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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 6 December 2001, pp. 3043-3055
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
7 and
4
2 Subtypes
Differentially Control GABAergic Input to CA1 Neurons in Rat
Hippocampus
1Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201; 2Departamento de Farmacologia Básica e Clínica, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Centro de Ciências da Saúde, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, RJ 21944, Brazil
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ABSTRACT |
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Alkondon, Manickavasagom and
Edson X. Albuquerque.
Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor
7 and
4
2 Subtypes
Differentially Control GABAergic Input to CA1 Neurons in Rat
Hippocampus.
J. Neurophysiol. 86: 3043-3055, 2001.
The hippocampus, a limbic brain region involved in
the encoding and retrieval of memory, has a well-defined structural
network assembled from excitatory principal neurons and inhibitory
interneurons. Because the GABAergic interneurons form synapses onto
both pyramidal neurons and interneurons, the activation of nicotinic
acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) present on certain interneurons could
induce either inhibition or disinhibition in the hippocampal circuitry. To understand the role of nAChRs in controlling synaptic transmission in the hippocampus, we evaluated the magnitude of nAChR-modulated GABAergic postsynaptic currents (PSCs) in pyramidal neurons and various
interneurons of the CA1 region. Using whole cell patch-clamp recording
and post hoc identification of neuronal types in rat hippocampal
slices, we show that brief (12-s) nAChR activation by ACh (1 mM) or
choline (10 mM) enhances the frequency of GABAergic PSCs in both
pyramidal neurons and CA1 interneurons. The magnitude of
7
nAChR-mediated GABAergic inhibition, as assessed by the net charge of
choline-induced PSCs, was highest in stratum lacunosum moleculare
interneurons followed by pyramidal neurons and s. radiatum interneurons. In contrast, the magnitude of
4
2 nAChR-mediated GABAergic inhibition, as assessed by the difference between the net
charge of PSCs induced by ACh and choline, was highest in pyramidal
neurons followed by s. lacunosum moleculare and s. radiatum interneurons. The present results suggest that cholinergic cues transmitted via specific subtypes of nAChRs modify the synaptic function in the hippocampus by inducing a differential degree of
GABAergic inhibition in the target neurons.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Recent
studies have demonstrated that the excitability of hippocampal
interneurons can be modulated via a number of receptor proteins,
including opioid receptors (Svoboda et al. 1999
),
muscarinic receptors (Hájos et al. 1998
;
McQuiston and Madison 1999a
), serotonin receptors
(McMahon and Kauer 1997
), metabotropic glutamate
receptors (McBain et al. 1994
), and nicotinic
acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) (Albuquerque et al.
1997
; Alkondon et al. 1997
, 1999
; Frazier et al. 1998b
; Hefft et al. 1999
; Jones
and Yakel 1997
; McQuiston and Madison 1999b
).
Although the exact subunit composition of the native nAChR is still
unknown, the pharmacological analysis of the agonist-evoked nicotinic
currents together with the in situ hybridization studies on cultured
hippocampal neurons enabled us to define a set of criteria to identify
7-containing receptors (referred to in this study as
7 nAChRs)
and
4
2-containing receptors (referred to in this study as
4
2 nAChRs) (see Albuquerque et al. 1997
). Thus
nAChRs that are fully activated by agonists such as choline, nicotine,
and ACh and inhibited reversibly by methyllycaconitine (MLA) and
irreversibly by
-bungarotoxin (
-BGT) are classified as
7
nAChRs. On the other hand, nAChRs that are activated by ACh and
nicotine, but not by choline, inhibited by dihydro-
-erythroidine (DH
E), but not by
-BGT, are classified as
4
2 nAChRs.
The activation of
7 and
4
2 nAChRs in GABAergic interneurons in
the CA1 field of the hippocampus results, respectively, in fast and
slowly decaying nicotinic currents (Alkondon et al. 1997
,
1999
; Frazier et al. 1998b
; Jones and
Yakel 1997
; McQuiston and Madison 1999b
;
Sudweeks and Yakel 2000
). If one considers that
stimulation of GABAergic synapses can cause either inhibition or
disinhibition depending on the neuronal connectivity (Alkondon
et al. 1999
, 2000b
; Ji and Dani 2000
), it is
essential to identify primary neuron targets for nAChR-dependent GABA
release, the strength of which will dictate the significance of nAChR
activation to overall hippocampal output and hence to mnemonic processing.
Patterns of activity of GABAergic interneurons have been shown to
provide spatial and temporal cues for modifying synaptic weight and
thereby to promote encoding and retrieval of memory in the hippocampus
(Paulsen and Moser 1998
; Wallenstein and Hasselmo 1997
). The interneurons are diverse in type and control the
input and output activity by spanning their dendrites and axons,
respectively, in a lamina-specific manner in the hippocampus
(Freund and Busaki 1996
). To name a few examples, the
basket and axo-axonic interneurons, which contain parvalbumin and are
located in the stratum pyramidal (SP) region, suppress by a perisomatic
innervation the generation of Na+ spikes and
action potentials and hence the output of pyramidal neurons
(Miles et al. 1996
). Calbindin
D28k-containing interneurons, particularly those
referred to as type I cells (Gulyás et al. 1999
)
and located predominantly in s. radiatum (SR), innervate pyramidal cell
dendrites at the Schaffer collateral termination zone
(Gulyás and Freund 1996
) and are implicated in the
control of dendritic Ca2+ spikes (Miles et
al. 1996
). Somatostatin-containing interneurons with horizontal
dendrites, found in s. oriens (SO), project their axon terminals to s.
