Glutamate is the most abundant excitatory neurotransmitter in the mammalian nervous system. It is stored in presynaptic vesicles and is released by calcium-dependent vesicular release. There are two kinds of glutamate receptors- the ionotropic receptors (GRI, related to ionic channels) or metabotropic receptors (GRM, related to metabolic formation of second messengers). Glutamate is removed from the synaptic cleft by reuptake into the presynaptic terminal or by uptake into glial cells, where it is converted to glutamine. The reuptake process is achieved by glutamate transporters; solute carrier family 1 (SLC1A)...