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First published online on April 25, 2008.
Copyright © 2008 by The Physiological Society
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jphysiol.2008.153437v2
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Received March 4, 2008
Revised April 2, 2008
Accepted after revision April 17, 2008

Synaptic inhibition by glycine acting at a metabotropic receptor in tiger salamander retina

Mingli Hou1*, Lei Duan1, and Malcolm M. Slaughter1

1 SUNY Buffalo

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mingli_hou{at}hms.harvard.edu.

Glycine is the lone fast neurotransmitter for which a metabotropic pathway has not been identified. In retina, we found a strychnine-insensitive glycine response in bipolar and ganglion cells. This glycine response reduced high voltage-activated calcium current. It was G-protein mediated and protein kinase A dependent. The EC50 of the metabotropic glycine response is 3 µM, an order of magnitude lower than the ionotropic glycine receptor in the same retina. The bipolar cell glutamatergic input to ganglion cells was suppressed by metabotropic glycine action. The synaptic output of about two-thirds of bipolar cells and calcium current in two-thirds of ganglion cells are sensitive to glycine's action at metabotropic receptors, suggesting this signal regulates specific synaptic pathways in proximal retina. This study resolves the curious absence of a metabotropic glycine pathway in the nervous system and reveals that the major fast inhibitory neurotransmitters, GABA and glycine, both activate G-coupled pathways as well.


Key words: Glycine receptors • Retinal ganglion cell • Synaptic transmission • metabotropic glycine signals







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