Glutamate-stimulated, astrocyte-derived carbon monoxide (CO) causes cerebral arteriole dilation by activating smooth muscle cell large-conductance Ca 2ϩ -activated K ϩ channels. Here, we examined the hypothesis that glutamate activates heme oxygenase (HO)-2 and CO production via the intracellular Ca 2ϩ concentration ([Ca 2ϩ ]i)/ Ca 2ϩ -calmodulin signaling pathway in newborn pig astrocytes. The major findings are: 1) glutamate stimulated Ca 2ϩ transients and increased steady-state [Ca 2ϩ ]i in cerebral cortical astrocytes in primary culture, 2) in astrocytes permeabilized with ionomycin, elevation of [Ca 2ϩ ]i concentration-dependently increased CO production, 3) glutamate did not affect CO production at any [Ca 2ϩ ]i when the [Ca 2ϩ ]i was held constant, 4) thapsigargin, a sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca 2ϩ -ATPase blocker, decreased basal CO production and blocked glutamate-induced increases in CO, and 5) calmidazolium, a calmodulin inhibitor, blocked CO production induced by glutamate and by [Ca 2ϩ ]i elevation. Taken together, our data are consistent with the hypothesis that glutamate elevates [Ca 2ϩ ]i in astrocytes, leading to Ca 2ϩ -and calmodulin-dependent HO-2 activation, and CO production. cerebral circulation; heme oxygenase; calmodulin; gasotransmitter; neurovascular coupling IN THE NEUROVASCULAR UNIT, astrocytes act as intermediaries between neurons and arterioles to regulate vascular tone in response to neuronal activity. Release of glutamate from presynaptic neurons increases blood flow to match metabolic demands; such coupling is called functional hyperemia. Functional hyperemia has been investigated extensively, and many astrocyte-derived vasoactive mediators, including ADP (40, 41), ATP (34, 36), epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (1-3), K ϩ (11, 13, 33), and prostacyclin (42), appear to be involved, depending on experimental models. We have shown that carbon monoxide (CO) is another critical regulator of cerebrovascular tone in newborn piglets (19,24,26,31,39).CO dilates newborn pig pial arterioles (22,25). CO causes vasodilation by stimulating Ca 2ϩ sparks and large-conductance Ca 2ϩ -activated K ϩ (BK Ca ) channels and by increasing effective coupling between Ca 2ϩ sparks and BK Ca channels in arterial smooth muscle cells (17,18,25,38). Physiologically, CO is produced by heme oxygenase (HO)-catabolized breakdown of heme to CO, iron, and biliverdin (27). Of three HO isoforms, only HO-2 is expressed under basal conditions in newborn piglet brain (31, 32). In piglets, endogenous HO-2 can produce sufficient CO to induce cerebral arteriole dilation (23).Our previous studies in piglets demonstrated that glutamate stimulates astrocytic CO production in primary-cultured astrocytes and in vivo (24,26,31). We also demonstrated that astrocytes release CO and astrocyte-derived CO causes glutamate-induced pial arteriolar dilation in vivo (24), supporting a regulatory role for astrocytic CO in neurovascular coupling in the newborn brain. Indeed, in brain slices from newborn piglets, we demonstrated that glut...