The observation that the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate released from presynaptic terminals can activate, beside the post-synaptic neuron, the glial cell astrocyte, stimulated glial cell research like no other event since the recognition in the 1980s that astrocytes can express on their membrane many receptors for classical neurotransmitters. The properties and the functional role(s) of such a neuron-to-astrocyte signaling have now become the focus of intense research in neurobiology. Indeed, a growing body of evidence has recently highlighted the ability of astrocytes to work as sophisticated detectors of synaptic activity: by changing the frequency of [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations evoked by the synaptic release of glutamate, these cells display the remarkable capacity to discriminate between different levels and patterns of synaptic activity. Furthermore, the observation that astrocytes increase the frequency of [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations in response to repetitive episodes of high neuronal activity challenges the common concept that memory function in the brain is an exclusive property of neuronal cells. Glutamate-mediated [Ca(2+)](i) elevations can also trigger in astrocytes the release of glutamate that can ultimately affect neuronal transmission. Given the wide role played by glutamate in brain physiology, our view on how the brain operates needs now to be revised taking into account the bi-directional, glutamatergic communication between neurons and astrocytes.
Copyright 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd.