ePoster

INTERPLAY BETWEEN ASTROCYTIC MORPHOLOGY AND SODIUM SIGNALLING IN SYNAPTIC SIGNALLING

Alexandre Vargaand 1 co-author

Institute of Cellular Neurosciences I

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS06-09PM-196

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS06-09PM-196

Poster preview

INTERPLAY BETWEEN ASTROCYTIC MORPHOLOGY AND SODIUM SIGNALLING IN SYNAPTIC SIGNALLING poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS06-09PM-196

Abstract

The efficiency of astroglial glutamate uptake at synapses depends on the electrochemical driving forces at perisynaptic astrocytic processes (PAPs). Na+-coupled uptake of glutamate evokes astrocytic sodium transients ([Na+]A). Depending on their amplitude and kinetics, which are likely determined by astrocyte morphology, these transients could lower the driving force for further uptake. However, the quantitative relationship between PAPs [Na+]A transients and astrocyte morphology remains unclear. To investigate this, we used fluorescence lifetime imaging of whole-cell patch clamped astrocytes filled with the Na+ indicator ING-2 in acute hippocampal slices. First, a cuvette calibration confirmed the sensitivity of the ING-2 lifetime to changes of [Na+]. The dye was then calibrated in situ by patching astrocytes with internal solutions containing different [Na+]. This provided a direct, quantitative readout of [Na+] from the fluorescence lifetime.
We then assessed activity-dependent [Na+]A dynamics across distinct subcellular compartments. High-frequency stimulation (HFS) of Schaffer collaterals elicited robust, long-lasting [Na+]A increases in the PAPs, but not in the soma, despite membrane depolarization. These signals were abolished by the Na+ channel inhibitor TTX. To probe the capacity for transporter-mediated Na+ entry, we used pressure application of D-aspartate, which is taken up by glutamate transporters with Na+. Similar to HFS, D-aspartate triggered [Na+]A in the PAPs but not the soma, while aCSF applications elicited no responses. Our data indicates that glutamatergic synaptic transmission and glutamate uptake drive substantial Na+ increases in the astrocyte periphery. Current experiments investigate how induced morphological changes impact these synaptically driven transients.

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