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Dive into the research topics where Matthew A. Kreitzer is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew A. Kreitzer.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2007

Modulation of Extracellular Proton Fluxes from Retinal Horizontal Cells of the Catfish by Depolarization and Glutamate

Matthew A. Kreitzer; Leon P. Collis; Anthony J.A. Molina; Peter J. Smith; Robert Paul Malchow

Self-referencing H+-selective microelectrodes were used to measure extracellular proton fluxes from cone-driven horizontal cells isolated from the retina of the catfish (Ictalurus punctatus). The neurotransmitter glutamate induced an alkalinization of the area adjacent to the external face of the cell membrane. The effect of glutamate occurred regardless of whether the external solution was buffered with 1 mM HEPES, 3 mM phosphate, or 24 mM bicarbonate. The AMPA/kainate receptor agonist kainate and the NMDA receptor agonist N-methyl-d-aspartate both mimicked the effect of glutamate. The effect of kainate on proton flux was inhibited by the AMPA/kainate receptor blocker CNQX, and the effect of NMDA was abolished by the NMDA receptor antagonist DAP-5. Metabotropic glutamate receptor agonists produced no alteration in proton fluxes from horizontal cells. Depolarization of cells either by increasing extracellular potassium or directly by voltage clamp also produced an alkalinization adjacent to the cell membrane. The effects of depolarization on proton flux were blocked by 10 μM nifedipine, an inhibitor of L-type calcium channels. The plasmalemma Ca2+/H+ ATPase (PMCA) blocker 5(6)-carboxyeosin also significantly reduced proton flux modulation by glutamate. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that glutamate-induced extracellular alkalinizations arise from activation of the PMCA pump following increased intracellular calcium entry into cells. This process might help to relieve suppression of photoreceptor neurotransmitter release that results from exocytosed protons from photoreceptor synaptic terminals. Our findings argue strongly against the hypothesis that protons released by horizontal cells act as the inhibitory feedback neurotransmitter that creates the surround portion of the receptive fields of retinal neurons.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2012

Extracellular pH dynamics of retinal horizontal cells examined using electrochemical and fluorometric methods

Jason Jacoby; Matthew A. Kreitzer; Simon Alford; Haohua Qian; Boriana K. Tchernookova; Ethan R. Naylor; Robert Paul Malchow

Extracellular H(+) has been hypothesized to mediate feedback inhibition from horizontal cells onto vertebrate photoreceptors. According to this hypothesis, depolarization of horizontal cells should induce extracellular acidification adjacent to the cell membrane. Experiments testing this hypothesis have produced conflicting results. Studies examining carp and goldfish horizontal cells loaded with the pH-sensitive dye 5-hexadecanoylaminofluorescein (HAF) reported an extracellular acidification on depolarization by glutamate or potassium. However, investigations using H(+)-selective microelectrodes report an extracellular alkalinization on depolarization of skate and catfish horizontal cells. These studies differed in the species and extracellular pH buffer used and the presence or absence of cobalt. We used both techniques to examine H(+) changes from isolated catfish horizontal cells under identical experimental conditions (1 mM HEPES, no cobalt). HAF fluorescence indicated an acidification response to high extracellular potassium or glutamate. However, a clear extracellular alkalinization was found using H(+)-selective microelectrodes under the same conditions. Confocal microscopy revealed that HAF was not localized exclusively to the extracellular surface, but rather was detected throughout the intracellular compartment. A high degree of colocalization between HAF and the mitochondrion-specific dye MitoTracker was observed. When HAF fluorescence was monitored from optical sections from the center of a cell, glutamate produced an intracellular acidification. These results are consistent with a model in which depolarization allows calcium influx, followed by activation of a Ca(2+)/H(+) plasma membrane ATPase. Our results suggest that HAF is reporting intracellular pH changes and that depolarization of horizontal cells induces an extracellular alkalinization, which may relieve H(+)-mediated inhibition of photoreceptor synaptic transmission.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Distinctive patterns of alterations in proton efflux from goldfish retinal horizontal cells monitored with self-referencing H + -selective electrodes

Matthew A. Kreitzer; Jason Jacoby; Ethan R. Naylor; Adam Baker; Trent Grable; Emma Tran; Sophie Erwin Booth; Haohua Qian; Robert Paul Malchow

