinity for L-aspartate and L-glutamate, and has a pharmacological profile consistent with previously described cerebellar transport activities. In Xenopus oocytes expressing EAAT4, L-aspartate and L-glutamate elicited a current predominantly carried by chloride ions. This chloride conductance was not blocked by components that block endogenous oocyte chloride channels. Thus EAAT4 combines the re-uptake of neurotransmitter with a mechanism for increasing chloride permeability, both of which could regulate excitatory neurotransmission.

Keywords

Glutamate receptorExcitatory postsynaptic potentialChemistryChloride channelNeurotransmissionSynaptic cleftNMDA receptorBiochemistryCell biologyBiophysicsBiologyReceptor

MeSH Terms

Amino Acid SequenceAmino Acid Transport System X-AGAnimalsAspartic AcidBase SequenceCellsCulturedCerebellumChloride ChannelsChloridesDNAComplementaryExcitatory Amino Acid Transporter 4Glutamate Plasma Membrane Transport ProteinsHumansIon Channel GatingLigandsMembrane PotentialsMolecular Sequence DataOocytesReceptorsAmino AcidReceptorsGlutamateSequence HomologyAmino AcidSodiumSymportersXenopus

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Publication Info

Year
1995
Type
article
Volume
375
Issue
6532
Pages
599-603
Citations
1129
Access
Closed

Social Impact

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Citation Metrics

1129
OpenAlex
53
Influential
941
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Cite This

W. A. Fairman, Robert J. Vandenberg, J.L. Arriza et al. (1995). An excitatory amino-acid transporter with properties of a ligand-gated chloride channel. Nature , 375 (6532) , 599-603. https://doi.org/10.1038/375599a0

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/375599a0
PMID
7791878

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%