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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 3 September 2002, pp. 1352-1362
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana 70118
Belousov, Andrei B.,
Nicole D. Hunt,
Ryan P. Raju, and
Janna
V. Denisova.
Calcium-Dependent Regulation of Cholinergic Cell Phenotype in the
Hypothalamus In Vitro. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1352-1362, 2002. Glutamate is a major fast excitatory
neurotransmitter in the CNS including the hypothalamus. Our previous
experiments in hypothalamic neuronal cultures showed that a
long-term decrease in glutamate excitation upregulates ACh
excitatory transmission. Data suggested that in the absence of
glutamate activity in the hypothalamus in vitro, ACh becomes the major
excitatory neurotransmitter and supports the excitation/inhibition
balance. Here, using neuronal cultures, fura-2
Ca2+ digital imaging, and immunocytochemistry, we
studied the mechanisms of regulation of cholinergic properties in
hypothalamic neurons. No ACh-dependent activity and a low number
(0.5%) of cholinergic neurons were detected in control hypothalamic
cultures. A chronic (2 wk) inactivation of
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) ionotropic glutamate
receptors, L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels,
calmodulin, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein
kinases II/IV (CaMK II/IV), or protein kinase C (PKC) increased
the number of cholinergic neurons (to 15-24%) and induced ACh
activity (in 40-60% of cells). Additionally, ACh activity and an
increased number of cholinergic neurons were detected in hypothalamic
cultures 2 wk after a short-term (30 min) pretreatment with
bis-(o-aminophenoxy)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid
tetrakis(acetoxy-methyl) ester (BAPTA AM; 2.5 µM), a membrane permeable Ca2+-chelating agent that blocks
cytoplasmic Ca2+ fluctuations. An increase in the
number of cholinergic neurons following a chronic NMDA receptor
blockade was likely due to the induction of cholinergic phenotypic
properties in postmitotic noncholinergic neurons, as determined using
5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling. In contrast, a chronic
inactivation of non-NMDA glutamate receptors or cGMP-dependent protein
kinase had little effect on the expression of ACh properties. The data
suggest that Ca2+, at normal intracellular
concentrations, tonically suppresses the development of cholinergic
properties in hypothalamic neurons. However, a decrease in
Ca2+ influx into cells (through NMDA receptors or
L-type Ca2+ channels), inactivation of
intracellular Ca2+ fluctuations, or
downregulation of Ca2+-dependent signal
transduction pathways (CaMK II/IV and PKC) remove the tonic inhibition
and trigger the development of cholinergic phenotype in some
hypothalamic neurons. An increase in excitatory ACh transmission may
represent a novel form of neuronal plasticity that regulates the
activity and excitability of neurons during a decrease in glutamate
excitation. This type of plasticity has apparent region-specific
character and is not expressed in the cortex in vitro; neither increase
in ACh activity nor change in the number of cholinergic neurons were
detected in cortical cultures under all experimental conditions.
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