1995
DOI: 10.1097/00001756-199511270-00002
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Cobalt-permeable non-NMDA receptors in developing chick brainstem auditory nuclei

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Cited by 48 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…It is possible that CNQX and NBQX block some interaction of ambient glutamate (Haberecht and Redburn, 1996) with AMPA /kainate receptors on NM and NL neurons before the formation of functioning synapses. At least in NM, such a mechanism could not involve calcium-permeable non-NMDA receptors, however, because they do not appear until after E11 (Zhou et al, 1995). In view of this, we now favor the hypothesis that CNQX and NBQX increase production of one or more diffusible factors that act on auditory neurons to promote their survival.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
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“…It is possible that CNQX and NBQX block some interaction of ambient glutamate (Haberecht and Redburn, 1996) with AMPA /kainate receptors on NM and NL neurons before the formation of functioning synapses. At least in NM, such a mechanism could not involve calcium-permeable non-NMDA receptors, however, because they do not appear until after E11 (Zhou et al, 1995). In view of this, we now favor the hypothesis that CNQX and NBQX increase production of one or more diffusible factors that act on auditory neurons to promote their survival.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…For these reasons, NM and NL have been used extensively in studies of the control of neuron survival by afferent synaptic connections and activity (Rubel and Parks, 1988;Rubel et al, 1990). Calcium-permeable AMPA receptors are prominently expressed in NM and NL during development (Zhou et al, 1995) and mediate normal synaptic transmission (Otis et al, 1995). Normal programmed cell death in NL occurs during a period when these neurons receive rhythmic spontaneous excitation via afferent pathways originating in the cochlea and acting via AMPA receptors (Lippe, 1994).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lawrence and Trussell (2000) suggested that a reduction in flip expression contributes to the developmental changes in AMPAR kinetics in the chick nMag. Other studies using calcium permeability measurements and molecular analysis suggest a low expression level of the GluR2 subunit in the rat and chick auditory neurons Otis et al, 1995;Zhou et al, 1995;Ravindranathan et al, 2000). This was supported by enhanced spermine sensitivity during early development (Washburn et al, 1997).…”
Section: Mechanisms Underlying Age-dependent Acceleration In Ampar Dementioning
confidence: 82%
“…AMPARs that contain the GluR4 subunit may mediate fast synaptic transmission in rat and chick auditory synapses Otis et al, 1995;Zhou et al, 1995;Caicedo and Eybalin, 1999;Ravindranathan et al, 2000). We postulated that during development, the AMPAR complex might switch from subunits that are slow gating and Ca 2ϩ impermeable to fast-gating Ca 2ϩ permeable compositions (e.g., from GluR2 to GluR4), leading to the accelerated decay time course.…”
Section: Ampars Devoid Of Glur2 Mediate Synaptic Transmission During mentioning
confidence: 99%
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