Actions of acromelic acid on nervous system l-glutamate receptors

Sattelle, David B.; Sepúlveda, Maria-Isabel; Shinozaki, Haruhiko; Ishida, Michiko

Abstract

Acromelic acid, a naturally occurring kainoid, isolated from the mushroom Clitocybe acromelalga, is a weak displacer of [3H]L-glutamate binding to cockroach (Periplaneta americana) nerve cord membranes. Acromelic acid (1 mM) displaces approximately 60% of specifically bound [3H]L-glutamate. When applied by bath perfusion to the cell body membrane of the cockroach fast coxal depressor motor neurone, acromelic acid generated slow, prolonged, dose-dependent depolarizations at concentrations of 0.3 microM and above. Thus acromelic acid is among the most potent of the excitatory amino acids tested to date on insect neurones.

Más información

Título de la Revista: Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology
Volumen: 25
Número: 2
Fecha de publicación: 1994
Página de inicio: 87
Página final: 94
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1002/arch.940250202

Notas: ISI