The H+ hypothesis of lateral feedback inhibition in the outer retina predicts that depolarizing agents should increase H+ release from horizontal cells. To test this hypothesis, self‐referencing H+‐selective microelectrodes were used to measure extracellular H+ fluxes from isolated goldfish horizontal cells. We found a more complex pattern of cellular responses than previously observed from horizontal cells of other species examined using this technique. One class of cells had an initial standing signal indicative of high extracellular H+ adjacent to the cell membrane; challenge with glutamate, kainate or high extracellular potassium induced an extracellular alkalinization. This alkalinization was reduced by the calcium channel blockers nifedipine and cobalt. A second class of cells displayed spontaneous oscillations in extracellular H+ that were abolished by cobalt, nifedipine and low extracellular calcium. A strong correlation between changes in intracellular calcium and extracellular proton flux was detected in experiments simultaneously monitoring intracellular calcium and extracellular H+. A third set of cells was characterized by a standing extracellular alkalinization which was turned into an acidic signal by cobalt. In this last set of cells, addition of glutamate or high extracellular potassium did not significantly alter the proton signal. Taken together, the response characteristics of all three sets of neurons are most parsimoniously explained by activation of a plasma membrane Ca2+ ATPase pump, with an extracellular alkalinization resulting from exchange of intracellular calcium for extracellular H+. These findings argue strongly against the hypothesis that H+ release from horizontal cells mediates lateral inhibition in the outer retina.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2014

Fluorescent imaging reports an extracellular alkalinization induced by glutamatergic activation of isolated retinal horizontal cells

Jason Jacoby; Matthew A. Kreitzer; Simon Alford; Robert Paul Malchow

Extracellular acidification induced by retinal horizontal cells has been hypothesized to underlie lateral feedback inhibition onto vertebrate photoreceptors. To test this hypothesis, the H(+)-sensitive fluorophore 5-hexadecanoylaminofluorescein (HAF) was used to measure changes in H(+) from horizontal cells isolated from the retina of the catfish. HAF staining conditions were modified to minimize intracellular accumulation of HAF and maximize membrane-associated staining, and ratiometric fluorescent imaging of cells displaying primarily membrane-associated HAF fluorescence was conducted. Challenge of such HAF-labeled cells with glutamate or the ionotropic glutamate receptor agonist kainate produced an increase in the fluorescence ratio, consistent with an alkalinization response of +0.12 pH units and +0.23 pH units, respectively. This alkalinization was blocked by the AMPA receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX), the L-type calcium channel blocker nifedipine, and lanthanum. The alkalinization reported by HAF was consistent with extracellular alkalinizations detected in previous studies using self-referencing H(+)-selective microelectrodes. The spatial distribution of the kainate-induced changes in extracellular H(+) was also examined. An overall global alkalinization around the cell was observed, with no obvious signs of discrete centers of acidification. Taken together, these data argue against the hypothesis that glutamatergic-induced efflux of protons from horizontal cells mediates lateral feedback inhibition in the outer retina.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2017

Extracellular H+ fluxes from tiger salamander müller (Glial) cells measured using self-referencing H+-selective microelectrodes

Matthew A. Kreitzer; David Swygart; Meredith Osborn; Blair Skinner; Chad Heer; Ryan Kaufman; Bethany Williams; Lexi Shepherd; Hannah Caringal; Michael Gongwer; Boriana K. Tchernookova; Robert Paul Malchow

Self-referencing H+-selective electrodes were used to measure extracellular H+ fluxes from Müller (glial) cells isolated from the tiger salamander retina. A novel chamber enabled stable recordings using H+-selective microelectrodes in a self-referencing format using bicarbonate-based buffer solutions. A small basal H+ flux was observed from the end foot region of quiescent cells bathed in 24 mM bicarbonate-based solutions, and increasing extracellular potassium induced a dose-dependent increase in H+ flux. Barium at 6 mM also increased H+ flux. Potassium-induced extracellular acidifications were abolished when bicarbonate was replaced by 1 mM HEPES. The carbonic anhydrase antagonist benzolamide potentiated the potassium-induced extracellular acidification, while 300 μM DIDS, 300 μM SITS, and 30 μM S0859 significantly reduced the response. Potassium-induced extracellular acidifications persisted in solutions lacking extracellular calcium, although potassium-induced changes in intracellular calcium monitored with Oregon Green were abolished. Exchange of external sodium with choline also eliminated the potassium-induced extracellular acidification. Removal of extracellular sodium by itself induced a transient alkalinization, and replacement of sodium induced a transient acidification, both of which were blocked by 300 μM DIDS. Recordings at the apical portion of the cell showed smaller potassium-induced extracellular H+ fluxes, and removal of the end foot region further decreased the H+ flux, suggesting that the end foot was the major source of acidifications. These studies demonstrate that self-referencing H+-selective electrodes can be used to monitor H+ fluxes from retinal Müller cells in bicarbonate-based solutions and confirm the presence of a sodium-coupled bicarbonate transporter, the activity of which is largely restricted to the end foot of the cell.NEW & NOTEWORTHY The present study uses self-referencing H+-selective electrodes for the first time to measure H+ fluxes from Müller (glial) cells isolated from tiger salamander retina. These studies demonstrate bicarbonate transport as a potent regulator of extracellular levels of acidity around Müller cells and point toward a need for further studies aimed at addressing how such glial cell pH regulatory mechanisms may shape neuronal signaling.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Activation of retinal glial (Müller) cells by extracellular ATP induces pronounced increases in extracellular H+ flux

