Acute Ethanol Reduces Calcium Signaling Elicited by K+ Depolarization in Cultured Cerebellar Granule Neurons
Acute Ethanol Reduces Calcium Signaling Elicited by K+ Depolarization in Cultured Cerebellar Granule Neurons
- 한국독성학회
- Toxicological Research
- Vol.16 No.1
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2000.0163 - 66 (4 pages)
- 0
The effects of acute ethanol on the high K+ induced $Ca^{2+}}$ signals were examined from primary cultures of cerebellar granule neurons. $Ca^{2+}}$ signals were measured with Calcium Green-1 based microscopic video imaging. Because $Ca^{2+}}$ signal was low in most of granule neurons without stimuli, high KCI was used for depolarization. In most case, acute exposure to ethanol reduced the peak amplitude of the $Ca^{2+}}$ signals, induced by high K+, even though low concentration of ethanol(2~10mM) was used and the effects lasted more than 30min. In was also possible to see differences of ethanol inhibition, i.e. the temporal pattern of $Ca^{2+}}$ signal reductions and the strength of inhibition of $Ca^{2+}}$ signals in cerebellar granule neurons. These results indicate that low concentration of ethanol has diverse actions on the $Ca^{2+}}$ signals in cerebellar granule neurons.
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