In the inner plexiform layer, amacrine cells receive glutamatergic
input from bipolar cells. Glutamate can depolarize amacrine cells by
activation of ionotropic glutamate receptors or mediate potentially
more diverse changes via activation of G protein-coupled
metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluR5). Here, we asked whether
selective activation of metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 is linked to
modulation of the voltage-gated Ca2+ channels expressed by
cultured GABAergic amacrine cells. To address this, we performed
whole-cell voltage clamp experiments, primarily in the perforated-patch
configuration. We found that agonists selective for mGluR5, including
(RS)-2-chloro-5-hydroxyphenylglycine (CHPG), enhanced the amplitude of
the voltage-dependent Ca2+ current. The voltage-dependent
Ca2+ current and CHPG-dependent current enhancement were
blocked by nifedipine, indicating that L-type Ca2+ channels,
specifically, were being modulated. We have previously shown that
activation of mGluR5 produces Ca2+ elevations in cultured
amacrine cells (Sosa et al., 2002). Loading
the cells with 5 mM BAPTA inhibited the mGluR5-dependent enhancement,
suggesting that the cytosolic Ca2+ elevations are required
for modulation of the current. Although activation of mGluR5 is
typically linked to activation of protein kinase C, we found that
direct activation of this kinase leads to inhibition of the
Ca2+ current, indicating that stimulation of this enzyme is
not responsible for the mGluR5-dependent enhancement. Interestingly,
direct stimulation of protein kinase A produced an enhancement of the
Ca2+ current similar to that observed with activation of
mGluR5. Thus, activation of mGluR5 may modulate the L-type
voltage-gated Ca2+ current in these GABAergic amacrine cells
via activation of protein kinase A, possibly via
direct activation of a Ca2+-dependent adenylate cyclase.