lacunosum moleculare (SLM) where they modify the excitatory drive
arriving at distal apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons. In layer SLM
of the CA1, near the SR border, three main interneuron types,
i.e., a basket cell type with axon projecting to pyramidal layer, a
perforant path-associated cell with axon ramifying in the SLM, and a
Schaffer-associated type with axon terminating in SR and SO, have been
described (Vida et al. 1998
). These SLM interneurons,
when activated, result in inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) in
pyramidal cells (Lacaille and Schwartzkroin 1988
;
Vida et al. 1998
), and such activation suppresses
selectively spikes evoked by Schaffer collateral stimulation
(Dvorak-Carbone and Schuman 1999
).
Taking into account the strong evidence that interneurons have a
central role in controlling the activity of neuronal circuitry in the
brain, particularly in the hippocampal CA1 region
(Dvorak-Carbone and Schuman 1999
; Tsuhokawa and
Ross 1996
), an understanding of the various factors that govern
interneuron activity is essential for predicting the output of the hippocampus.
In the present study, we evaluated the role of activation of
7 and
4
2 nAChR on GABAergic transmission to various neuronal populations present in the CA1 region. Using whole cell patch-clamp recording to measure GABAergic PSCs and post hoc tracing of
biocytin-filled structures to identify the neuron types in the CA1 area
of rat hippocampal slices, we found that nAChR activation enhances
GABAergic transmission and that the magnitude of this effect can be
predicted based on the target neuron type and the subtype of nAChR involved.
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METHODS |
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Hippocampal slices
Slices (250-µm thickness) of hippocampus along with adjacent
cortex were obtained from the brain of 15- to 24-day-old male Sprague-Dawley rats according to a procedure similar to that described earlier (Alkondon et al. 1997
). Animal care and handling
were done strictly in accordance with the guidelines set forth by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of University of
Maryland at Baltimore. Slices were stored at room temperature in
artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF), which was bubbled with 95%
O2-5% CO2 and had the
following composition (in mM): 125 NaCl, 25 NaHCO3, 2.5 KCl, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 2 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, and 25 glucose. Neurons in the CA1 field of the slices were visualized by
means of infrared-assisted video microscopy for whole cell patch-clamp
recordings (Alkondon et al. 1997
). The identity of the
neurons was later confirmed by postrecording reconstruction of
biocytin-filled neurons in fixed slices according to the procedure
reported earlier (Alkondon et al. 2000b
; Svoboda
et al. 1999
). The images of neurons were drawn using the
Neurolucida program (MicroBrightField, Colchester, VT).
Electrophysiological recordings
The PSCs were recorded from the somata of CA1 neurons according
to the whole cell patch-clamp technique (Hamill et al.
1981
), using an LM-EPC7 patch-clamp system (List Electronic,
Darmstadt, FRG). The ability of an agonist to generate action
potentials was assessed by recording action currents in cell-attached
configuration at a pipette potential of
60 mV (Alkondon et al.
2000a
). This technique had the added advantage of detecting in
the same neuron the firing frequency followed later of measuring in the
whole cell mode the nicotinic currents or agonist-elicited GABAergic PSCs. All signals were initially filtered at 3 kHz and either recorded
onto a video tape for later analysis or directly sampled by a
microcomputer using the pCLAMP 6 program (Axon Instruments, Foster
City, CA). The slices were superfused with ACSF at 2 ml/min. Atropine
(1 µM) was added to the ACSF to block muscarinic receptors. Patch
pipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass capillary (1.2 mm OD) and
when filled with the internal solution had resistances between 3 and 6 M
. The internal solution consisted of (in mM) 10 EGTA, 10 HEPES, 130 Cs-methane sulfonate, 10 CsCl, 2 MgCl2, 5 QX-314,
and 0.5% biocytin (pH adjusted to 7.3 with CsOH; 340 mOsm). Membrane
potentials were corrected for liquid junction potentials. All
recordings were performed at room temperature (20-22°C).
Agonist and antagonist application
Antagonists were applied via bath superfusion. A U-tube,
made in the laboratory from 100-µm-ID glass capillary and having a
pore of 250-µm diam, was placed ~100 µm above the slice and used
to deliver the agonists to the somata and dendrites of the neuron under
study (Fig. 1A for schematic
diagram). In 70% of the experiments, both choline (10 mM) and ACh (1 mM) were tested on the same neuron. Typically, choline was applied
first, followed 5 min later by a pulse of ACh. This interval was found
to be sufficient to obtain a full recovery from desensitization of
nAChRs that occurs after the first pulse of the agonist. Using this
protocol, it is possible to calculate the ratio of the responses
induced by the two agonists in each neuron studied and to estimate the contribution of each nAChR subtype being activated by these agonists. Neurons located no more than 40-80 µm below the slice surface were
used so that the applied agonist would have easy access to the neuronal
structures. This choice, however, resulted in the studied neurons
having fewer axonal arborizations, a feature that otherwise could have
been used as one of the identifying criteria for the neuron types (see
RESULTS). The agonist pulse delivered from the U-tube
covered the structures around the cell somata within a radius of ~125
µm, as assessed by the flow pattern of phenol red-containing ACSF
(see Fig. 1A). This arrangement allowed coverage of
~40-70% of the dendritic branches in each neuron and permitted us
to evaluate the impact of activation of nAChRs present in large number
of synapses made onto the neuron under study. Also we could correlate
neuron type with the magnitude of GABAergic inhibition. Agonist pulses
shown in the figures indicate the amount of time the valve that
controls the outflow of agonist solution through the U-tube pore was
closed. Thus the start of the agonist pulses shown represents the
activation of the valve rather than the actual beginning of agonist
outflow. The inflow and outflow in the U-tube was adjusted to prevent
agonist leakage and/or drawing up of the slice into the U-tube. This
flow setting created a delay of
500 ms between the time of activation
of the valve and the time when the neuron was actually exposed to the
agonist. The presence of adjacent cortex in the slices provided
additional stability during recordings from neurons in the SO and
pyramidal layers where drawing up of the slice into the U-tube would
have occurred frequently.
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Focal application of ACh was done by a pressure-ejection system. In this, a patch pipette with a tip diameter of <0.5 µm was filled with ACh (1 mM) and positioned ~10 µm from the somata of the interneuron being studied. A picospritzer (PLI-100, Medical Systems, Greenvale, NY) was used to apply a pressure of 10 psi for 25 or 50 ms to eject the agonist close to the cell somata.
Data analysis
The net charge flowing through GABAA
receptors during a 12-s agonist application was calculated by
integrating the area under the PSCs using the pCLAMP 6 program. The
data were sampled at 500 Hz (2,000-µs sampling interval between the
points) so that sufficient baseline data could be gathered before
the effect of the agonist began. It was confirmed from the analysis of
a short pulse (2 s) of agonist-induced PSCs that a sampling rate of 500 Hz was adequate to resolve rapid current fluctuations and thereby to
assess the net charge carried by individual GABAergic PSC transients. Sampling the same data segment at 500 Hz and again at 5 kHz resulted in
<1% change in the net charge. The frequency, 10-90% rise time, and
amplitude of GABAergic PSCs were measured using the continuous data
recording (CDR) program (Dempster 1989
). All results are presented as means ± SE. One-way ANOVA with Dunnett's post test (comparison of data among various groups of neurons), and two-tailed unpaired t-test with Welch correction (comparison between
choline and ACh in various types of neurons) were performed using
GraphPad InStat 3.05 for Windows 95 (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA). The distributions of the amplitudes and intervals between the events
were compared using Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, and the difference between
the groups was considered significant if the P value
was <0.01.
Drugs and toxins used
ACh chloride, (
)bicuculline methiodide, choline chloride,
lidocaine N-ethyl bromide (QX-314), biocytin, and atropine
sulfate were obtained from Sigma Chemical (St. Louis, MO).
Methyllycaconitine citrate (MLA) was a gift from Professor M. H. Benn (Dept. Chemistry, Univ. Calgary, Alberta, Canada). DH
E was a
gift from Merck, Sharp, and Dohme (Rahway, NJ). Stock solutions of all
drugs were made in distilled water.
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RESULTS |
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In this study, we evaluated in the CA1 region of rat hippocampal
slices the net effects of activation of multiple GABAergic synapses via
two pharmacologically identified nAChR subtypes that are presumed to
contain
7 and
4
2 nAChRs, respectively (Albuquerque et
al. 1997
; Alkondon et al. 1999
; Mike et
al. 2000
). To assess in each neuron the maximal contribution of
the two receptor subtypes in modulating GABAergic transmission, we
tested a saturating concentration of choline (10 mM) to activate
selectively
7 nAChRs and ACh (1 mM) to activate
7 and
4
2
nAChRs. Previous studies have shown that 10 mM choline is equieffective
with 1 mM ACh in activating
7 nAChRs, choline does not activate
4
2 nAChRs, and ACh activates both receptor subtypes
(Albuquerque et al. 1997
; Alkondon et al. 1999
). It has been assumed, therefore, in this study that the choline-evoked responses represent the sole activation of
7 nAChR and that the ACh-induced responses represent the combined activation of
7 and
4
2 nAChRs. Thus any difference in the response magnitude between the two agonists (i.e., ACh
choline), if found, was considered to represent the activation of
4
2 nAChRs. To obtain a
rough estimate of the relative contribution of the two nAChR subtypes
in modulating GABAergic transmission, the ratio of the net charge of
PSCs induced by the two agonists (i.e., ACh/choline) was calculated
considering that a ratio of one represents a contribution from only
7 nAChR, a ratio of two suggests equal contribution from both
receptor subtypes, and a ratio higher than two indicates a larger
contribution from
4
2 nAChR than
7 nAChR. Outward GABAergic PSCs were recorded at 0 mV to avoid any cationic currents arising from
nAChR activation in the recorded neurons. To evaluate the overall
magnitude of nAChR activation on GABA transmission, the net charge
flowing through GABAA receptor channels was
measured and quantified. All recordings were performed on visually
identified neurons in the slices and were confirmed later from the
images of biocytin-filled neurons (Fig. 1, B-F). In 95 neurons studied, 59 neurons, included in the subsequent detailed
analysis, had biocytin labeling that was of sufficient quality to allow
positive identification of neuron types based on cell location, cell
soma, and dendritic branching. Axonal arborization, however, was
incomplete in many neurons and therefore was used only as a secondary
criterion for identification of neuron types. In this study,
interneurons were grouped primarily on the basis of the laminar
location of their cell somata. SP interneurons referred to in this
study, however, were those that had cell somata located in either the SP or SO, multiple vertical dendrites going toward SLM, and axons projecting mainly to the SP region.
Nicotinic modulation of GABAergic input to pyramidal neurons
Postrecording reconstruction of presumed pyramidal neurons (see
Figs. 1B and 2A) indicated that they had several
basal dendrites, a single axon branching in the SO, and a single apical
dendrite emerging as a continuation of cell somata passing through the SR and subsequently branching extensively in the SLM. Several secondary
branches also emerged from the apical dendrite in the SR. These
characteristics were used to confirm the identity of pyramidal neurons
(Fig. 2A).
Functionally, application of choline or ACh to pyramidal neurons
induced PSCs that occurred in quick succession and summated to produce
a large tonic outward current (Fig. 2, B, C, and
E). Both agonists elicited PSCs in all 12 pyramidal neurons
analyzed. Exposure of the slices to bicuculline (10 µM) markedly
reduced the frequency of spontaneous and agonist-induced PSCs (Fig.
2B), thus confirming the origin of PSCs as arising from
activation of GABAA receptor channels. Exposure
of the slices to the
7-selective competitive antagonist MLA (10 nM;
n = 3) completely abolished the effect of choline (Fig.
2C), confirming the sole involvement of
7 nAChRs in
choline-induced PSCs. On the other hand, exposure of the slices to 10 µM DH
E (Fig. 2C), a specific antagonist of
4
2
nAChR, decreased the net charge of GABAergic PSCs induced by ACh by
83% (mean ± SE: 83 ± 4.6%; n = 3),
indicating the primary involvement of
4
2 nAChRs in ACh-induced PSCs. Choline-induced PSCs persisted in the presence of
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxalene-2,3-dione (CNQX, 10 µM) and
2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV, 20 µM; n = 6;
Fig. 2D), indicating that the glutamate pathway is not required for the elicitation of GABAergic PSCs. On the other hand, exposure of the slices to 0.5 µM TTX (n = 4)
abolished most of the PSCs elicited by the agonist (Fig.
2E), indicating the recruitment of Na+
channels in the action of the agonist. The inhibitory effect of TTX
also revealed that nAChR agonist did not modify the sensitivity of
postsynaptic GABAA receptors.
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The magnitude of the effect of nAChR activation on GABAergic input was
determined from the net charge passing through the GABAA receptors during 12-s application of the
agonists. As there are no cationic currents at 0 mV after exposure to
bicuculline (see Fig. 2B), the measured net charge
reflects solely the anionic current flow through
GABAA receptors. The net charge induced by ACh
varied about fivefold (600-2,840 pC; n = 12), and that
induced by choline varied about fourfold (186-740 pC;
n = 12) among the pyramidal neurons studied (Fig.
2F). In each pyramidal neuron examined, the ACh-induced
response was larger than that induced by choline. The mean ACh/choline
ratio of ~ 4 (Table 1) is
significantly (P < 0.01) larger than the hypothetical
ratio of 2 that would have been expected if
7 and
4
2 nAChRs
contributed equally to ACh-induced PSCs. Thus a ratio >2, as observed
here, reflects a larger contribution of
4
2 nAChRs than
7
nAChRs in modulating GABAergic transmission onto pyramidal neurons.
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Nicotinic modulation of GABAergic input to SO interneurons
All interneurons studied in this layer had predominantly
horizontally oriented dendrites (n = 8). The axons
tended to project either to the SO and SP (neuron in Fig.
3A) or to the SLM and to some
extent to the SO (neurons in Fig. 3, B and C). SO
interneurons with axons projecting mainly to the SLM would correspond
to the oriens-lacunosum moleculare (O-LM) interneurons
described earlier (McBain et al. 1994
; Svoboda et
al. 1999
) and are known to modify the excitatory drive arriving
at distal apical dendrites of pyramidal neurons. It is possible that
the remaining SO interneurons, which lack projections to SLM, may
correspond to trilaminar and backprojection cells described by others
as having horizontal dendrites and axons projecting to other layers
(Cobb et al. 1997
; Sik et al. 1995
). Thus
it is likely that more than one type of SO neuron might have been
included in our study. Interneurons projecting predominantly to the SLM
(n = 3) failed to exhibit choline-induced PSCs (Fig. 3,
E and F), and those projecting mostly to the SO
and SP (Fig. 3D) showed small responses with a mean net
charge of ~33 pC (n = 5). All SO interneurons
(n = 8), however, responded to ACh with PSCs (Fig. 3,
D-F). A wide variability in the magnitude of PSC responses
to ACh was observed, and PSC summation did not result in robust tonic
outward currents (Fig. 3, D-F) as seen in pyramidal neurons. The net charge carried via GABAA
receptors in response to 1 mM ACh varied 17-fold in the range of 70 and
1,230 pC (Fig. 3G). The mean ACh/choline ratio of ~4
(Table 1) is significantly larger (P < 0.05) than the
hypothetical ratio of 2, suggesting the prevalence of
4
2 nAChRs
over
7 nAChRs in modulating GABAergic input to SO interneurons.
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Nicotinic modulation of GABAergic input to SP interneurons
SP interneurons found in either the SP or SO regions
(n = 7) had two to six vertically oriented dendrites
originating from the cell somata, running parallel to CA1 pyramidal
neuron apical dendrites, traversing through SR, and reaching SLM. As
shown in Fig. 4, A and
B, the SP interneurons displayed this unique dendritic architecture and, in addition, had their axon terminating in the SP.
These features are characteristics of basket and axo-axonic cells in
the hippocampus (Buhl et al. 1996
). Choline induced PSCs (Fig. 4, C and D) in six of seven SP interneurons
tested, but the net charge of GABAergic PSCs varied about sevenfold
between 22 and 161 pC (Fig. 4E). The mean net charge of
ACh-induced GABAergic PSCs (Fig. 4, C and D) was
~136 pC; the individual values ranged from 19 to 492 pC (Fig.
4E). Thus notably in SP interneurons, the mean ACh/choline
ratio was close to unity (Table 1), suggesting that compared with
7
nAChRs,
4
2 nAChRs play a minor role in modulating GABAergic input
to most SP interneurons (SPIs).
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Nicotinic modulation of GABAergic input to SR interneurons
SR interneurons (n = 12) invariably had vertically
oriented dendrites traversing one or more layers, but some main or
secondary branches were also directed obliquely or horizontally (Fig.
5, A and B).
Although a major part of the SR interneuron dendrites remained in the
SR region, 50% of the neurons extended their dendrites into the SLM
and 25% of the neurons had their dendrites additionally in the SO.
Rarely did we encounter SR neurons with dendrites extending into three
layers. In contrast, of the 12 SR interneurons in which we could
visualize some axonal branches in biocytin images, all had axon
projections into the SR, 2 neurons had their axons extended into the
SLM. SR interneurons studied here corresponded to those reported to
contain calbindinD28k that are known to inhibit
the Schaffer collateral termination zone (Gulyás and
Freund 1996
). Both choline and ACh induced PSCs (Fig. 5,
C and D) in all 12 neurons studied. The net
charge of choline-induced PSCs varied by 19-fold in the range from 41 to 780 pC (Fig. 5E). When ACh was used as the agonist, in
addition to a tonic PSC response, discrete individual PSC events could
also be discerned in the responses (Fig. 5, C and
D). The net charge induced by ACh varied by 10-fold, in the
range from 140 to 1,400 pC (Fig. 5E). In SR neurons, the
mean ACh/choline ratio was nearly 4 (Table 1), which is found to be
significantly different (P < 0.01) from the
hypothetical ratio of 2 for equal contribution, thus indicating a
predominance of
4
2 nAChR over
7 nAChR in modulating GABAergic
input to SR interneurons. We did not find any consistent correlation in
SR interneurons between the magnitude of choline- or ACh-induced PSCs
and their direction of dendritic or axonal projections.
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Nicotinic modulation of GABAergic input to SLM interneurons
In 8 of 10 SLM interneurons verified (see Fig.
6A), all dendrites and axonal
branches remained solely in the SLM, and in the remaining 2 neurons
(see Fig. 6B), dendrites remained in the SLM and SR, whereas
axons terminated in the SLM, SR, and SO. SLM interneurons studied here
appear to belong to perforant path-associated and Schaffer-associated
interneuron types (Vida et al. 1998
). Both choline- and
ACh-induced PSCs that summated to yield large tonic outward currents
(Fig. 6, C and D). In general, there was less variability in the magnitude of the responses (~3-fold for either agonist) among the neurons studied. For example, the net charge of
choline-induced PSCs ranged from 430 to 1,300 pC and that of ACh-induced PSCs ranged from 940 to 2,600 pC (Fig. 6E).
Although the mean ACh/choline ratio in SLM neurons was not
significantly different (P > 0.05) from the
hypothetical ratio of 2.0 (Table 1), the value of 1.83 suggests that
7 nAChR contributed more than
4
2 nAChR in ACh-induced PSCs
onto SLM interneurons.
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Comparison of the nicotinic modulation of GABAergic input in different types of neurons in the CA1 region
Initially we compared the actual mean net charge of
GABAergic PSCs induced by the two agonists in each group of neurons in the CA1 region (Fig. 7A). The
magnitude of choline-induced PSCs, an indicator of the strength of
7
nAChR-mediated inhibition, was highest in SLM interneurons and lowest
in SO interneurons, and it decreased in the order SLM>pyramidal
neuron>SR>SPI>SO. Also, there were significant differences between
various groups in the magnitude of choline-induced PSCs. For example,
the mean net charge of choline-induced PSCs in the SLM was
significantly higher than that in the SO and SPI (P < 0.001), or the SR (P < 0.01). Further, the mean net
charge of choline-induced PSCs in pyramidal neurons was significantly
higher than that in the SO (P < 0.01) or the SPI
(P < 0.05).
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ACh-induced PSCs, which represent the strength of inhibition
exerted by
7 and
4
2 nAChRs combined, followed pattern similar to that of choline-induced PSCs except that the response was larger in
SO interneurons than in SP interneurons. The net charge of ACh-induced
PSCs in either SO or SPI neurons was significantly lower than that of
the stratum pyramidal pyramidal neuron (SPP) or SLM
(Fig. 7A). To get a better idea of the contribution of
4
2 nAChR alone, we subtracted the net charge of choline-induced PSCs from that of ACh-induced PSCs and plotted the results separately for each group of neurons (Fig. 7B). This analysis was
undertaken assuming that at the test concentrations used in this study,
choline and ACh are equally effective in activating
7 nAChRs and
that choline does not activate
4
2 nAChRs (Alkondon et al.
