Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) is a regulator of the water and electrolyte content in the brain which also mediates cell volume homeostasis. Here, we determined whether the expression of ANP in the retina of the rat undergoes changes during ischemia-reperfusion, and whether ANP affects the osmotic swelling of Müller glial cells in postischemic retinas under hypotonic conditions. Transient retinal ischemia was induced by elevation of the intraocular pressure above systolic blood pressure for 1h. At 1 and 3days after reperfusion, there was an increased content of ANP protein in the retina, as determined by Western blotting. The increase of the retinal ANP content was markedly reduced when triamcinolone acetonide (10mM in 2μl vehicle) was intravitreally injected before ischemia. ANP inhibited the osmotic swelling of Müller cell somata in retinal slices. The effect of ANP was mediated by activation of NP receptors expressed by retinal neurons which evoked a release of glutamate. The stimulation of metabotropic glutamate receptors expressed by Müller cells evoked an autocrine purinergic signaling mechanism that resulted in the opening of K + and Cl − channels; the ion efflux counteracted the osmotic swelling of Müller cells. It is concluded that the expression of ANP is transiently upregulated in the postischemic retina of the rat. The increased expression of ANP may represent a part of the retinal response to transient ischemia and may inhibit cytotoxic glial cell swelling.