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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Edwards R. What the neuron tells glia. Neuron. 2009 Mar 26;61(6):811-2. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: How Cells, and Drugs, Try to Control Glutamate in the Synapse

Comment by:  Ben Barres, ARF Advisor
Submitted 9 April 2009  |  Permalink Posted 9 April 2009

Overall, the data now show that loss of neuronal glutamate release leads to downregulation of glutamate transporters in astrocytes. This makes a lot of sense for a homeostatic mechanism. It implies that the previously noted downregulation of astrocyte glt1 was a consequence of the neurodegenerative process rather than necessarily being part of the disease process. Drugs like riluzole have had only weak effects and conceivably their actions could relate to some other effect of this drug rather than any effect on glutamate transport.

The drug resistance problem caused by upregulation of P-glycoprotein at the blood-brain barrier is well documented and comes as no surprise. Getting drugs across the CNS is a big problem. The current findings showing that glial downregulation of glt1 is caused by loss of neurons suggest that even if high riluzole levels could be maintained in the CNS, this still would not be much more helpful for treating ALS. Many other genes are likely to turn off or on in astrocytes as a result of neuron degeneration and quite possibly these will turn out to be...  Read more

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