Neuronal activity drives pathway-specific depolarization of astrocyte distal processes
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Abstract
Astrocytes are glial cells that interact with neuronal synapses via their distal processes, where they remove glutamate and potassium (K + ) from the extracellular space following neuronal activity. Astrocyte clearance of both glutamate and K + is voltage-dependent, but astrocyte membrane potential (V m ) has been thought to be largely invariant. As a result, these voltage-dependencies have not been considered relevant to astrocyte function. Using genetically encoded voltage indicators enabling the measurement of V m at distal astrocyte processes (DAPs), we report large, rapid, focal, and pathway-specific depolarizations in DAPs during neuronal activity. These activity-dependent astrocyte depolarizations are driven by action potential-mediated presynaptic K + efflux and electrogenic glutamate transporters. We find that DAP depolarization inhibits astrocyte glutamate clearance during neuronal activity, enhancing neuronal activation by glutamate. This represents a novel class of sub-cellular astrocyte membrane dynamics and a new form of astrocyte-neuron interaction.
One Sentence Summary
Genetically encoded voltage imaging of astrocytes shows that presynaptic neuronal activity drives focal astrocyte depolarization, contributing to activity-dependent inhibition of glutamate uptake.
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Excerpt
Eavesdropping neuron-astrocyte conversations: the Dulla lab unravels a novel form of neuron-astrocyte crosstalk using genetically encoded voltage imaging
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