Boriana K. Tchernookova; Chad Heer; Marin Young; David Swygart; Ryan Kaufman; Michael Gongwer; Lexi Shepherd; Hannah Caringal; Jason Jacoby; Matthew A. Kreitzer; Robert Paul Malchow

Small alterations in extracellular acidity are potentially important modulators of neuronal signaling within the vertebrate retina. Here we report a novel extracellular acidification mechanism mediated by glial cells in the retina. Using self-referencing H+-selective microelectrodes to measure extracellular H+ fluxes, we show that activation of retinal Müller (glial) cells of the tiger salamander by micromolar concentrations of extracellular ATP induces a pronounced extracellular H+ flux independent of bicarbonate transport. ADP, UTP and the non-hydrolyzable analog ATPγs at micromolar concentrations were also potent stimulators of extracellular H+ fluxes, but adenosine was not. The extracellular H+ fluxes induced by ATP were mimicked by the P2Y1 agonist MRS 2365 and were significantly reduced by the P2 receptor blockers suramin and PPADS, suggesting activation of P2Y receptors. Bath-applied ATP induced an intracellular rise in calcium in Müller cells; both the calcium rise and the extracellular H+ fluxes were significantly attenuated when calcium re-loading into the endoplasmic reticulum was inhibited by thapsigargin and when the PLC-IP3 signaling pathway was disrupted with 2-APB and U73122. The anion transport inhibitor DIDS also markedly reduced the ATP-induced increase in H+ flux while SITS had no effect. ATP-induced H+ fluxes were also observed from Müller cells isolated from human, rat, monkey, skate and lamprey retinae, suggesting a highly evolutionarily conserved mechanism of potential general importance. Extracellular ATP also induced significant increases in extracellular H+ flux at the level of both the outer and inner plexiform layers in retinal slices of tiger salamander which was significantly reduced by suramin and PPADS. We suggest that the novel H+ flux mediated by ATP-activation of Müller cells and of other glia as well may be a key mechanism modulating neuronal signaling in the vertebrate retina and throughout the brain.


Archive | 2015

isolated retinal horizontal cells alkalinization induced by glutamatergic activation of Fluorescent imaging reports an extracellular

Matthew A. Kreitzer; Simon Alford; Robert Paul Malchow


Archive | 2015

Simultaneous Recordings Potential on Cone Calcium Currents Studied With Feedback Effects of Horizontal Cell Membrane

Wallace B. Thoreson; Joanna D. Crook; Michael B. Manookin; Orin S. Packer; Dennis M. Dacey; Ethan R. Naylor; Robert Paul Malchow; Jason Jacoby; Matthew A. Kreitzer; Simon Alford; Haohua Qian; Boriana K. Tchernookova; Anne Hanneken; Norbert Babai


Journal of undergraduate neuroscience education : JUNE | 2013

Engaging Undergraduates in a Unique Neuroscience Research Opportunity: A Collaborative Research Experience Between a Primarily Undergraduate Institution (PUI) and a Major Research Institution

Matthew A. Kreitzer; Robert Paul Malchow


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012

The pH-sensitive Dye HAF Reports An Extracellular Alkalinization Upon Stimulation Of Catfish Horizontal Cells: Testing The H+ Hypothesis Of Lateral Inhibition

Robert Paul Malchow; Jason Jacoby; Simon Alford; Haohua Qian; Matthew A. Kreitzer

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Robert Paul Malchow

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Haohua Qian

National Institutes of Health

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Jason Jacoby

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

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Simon Alford

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Boriana K. Tchernookova

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Ethan R. Naylor

Indiana Wesleyan University

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Chad Heer

Indiana Wesleyan University

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David Swygart

Indiana Wesleyan University

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Hannah Caringal

Indiana Wesleyan University

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Leon P. Collis

Marine Biological Laboratory

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