1999
; Mike et al. 2000
). The subtraction
analysis indicated that the contribution of
4
2 nAChR-induced PSCs
is highest in pyramidal neurons with the rank order being pyramidal
neuron>SLM>SR>SO>SPI (Fig. 7B). Most notably, the mean
value obtained in SPI neurons was found to be significantly lower than
that in the SPP (P < 0.001), SR or SLM
(P < 0.05).
Local modulation by ACh of GABAergic transmission in SR interneurons
The initiation of GABAergic PSCs by U-tube application of the nicotinic agonists, considering the area covered by the agonist, could result from a direct activation of nAChRs at presynaptic/preterminal regions of GABAergic terminals, but it could also result from an action potential-dependent GABA release stemming from somatodendritic nAChRs on the interneurons within the area exposed to the agonist flow. Whether or not a polysynaptic component contributes to the GABAergic PSCs measured in the above-mentioned experiments was assessed in two additional sets of experiments performed on SR interneurons. In the first set of experiments, ACh (1 mM) was applied focally by pressure ejection for brief periods (25-50 ms) close to the somata of the recorded interneuron. These brief pulses of ACh triggered a burst of PSCs that had higher amplitude than the ones that occurred spontaneously (Fig. 8); similar effects were observed in all four interneurons tested. In addition, most of the larger-amplitude events had shorter rise times when compared with the majority of events in the recording (Fig. 8E), suggesting that the nAChR-activated GABAergic synapses must be located close to the cell somata of the recorded interneuron. Addition of TTX (0.5 µM) to the recording medium abolished the effect of focally applied ACh (Fig. 8D), indicating that nAChR-mediated enhancement of GABAergic transmission is due to a local depolarization near the axon terminals, may involve preterminal rather than presynaptic nAChRs in their action, and further rules out any involvement of a postsynaptic action of ACh at the GABAA receptors.
|
In the second set of experiments, we tested the effect of 10 µM ACh to find out whether this low concentration of the agonist is able to affect GABAergic transmission and if so, by an action-potential-dependent or independent mechanism. Figure 9A illustrates an control experiment from an SR interneuron in which U-tube application of choline induced action currents in a cell-attached recording mode. The nicotinic current induced by another pulse of choline in the same interneuron after breaking the patch membrane to achieve the whole cell configuration (Fig. 9A, bottom) indicates that the action currents recorded in the cell-attached mode were due to the activation of somatodendritic nAChRs present in that interneuron. However, when 10 µM ACh was applied via a U-tube to the interneurons (n = 6), no action currents were induced (see trace in Fig. 9B, top), suggesting that very little somatodendritic nAChRs were activated by this low concentration of the agonist. As illustrated in Fig. 9B (bottom), in the same interneuron in which ACh (10 µM) failed to induce action currents in cell-attached mode, the agonist triggered a burst of GABAergic PSCs in the whole cell configuration. This result indicates that the agonist must be acting at the nAChRs located near the axon terminals and may not involve an action potential-dependent polysynaptic pathway. To assess quantitatively the effect of a low concentration of ACh (10 µM) on the frequency and amplitude of GABAergic PSCs, the effect of a 5-min bath application of ACh (10 µM) was studied in six other interneurons. As illustrated in Fig. 9C, the bath application of ACh (10 µM) enhanced both the peak amplitude and the frequency of GABAergic PSCs to a significant extent (by Kolmogorov-Smirnov test).
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| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The present study demonstrates for the first time that
7 and
4
2 nAChRs regulate GABAergic transmission in a
neuron-type-specific way in the CA1 region of the hippocampus. The
strength of nicotinic facilitation of GABAergic input to different
types of neurons varied substantially (see Fig.
10), indicating that the cholinergic nicotinic system may indeed control the hippocampal synaptic function in a lamina-specific fashion.
|
Correlation between neuron type and the strength of nAChR-modulated GABAergic inhibition
The major finding of this study is that CA1 pyramidal neurons
receive GABAergic input that is facilitated by activation of
7 and
4
2 nAChRs. Previous studies demonstrated the presence of
7
nAChRs in somatodendritic membranes of interneurons located in SR, SO,
and SLM, as evidenced by the ability of choline and ACh to evoke fast
decaying nicotinic currents (referred to as type IA currents) and their
sensitivity to blockade by MLA or
-bungarotoxin (
-BGT)
(Alkondon et al. 1997
, 1999
; Frazier et al.
1998b
; Jones and Yakel 1997
; McQuiston
and Madison 1999b
). Subsequent studies described the existence
of fast synaptic transmission mediated via
7 nAChRs in CA1
interneurons (Alkondon et al. 1998
; Frazier et
al. 1998a
; Hefft et al. 1999
). Two groups of
laboratories also examined the distribution of somatodendritic
4
2
nAChRs in various CA1 interneurons and found that they are present in SO, SLM, and to a lesser extent in SR interneurons (Alkondon et al. 1999
, 2000a
; McQuiston and Madison 1999b
).
