<table class="infobox infobox-cell">
<tr>
<th class="infobox-header" colspan="2">Vesicular Glutamate Transporter (VGLUT) Neurons</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="label">Name</td>
<td><strong>Vesicular Glutamate Transporter (VGLUT) Neurons</strong></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="label">Type</td>
<td>Cell Type</td>
</tr>
</table>
Vesicular Glutamate Transporter (Vglut) [Neurons](/entities/neurons) is an important cell type in the neurobiology of neurodegenerative diseases. This page provides detailed information about its structure, function, and role in disease processes.
<table class="infobox infobox-cell">
<tr>
<th class="infobox-header" colspan="2">Vesicular Glutamate Transporter (VGLUT) Neurons</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="label">Name</td>
<td><strong>Vesicular Glutamate Transporter (VGLUT) Neurons</strong></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="label">Type</td>
<td>Cell Type</td>
</tr>
</table>
Vesicular Glutamate Transporter (Vglut) [Neurons](/entities/neurons) is an important cell type in the neurobiology of neurodegenerative diseases. This page provides detailed information about its structure, function, and role in disease processes.
Vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT) neurons are excitatory neurons that package glutamate into synaptic vesicles through the transporter family [SLC17A7 (VGLUT1)slc17a7-protein), [SLC17A6 (VGLUT2)slc17a6-protein), and SLC17A8 (VGLUT3).[@el2011] VGLUT abundance is a major determinant of glutamate quantal size and therefore of synaptic drive, plasticity thresholds, and circuit-level excitability.[@el2011] In neurodegenerative disorders, VGLUT-dependent signaling sits at the interface of adaptive compensation and excitotoxic injury, making these neurons mechanistically important across [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease), and related syndromes.[@masini2022][@csarnovszki2024]
VGLUT1 is enriched in corticocortical and hippocampal projections and supports high-fidelity excitatory transmission in cognition-relevant networks. Decline in VGLUT1 signal is frequently interpreted as a proxy for excitatory synapse loss in AD-vulnerable corticolimbic regions.[@cerminara2023][@csarnovszki2024]
VGLUT2 is common in thalamic, brainstem, and subcortical excitatory neurons. In midbrain dopamine systems, VGLUT2 can co-define subpopulations with specialized stress responses and differential vulnerability to toxins and aging.[@masini2022][@steinkellner2021]
VGLUT3 is expressed in selected neurons that are not classically glutamatergic (for example, subsets of cholinergic and serotonergic neurons), enabling glutamate co-release and transmitter synergy.[@el2011]
VGLUT biology contributes to degeneration risk through several linked mechanisms:
Recent work shows that dopamine neurons can exhibit emergent glutamatergic identity in PD, reinforcing the concept that transmitter phenotype is plastic in disease.[@masini2022] In toxin models, deleting vesicular glutamate transport in dopamine neurons increases vulnerability to MPTP injury, suggesting that VGLUT-linked signaling can be protective in specific contexts.[@steinkellner2018] Additional aging data indicate sex-dependent effects of vesicular glutamate transport on dopamine neuron survival, which may help explain heterogeneous progression phenotypes.[@steinkellner2021]
Multiple imaging and neuropathology studies report altered VGLUT patterns during AD progression, including default-mode-network changes and region-specific cortical decline in VGLUT immunoreactivity.[@cerminara2023][@csarnovszki2024] Mechanistically, this is consistent with early excitatory synapse remodeling followed by terminal loss in vulnerable association networks.
Because VGLUT status tracks excitatory terminal integrity, it can complement synaptic scaffolding and vesicle-cycle markers when profiling [synaptic vesicle cycling in neurodegeneration](/mechanisms/synaptic-vesicle-cycling-neurodegeneration). Combined readouts may better separate primary excitatory synapse degeneration from secondary network adaptation.
Practical translational uses include:
The study of Vesicular Glutamate Transporter (Vglut) Neurons has evolved significantly over the past decades. Research in this area has revealed important insights into the underlying mechanisms of neurodegeneration and continues to drive therapeutic development.
Historical context and key discoveries in this field have shaped our current understanding and will continue to guide future research directions.
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving Vesicular Glutamate Transporter (VGLUT) Neurons discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis: