Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1492710069> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1492710069 endingPage "351" @default.
- W1492710069 startingPage "339" @default.
- W1492710069 abstract "Recently, the distinction between transmitters that use volume or wiring transmission has been blurred by several reports that both GABA and glutamate can act relatively remotely from their site of release. This chapter considers these evidence, and discusses the physiological and pathological roles of this form of signaling. The instances of extrasynaptic signalling, heterosynaptic interactions and cross talk listed above are not necessarily the most important phenomena mediated by amino acid spillover. Instead, they are the examples that have been observed with the available recording techniques. Indeed, the spatial arrangement of group I metabotropic receptors, just outside the edge of the synaptic cleft in many areas, would make them strong candidates for detecting glutamate spillover. However, it is more difficult to unravel activation of extra-synaptic receptors from conventional synaptic phenomena when the same post-synaptic cell detects both types of signal. Whether spillover-mediated transmission occurs extensively in the normal living brain is an open question; the anatomical evidence suggests that it is highly likely to occur at some synapses that are poorly isolated by glial processes. Because this phenomenon could severely impair the specificity of synaptic communication, it may be necessary to think of amino acid-mediated signaling as a mixture of volume and wiring transmission." @default.
- W1492710069 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1492710069 creator A5033570060 @default.
- W1492710069 date "2000-01-01" @default.
- W1492710069 modified "2023-10-14" @default.
- W1492710069 title "Spillover and synaptic cross talk mediated by glutamate and GABA in the mammalian brain" @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1513132249 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1551756182 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1571689838 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1577542220 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1588643584 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1597908762 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1662302126 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1891269879 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1897919376 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1966846060 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1967192722 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1968600322 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1972829230 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1975715220 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1975888261 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1979090630 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1986605182 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1988900265 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1993861337 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1994090626 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1998383469 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W1998984627 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2002173877 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2007239691 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2042261461 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2043123579 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2043166209 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2044232368 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2051378734 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2055137643 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2066902435 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2071230662 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2072962057 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2074235051 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2074417504 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2075603142 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2075952655 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2078324180 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2083954196 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2093428018 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2103292884 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2106414999 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2110469184 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2120741241 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2126033464 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2128426029 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2129151401 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2129766810 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2135382901 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2145806440 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2146112646 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2146973655 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2163634461 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2165062318 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2176076159 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W2326520701 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W4249136900 @default.
- W1492710069 cites W4376848285 @default.
- W1492710069 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/s0079-6123(00)25023-1" @default.
- W1492710069 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11098670" @default.
- W1492710069 hasPublicationYear "2000" @default.
- W1492710069 type Work @default.
- W1492710069 sameAs 1492710069 @default.
- W1492710069 citedByCount "84" @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692012 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692013 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692014 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692015 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692016 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692017 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692019 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692020 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692021 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692022 @default.
- W1492710069 countsByYear W14927100692023 @default.
- W1492710069 crossrefType "book-chapter" @default.
- W1492710069 hasAuthorship W1492710069A5033570060 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C162324750 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C170493617 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C175444787 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C200170125 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C49051014 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C55493867 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C55527203 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C61174792 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConceptScore W1492710069C162324750 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConceptScore W1492710069C169760540 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConceptScore W1492710069C170493617 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConceptScore W1492710069C175444787 @default.
- W1492710069 hasConceptScore W1492710069C200170125 @default.