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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 3 March 2002, pp. 1404-1414
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, State University of New York Health Science Center, Brooklyn, New York 11203
Perkins, Katherine L.
GABA Application to Hippocampal CA3 or CA1 Stratum
Lacunosum-Moleculare Excites an Interneuron Network. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 1404-1414, 2002. Whole cell voltage-clamp
recording and focal application of the neurotransmitter
-aminobutyric acid (GABA) were used to investigate the ability of
exogenous GABA applied to different locations within the guinea pig
hippocampal slice to trigger a giant GABA-mediated postsynaptic current
(GPSC) in pyramidal cells. A GPSC reflects the synchronous release of
GABA from a group of interneurons. Recordings were done in the presence
of 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) and blockers of ionotropic glutamatergic
synaptic transmission. Spontaneous GPSCs occurred rhythmically in
pyramidal cells under these conditions. Brief focal pressure
application of GABA (500 µM; 30-200 ms) to CA3 stratum
lacunosum-moleculare (SLM) or to the border between CA3 s. radiatum
(SR) and SLM triggered an "all-or-none" GPSC in CA3 and CA1
pyramidal cells that looked like the spontaneous GPSCs. During the
refractory period following a spontaneous GPSC, application of GABA
could not trigger a GPSC. Both spontaneous GPSCs and GPSCs triggered by
exogenous GABA were blocked by suppressing synaptic transmission with
high Mg2+/low Ca2+ bath
solution. On the other hand, focal application of GABA to CA3 s. oriens
(SO) or to proximal SR did not trigger a GPSC in the CA3 pyramidal
cell; instead it produced a graded response. Focal application of GABA
to regions other than CA3 was also tested. Focal application of GABA to
CA1 SLM always triggered a GPSC in the CA3 pyramidal cell. Focal
application of GABA within the outer two-thirds of the dentate
molecular layer often elicited a GPSC in the CA3 pyramidal cell. In
contrast, focal application of GABA to CA1 SO, to CA1 SR, or to the
hilus elicited no current response in the CA3 pyramidal cell. These
data indicate that the GPSC recorded in pyramidal cells that was
triggered by focal GABA application resulted from the synchronous
synaptic release of GABA from activated interneurons rather than from
the binding of exogenous GABA to receptors on the pyramidal cell.
Furthermore, the "all-or-none" nature of the response to SLM GABA
applications of different durations indicates that the exogenous GABA
was exciting (directly or indirectly) some members of a network of
interneurons, which in turn recruited the rest of the network, rather
than individually activating each interneuron that contributed to the
GPSC. Interestingly, the effective sites of GABA application
CA3 SLM,
CA1 SLM, and the outer two-thirds of the dentate molecular layer
are
also the sites which receive direct innervation from the entorhinal
cortex in an intact animal.
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