The presence of
4
2 nAChRs was confirmed by the ability of ACh to
evoke slowly decaying nicotinic currents (referred to as type II
currents) that were insensitive to blockade by
-BGT or MLA but were
blocked by DH
E. The presence of several nAChR subunit mRNAs was
shown in the SO and SR interneurons, raising the possibility that
either
7 or
4
2 nAChRs could also be associated with other
subunits or that new subtypes containing
2 subunits may exist
(Sudweeks and Yakel 2000
). Because it was found that not
all the neurons (e.g., pyramidal neurons) expressing mRNA exhibited
functional nicotinic currents (Sudweeks and Yakel 2000
),
it is premature at this stage to predict the number of possible
combinations and the number of subtypes of functional nAChRs in the CA1
neurons. Therefore we have restricted our discussion to include only
the pharmacologically defined
7 and
4
2 AChR subtypes with
respect to their ability to modulate GABAergic transmission. Because
the interneurons located in the SO (McBain et al. 1994
),
SR (Gulyás and Freund 1996
), and SLM
(Lacaille and Schwartzkroin 1988
) each project to
pyramidal neurons, one would predict that activation of either
7 or
4
2 nAChR would increase the frequency of GABAergic PSCs in CA1
pyramidal neurons. Although earlier studies indicated the role of
7
and
4
2 nAChRs in enhancing GABAergic transmission to pyramidal
neurons (Alkondon et al. 1997
; Ji and Dani
2000
), none of the previous studies addressed the relative
contribution of
7 and
4
2 nAChRs in mediating inhibition to
pyramidal neurons. Such information would help to elucidate the
participation of brain cholinergic nicotinic system in a number of
neurological disorders. In this regard, the present results are the
first to reveal the relative contribution of the two nAChR subtypes to brain function, i.e.,
4
2 nAChR-mediated inhibition of CA1
pyramidal neurons is at least three times stronger than the inhibition
derived from activation of
7 nAChRs.
Interneurons are heterogeneous in type, location, dendritic placement,
and axonal termination zone, and this anatomical diversity provides a
lamina-specific inhibitory control of the activity of pyramidal neurons
in the CA1 region (see review Freund and Busaki 1996
).
Because interneurons are intrinsically active and are constantly being
stimulated by feed-forward and feed-back glutamate pathways (see Fig.
10), it is conceivable that inhibition of interneurons would have an
impact similar to that achieved by activation. Very few studies have
addressed this issue, although the significance of this mechanism is
apparent from the anatomical evidence that interneurons synapse onto
other interneurons (Gulyás et al. 1996
, 1999
) and
the physiological evidence that spontaneous and evoked IPSCs can be
recorded from the interneurons (Cossart et al. 2001
;
Hájos and Mody 1997
; Morin et al.
1996
). The importance of interneurons innervating other
interneurons is not completely understood. It has been proposed,
however, that such interplay can result in disinhibition of pyramidal
neurons (Alkondon et al. 1999
; Ji and Dani
2000
; Tóth et al. 1997
) and sustain gamma oscillations (Wang and Buzsáki 1996
). The present
results indicating that nAChRs play a dynamic role in modulating
GABAergic input to different populations of interneurons in a
receptor-subtype-dependent fashion add new dimensions to our
understanding of hippocampal inhibitory mechanisms and further
underscore the importance of interneuron-to-interneuron synapses to
brain function.
Target interneurons appear to play an important role in the magnitude
of GABAergic inhibition exerted by nAChR activation in the CA1 region
(Fig. 10). We found that SO and SP interneurons receive the lowest
magnitude of nAChR-dependent inhibition (see Figs. 3, 4, and 7). This
can be attributed to the lower percentage (6.4%) of GABAergic inputs
onto the somata and dendrites of these neurons, particularly SP
interneurons (Gulyás et al. 1999
). Conversely, SR
interneurons receive one of the highest degrees of nAChR-dependent inhibition, particularly that mediated by
4
2 nAChRs (see Figs. 5
and 7). This can be attributed partly or wholly to the fact that SR
interneurons receive the largest percentage (29%) of GABAergic inputs
onto their somata and dendrites (Gulyás et al.
1999
). SLM interneurons receive the highest magnitude of
7
nAChR-dependent inhibition in addition to receiving a strong
4
2
nAChR-mediated inhibition (see Figs. 6 and 7). The GABAergic PSCs
induced by choline and ACh in SLM interneurons can arise from the
activation of nAChRs near the axon terminals of both SO interneurons as
well as other SLM neurons because both neuron types send axonal
projection to the SLM region (see Fig. 10). The demonstration of the
presence of MLA-sensitive (
7) and DH
E-sensitive (
4
2) nAChRs
on the somatodendritic sites of SO interneurons (McQuiston and
Madison 1999b
; Sudweeks and Yakel 2000
)
and SLM interneurons (Alkondon et al. 2000a
) supports
the possibility that the nAChRs are present near the axon terminals of
both interneuron types.
Correlation between cholinergic innervation and the strength of nAChR-modulated GABAergic inhibition
Comparison of the present results with other published work
suggests that there is no obvious correlation between the density of
cholinergic afferents and the magnitude of nAChR-modulated GABAergic
transmission in the CA1 region. For instance, a recent study
(Schäfer et al. 1998
) reported that the density of
cholinergic terminals, as assessed from the light microscopic analysis
of vesicular ACh transporter antibody-stained fibers, is highest in the
SP region, followed by SO, SLM, and SR. This is in quite a contrast to
the layer dependence of the magnitude of ACh-activated GABAergic PSCs
that followed the order: pyramidal neuron > SLM > SR > SO > SPI (see Fig. 7B). This discrepancy can be
accounted for by considering the fact that muscarinic ACh receptors are additional targets besides nAChRs for the actions of the endogenous cholinergic transmitter. Nevertheless, the presence of cholinergic fibers in different fields of the CA1 (Schäfer et al.
