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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 5 November 2000, pp. 2465-2476
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1Pediatric Regional Epilepsy Program and Joseph Stokes Research Institute of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and 2Department of Pediatrics, Division of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104; and 3Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0599
Cohen, Akiva S.,
Dean D. Lin, and
Douglas A. Coulter.
Protracted Postnatal Development of Inhibitory Synaptic
Transmission in Rat Hippocampal Area CA1 Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 2465-2476, 2000. In the CNS, inhibitory
synaptic function undergoes profound transformation during early
postnatal development. This is due to variations in the subunit
composition of subsynaptic GABAA receptors
(GABAARs) at differing developmental stages as
well as other factors. These include changes in the driving force for chloride-mediated conductances as well as the quantity and/or cleft
lifetime of released neurotransmitter. The present study was undertaken
to investigate the nature and time course of developmental maturation
of GABAergic synaptic function in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons. In
neonatal [postnatal day (P) 1-7] and immature (P8-14) CA1 neurons,
miniature inhibitory postsynaptic currents (mIPSCs) were significantly
larger, were less frequent, and had slower kinetics compared with
mIPSCs recorded in more mature neurons. Adult mIPSC kinetics were
achieved by the third postnatal week in CA1 neurons. However, despite
this apparent maturation of mIPSC kinetics, significant differences in
modulation of mIPSCs by allosteric agonists in adolescent (P15-21)
neurons were still evident. Diazepam (1-300 nM) and zolpidem (200 nM)
increased the amplitude of mIPSCs in adolescent but not adult neurons.
Both drugs increased mIPSC decay times equally at both ages. These
differential agonist effects on mIPSC amplitude suggest that in
adolescent CA1 neurons, inhibitory synapses operate differently than
adult synapses and function as if subsynaptic receptors are not fully
occupied by quantal release of GABA. Rapid agonist application
experiments on perisomatic patches pulled from adolescent neurons
provided additional support for this hypothesis. In
GABAAR currents recorded in these patches, benzodiazepine amplitude augmentation effects were evident only when
nonsaturating GABA concentrations were applied. Furthermore nonstationary noise analysis of mIPSCs in P15-21 neurons revealed that
zolpidem-induced mIPSC augmentation was not due to an increase in
single-channel conductance of subsynaptic GABAARs
but rather to an increase in the number of open channels responding to
a single GABA quantum, further supporting the hypothesis that synaptic receptors may not be saturated during synaptic function in adolescent neurons. These data demonstrate that inhibitory synaptic transmission undergoes a markedly protracted postnatal maturation in rat CA1 pyramidal neurons. In the first two postnatal weeks, mIPSCs are large
in amplitude, are slow, and occur infrequently. By the third postnatal
week, mIPSCs have matured kinetically but retain distinct responses to
modulatory drugs, possibly reflecting continued immaturity in synaptic
structure and function persisting through adolescence.
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