Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 4277-4286, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
AMPA, kainate, and quisqualate activate a common receptor-channel complex on embryonic chick motoneurons
CF Zorumski and J Yang
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri.
The actions of the putative quisqualate-selective agonist DL-alpha-
amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionic acid (AMPA) were examined in
identified embryonic chick motoneurons using gigaseal recording techniques
and compared with properties of the selective non- NMDA excitatory amino
acid agonists kainate and quisqualate. Pressure application of AMPA induces
an inward going current when neurons are voltage-clamped at negative
membrane potentials. The current-voltage relationship for this response is
linear with reversal near 0 mV. Over the range of 1 microM-10 mM, the
AMPA-induced current is dose-dependent with an ED50 of 40 microM. AMPA
currents are insensitive to the selective NMDA receptor antagonist,
2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate, and the putative quisqualate selective
blocker, glutamate diethyl ester, but are partially inhibited by kynurenic
acid. In competition experiments, applications of saturating concentrations
of AMPA and either kainate or quisqualate produce responses intermediate
between the response to either agonist alone, indicating commonality in the
mechanism of these agents. Applications of AMPA with the NMDA-selective
agonist aspartate give an additive response. Analysis of current
fluctuations indicates that AMPA, quisqualate, and kainate gate a channel
with a primary conductance near 20 pS. Differences in maximal macroscopic
current evoked by saturating concentrations of AMPA, kainate, and
quisqualate cannot be explained by differences in mean channel open time as
the most efficacious agonist, kainate, has the shortest channel open time
(AMPA = 5.9 +/- 0.4 msec, kainate = 2.7 +/- 0.1 msec, quisqualate = 5.0 +/-
0.5 msec). Rather, kainate induces a greater frequency of channel opening.
This finding contrasts with results obtained at the nicotinic ACh receptor,
where the most efficacious agonists have the longest mean channel open
time. Our results suggest that AMPA acts at the same receptor-channel
complex as kainate and quisqualate on chick motoneurons and support the
hypothesis that only 2 classes of excitatory amino acid receptor complexes
exist in this preparation.