1998
) assures that endogenous ACh is available for the
activation of nAChRs. However, it is not certain whether ACh would
interact with the nAChRs in a synaptic or nonsynaptic manner. The
prevalence of nonsynaptic specializations apposing cholinergic axon
varicosities (Mrzljak et al. 1995
; Umbriaco et
al. 1995
) suggests that, with the exception of selected cases
where a cholinergic impulse would gate through synaptic
7 nAChRs
located in somatodendritic regions (Alkondon et al.
1998
; Frazier et al. 1998a
), the majority of nicotinic cholinergic activity would be mediated by
presynaptic/preterminal nAChRs located on GABAergic neurons
(Alkondon et al. 1997
, 1999
; Léna et al.
1993
; McMahon et al. 1994
). The efficacy of both low and high ACh concentration in modulating GABAergic transmission (see Figs. 8 and 9) indicates that this mechanism is operational under
a wide range of physiological conditions.
Implications of nAChR-modulated GABAergic input to function of CA1 pyramidal neurons
nAChRs can alter the function of CA1 pyramidal neurons, the main
output neurons of the hippocampus, in at least three distinct ways.
First, nAChR-mediated facilitation of GABAergic transmission to
pyramidal neurons exerts an inhibitory effect during cholinergic neuron
firing. This would be accomplished via activation in the interneurons
of either somatodendritic nAChRs or presynaptic/preterminal nAChRs.
What is the significance of nAChR-triggered GABAergic PSCs recorded in
the pyramidal neurons? The most plausible explanation is that
cholinergic nicotinic inhibition would suppress weak excitatory signals
arriving at the pyramidal neuron dendrites such that only strong
signals would be propagated. This could be a mechanism to filter
extraneous signals (Paulsen and Moser 1998
) and increase the attentional function. This type of mechanism is presumed to be
involved in the actions of nicotine in cigarette smokers
(Stolerman et al. 2000
). Our study suggests that
4
2 nAChRs would have a greater role than
7 nAChRs in this process.
Secondly, nAChR-mediated GABA release disinhibits CA1 pyramidal neurons
via inhibiting the interneurons. When
7 nAChRs are activated, SLM
interneurons are inhibited more than other interneurons, resulting in a
selective disinhibition of the dendritic segments of pyramidal neurons
innervated by SLM axon terminals. When
4
2 nAChRs are activated,
both SR and SLM interneurons are inhibited, resulting in disinhibition
of dendritic areas innervated by both neuron types. Disinhibition would
be less prominent in dendritic compartments innervated by SO and SP
interneurons because these interneurons receive the least
nAChR-mediated inhibition. Thus nAChRs appear to disinhibit
feed-forward inhibitory zones (i.e., SR and SLM interneuron target
zones) more than feed-back inhibitory zones (i.e., SO and SP
interneuron target zones) at the pyramidal neuron dendrites (see Fig.
10).
Third, nAChR-mediated GABA release can cause neuronal
hyperpolarization, which in turn affects neuronal function via several mechanisms. For example, hyperpolarization removes inactivation of
inward currents (Cobb et al. 1995
), and this action resets the membrane
potential of the neurons such that a subsequent excitatory input will
be more effective in eliciting action potentials. This mechanism can
increase the efficiency of the neuron network as a whole. The
observation that all CA1 neurons receive some degree of nAChR-dependent
inhibition supports this notion. The nAChR-mediated GABAergic
inhibition of SLM interneurons deserves special mention because
7
nAChR activation can result in a neuron hyperpolarization, a signal
that is able to trigger rebound burst firing in SLM interneurons even
in the absence of excitation (Lacaille and Schwartzkroin 1988
). Burst firing in SLM interneurons suppresses spikes in
pyramidal neurons evoked by stimulation of Schaffer collaterals
(Dvorak-Carbone and Schuman 1999
), and this allows
selective activation of the pyramidal cells via the perforant pathway.
Such selective regulation of intrinsic (e.g., Schaffer collateral) and
extrinsic (e.g., perforant path) afferent inputs is considered
important in switching between encoding and retrieval modes of
associative memory systems (Hasselmo and Schnell 1994
;
Paulsen and Moser 1998
; Wallenstein and Hasselmo
1997
).
In summary, we propose that
7 and
4
2 nAChR-activated GABAergic
inputs to pyramidal neurons and interneurons in the CA1 field of the
hippocampus mediate several functions including inhibition, disinhibition, and removal of inactivation of intrinsic membrane conductances. Such mechanisms are critical for encoding information as
well as retrieval of memory in the CNS.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
The generous help of T. Jemski from the Illustration Department of the University of Maryland School of Medicine and the technical assistance of B. Marrow and M. Zelle is gratefully acknowledged. We thank Drs. E.F.R. Pereira and W. R. Randall for valuable suggestions on the manuscript. We also acknowledge the superb work of B. Alkondon for preparation of the hippocampal slices, biocytin-processing, and tracing of the neuron images using the Neurolucida program.
This study was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS-25296 and ES-05730.
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FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Address for reprint requests: E. X. Albuquerque, Dept. of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 655 W. Baltimore St., Baltimore, MD 21201 (E-mail: ealbuque{at}umaryland.edu).
Received 3 April 2001; accepted in final form 24 August 2001.
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