|
|
||||||||
The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 4 October 2002, pp. 1766-1776
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803
| |
ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Hoffpauir, Brian K. and
Evanna L. Gleason.
Activation of mGluR5 Modulates GABAA Receptor
Function in Retinal Amacrine Cells.
J. Neurophysiol. 88: 1766-1776, 2002.
Amacrine cells in the
vertebrate retina receive glutamatergic input from bipolar cells and
make synapses onto bipolar cells, ganglion cells, and other amacrine
cells. Recent studies indicate that amacrine cells express metabotropic
glutamate receptors (mGluRs) and that signaling within the inner
plexiform layer (IPL) of the retina might be modulated by mGluR
activity. This study tests the hypothesis that activation of mGluR5
modulates GABAA receptor function in retinal
amacrine cells. Whole cell voltage-clamp recordings were combined with
pharmacology to establish the identity of the ionotropic GABA receptors
expressed in primary cultures of chick amacrine cells and to determine
how mGluR5 activity affected the behavior of those receptors.
Application of GABA (20 µM) produced currents that reversed at
58.2 ± 0.9 mV, near the predicted Cl
reversal potential of
59 mV. The GABAA receptor
antagonist, bicuculline (50 µM), completely blocked the GABA-gated
currents. cis-4-Aminocrotonic acid (CACA; 100 µM), a
GABAC receptor agonist, produced small currents
that were not blocked by the GABAC antagonist, (1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridine-4-yl) methylphosphinic acid (TPMPA; 20 µM), but were completely blocked by bicuculline. These results indicate that cultured amacrine cells express
GABAA receptors exclusively. Activating mGluR5
with (RS)-2-chloro-5-hydroxyphenylglycine (CHPG; 300 µM)
enhanced GABA-gated currents by 10.0 ± 1.5%. Buffering internal
Ca2+ with BAPTA (10 mM) blocked the
CHPG-dependent enhancement. Activation of PKC with the cell-permeable
PKC activators (
)-7-octylindolactam V, phorbol 12-myristate 13 acetate (PMA), or 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol (OAG) also enhanced
GABA-gated currents in a dose-dependent manner. Preactivation of PKC
occluded the mGluR5-dependent enhancement, and inhibition of
Ca-dependent PKC isotypes with Gö6976 (35 nM) suppressed the
effects of mGluR5 activation, suggesting that mGluR5 and PKC are part
of the same pathway. To determine if mGluR5-dependent enhancement
occurred at synaptic GABAA receptors,
postsynaptic currents were recorded in the presence of CHPG. On
average, the mean amplitudes of the quantal events were increased by
about 18% when mGluR5 was activated. These results indicate that
activation of mGluR5 enhances GABA-gated current in cultured amacrine
cells in a manner that is both Ca2+- and
PKC-dependent. These results support the possibility that glutamate
released from bipolar cells can modulate the function of GABAergic
amacrine cells and alter signaling in the inner plexiform layer.
| |
INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Amacrine cells are a
morphologically and functionally diverse group of interneurons that
mediate signaling in the inner plexiform layer (IPL) of the vertebrate
retina. Although nearly 30 morphological classes of amacrine cells have
been identified in the mammalian retina (MacNeil and Masland
1998
; MacNeil et al. 1999
), it is not
yet clear how each class contributes to signal processing in the IPL.
GABAergic amacrine cells, the focus of this investigation, are one of
the most common types of amacrine cells in the vertebrate retina.
GABAergic amacrine cells can receive excitatory synaptic input from
glutamatergic bipolar cells and inhibitory synaptic input from other
GABAergic amacrine cells. These amacrine cells can make inhibitory
synapses back onto bipolar cells, onto ganglion cells, and onto other
amacrine cells (Dowling and Boycott 1965
; Dubin
1970
; Hartveit 1999
). In the retina, synaptic
input from bipolar cells depolarizes amacrine cells through the binding
of glutamate to ionotropic glutamate receptors. The expression of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) on postsynaptic amacrine cell
processes in the mammalian retina (Cai and Pourcho 1999
; Koulen et al. 1997
) expands the role of glutamate into a
possible modulator of amacrine cell function.
The mGluRs are an eight-member family of G protein-coupled receptors
that are divided into three groups based on their sequence similarity
and pharmacological properties (for review, see Conn and Pin
1997
). Activation of group I mGluRs (mGluRs 1 and 5) leads to
elevations in cytosolic IP3 and
Ca2+, and in some cells, to increases in cAMP
(Aramori and Nakanishi 1992
; Joly et al.
1995
). Groups II (mGluRs 2 and 3) and III (mGluRs 4, 6, 7, and
8) are both negatively coupled to adenylate cyclase, such that receptor
activation reduces production of cAMP.
Although it is well established that mGluR6 mediates synaptic
transmission to ON bipolar cells, the role of
other mGluRs in retinal function is poorly understood (Masu et
al. 1995
; Nakajima et al. 1993
; Vardi and
Morigiwa 1997
; Vardi et al. 1998
). In
photoreceptors, activation of mGluR8 reduces the cytosolic
Ca2+ concentration, but the underlying mechanism
has not been resolved (Koulen et al. 1999
). In
horizontal cells, activation of group I and III mGluRs causes
enhancement of voltage-gated Ca2+ currents
(Linn and Gafka 1999
), and activation of group III
suppresses an inward rectifier current (Dixon and Copenhagen
1997
). In the inner retina, activation of group III mGluRs on
bipolar cell terminals reduces neurotransmitter release
(Awatramani and Slaughter 2001
) but enhances
neurotransmitter release from amacrine cells (Caramelo et al.
1999
). In ganglion cells, activation of group III mGluRs inhibits voltage-gated Ca2+ currents (Shen
and Slaughter 1998
). These studies indicate that mGluRs are
present and functional in both the inner and outer retina. Nonetheless,
much remains to be learned about the intracellular targets of activated
mGluRs and the impact of mGluR activation on signal processing in the retina.
This study makes use of a culture system containing previously
identified GABAergic amacrine cells (Gleason et al.
1993
) and explores the role of a group I metabotropic glutamate
receptor expressed by these cells. Previous studies established that
GABAergic amacrine cells express mGluR5, and that
Ca2+ elevations can be engendered by activation
of these receptors (Kreimborg et al. 2001
). Furthermore,
the function of GABAA and GABAC receptors can be modulated by activation of
PKA. In this study, the effects of mGluR5 activation are examined on
the GABA-gated currents in individual amacrine cells and at their
GABAergic synapses.
To begin to understand how activation of mGluR5 affects amacrine cell function, GABA-gated currents are recorded from individual amacrine cells using whole cell voltage-clamp techniques. Initially, the identity of the ionotropic GABA receptors expressed by these cells and the effects of mGluR5 activity on these receptors are examined. A pharmacological approach is then used to uncover some aspects of the downstream signaling mechanisms involved. Finally, to address whether modulation of GABAA receptors occurs at the synapse, we determine whether activation of mGluR5 alters the amplitude distribution of quantal events in amacrine cells. Our findings indicate that activation of mGluR5 enhances GABAergic signaling between amacrine cells by modulating the function of postsynaptic GABAA receptors and that PKC is a key component of the signaling pathway.
| |
METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Cell culture
Chick retinal cultures were prepared as previously described
(Gleason et al. 1992
). Briefly, 8-day chick embryo
retinas were dissociated in 0.1% trypsin and plated onto 35-mm plastic
tissue culture dishes (Falcon, Oxnard, CA) that were previously treated with 1 mg poly-L-ornithine/ml (Sigma, St. Louis,
MO). Cells were plated at a density of 1.25 × 105 cells/35-mm dish in Dulbecco's modified
eagle medium (Sigma) supplemented with 5% fetal bovine serum (Hyclone,
Logan, UT), 1000 U of penicillin/ml, 100 µg of streptomycin/ml, and 2 mM glutamine (Sigma). Cultures were fed every 2-3 days with Neurobasal
medium (Gibco Life Technologies, Rockville, MD) containing 0.5× B-27 supplement (Gibco), 1000 U of penicillin/ml, 100 µg of
streptomycin/ml, and 2 mM glutamine (Sigma). Cultures were incubated at
37°C under a 5% CO2 atmosphere.
Electrophysiology
Electrophysiology experiments were performed on isolated
amacrine cells 6-10 days after plating. Culture dishes were mounted on
the stage of an Olympus IX70 inverted microscope equipped with Hoffman
modulation contrast optics. Whole cell voltage-clamp recordings were
made using an Axopatch 1-D amplifier, Digidata 1200 data acquisition
board, and Clampex 7.0 software (Axon Instruments, Union City, CA). A
reference Ag/AgCl pellet in 3 M KCl was connected to the culture dish
via an agar bridge containing 3 M KCl. Patch electrodes were pulled
from thick walled borosilicate glass (1.5 mm OD, 0.86 mm ID; Sutter
Instruments, Novato, CA) using a Flaming/Brown Puller (Sutter
Instruments). Tip resistance values were 5-10 M
for ruptured patch
recordings and 3-5 M
for perforated patch recordings as measured in
the bath. All recordings were made at room temperature (22-24°C).
To record whole cell GABA-gated currents, the ruptured patch technique
was used with the standard internal solution (see
Solutions). Before recordings were made,
RS values were monitored and allowed to stabilize. Cells that exhibited unstable
RS values during experiments were
discarded from the data set. The measured liquid junction potential for
the standard recording solutions was
11 mV, and this value was
applied to the voltage values in I-V plots. For recording
quantal events, the perforated patch technique (Horn and Marty
1988
) was used with amphotericin B (Sigma) as the perforant. The pipette solution was prepared fresh every 1-2 h by making a 1:2
dilution of amphotericin B (stock solution, 50 mg/ml DMSO) with
Pluronic F-127 (stock solution, 25 mg/ml DMSO; Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR). This mixture was sonicated for 30 s and diluted in
the perforated patch internal solution to a final concentration of 200 µg/ml.
Solutions
Unless otherwise indicated, reagents were purchased from Sigma.
The standard extracellular solution contained (in mM) 116.7 NaCl, 5.3 KCl, 3.0 CaCl2, 0.41 MgCl2,
5.6 glucose, 3.0 HEPES, and 20 TEA-Cl. The pH was adjusted to 7.4 with
NaOH. For experiments recording quantal events, the external solution
contained 300 nM tetrodotoxin (TTX; Alomone Labs, Jerusalem, Israel) to
block voltage-gated Na+ channels. The standard
internal solution for ruptured patch recordings consisted of (in mM)
100 CsAc, 10 CsCl, 2 MgCl2, 0.1 CaCl2, 1.1 EGTA, and 10 HEPES. The pH was
adjusted to 7.4 with CsOH. The following ATP-regeneration reagents were
added to the internal solution: 50 U/ml creatine phosphokinase, 3 mM
ATP dipotassium salt, 1 mM ATP-disodium salt, 20 mM phosphocreatine
(Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA), and 2 mM GTP sodium salt. ATP-dipotassium
and ATP-disodium salts were prepared as 1 M and 300 mM stocks,
respectively, and stored at
20°C. The intracellular recording
solution for perforated patch recordings consisted of (in mM) 148.5 CsCl, 2 MgCl2, 0.1 CaCl2,
1.1 EGTA, and 10 HEPES.
Stock solutions of (
)-7-octylindolactam V (Biomol Research
Laboratories, Plymouth Meeting, PA), phorbol 12-myristate 13 acetate (PMA; Biomol), 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol (OAG; Biomol), and Gö6976 (Calbiochem) were prepared in DMSO and stored as single use aliquots at
20°C
3 mo. When dissolved in external solution, the final DMSO concentrations did not exceed 0.1%, and control experiments showed that DMSO at that concentration did not affect GABA-gated currents (Fig. 4). GABA (Sigma) was routinely prepared as a
20 mM stock and stored at 4°C. 50 mM
(RS)-2-chloro-5-hydroxyphenylglycine (CHPG; Tocris Cookson,
Ballwin, MO) stocks were prepared in 100 mM NaOH, and stored at
20°C
1 wk. The final pH of external solutions containing CHPG was
readjusted to 7.4 with HCl. 100 mM cis-4-aminocrotonic acid (CACA; Tocris) and 20 mM (1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridine-4-yl) methylphosphinic acid (TPMPA; Tocris) stocks were prepared in water and
stored at 4°C. Bicuculline methiodide, 1(S),
9(R) was dissolved directly in the external solution.
During all experiments, cells were under continuous perfusion at a rate of 1-2 ml/min. Rapid solution changes were achieved using a tri-barrel square glass assembly (0.6 mm ID, 0.1 mm wall; Warner Instruments, Hamden, CT) attached to a SF-77B Perfusion Fast Step (Warner Instruments) whose movement was controlled by the Clampex 7.0 software. Each barrel of the assembly was supplied by a six-to-one manifold (Warner Instruments). Manifold inlets were connected in various configurations to eight pressurized reservoirs. Solution flow from the individual reservoirs was manually controlled using the ValveLink 8 system (Automate Scientific, Oakland CA). GABA application was achieved in 10-20 ms through computer-controlled barrel movements. GABA-gated currents were routinely elicited by switching to GABA-containing external for 500 ms at 30-s intervals. All other solution changes were achieved in approximately 500 ms by opening and closing the valves upstream of a manifold feeding one common barrel. Control experiments demonstrated that solution switching did not alter GABA-gated current amplitude (Fig. 4A).
Data analysis
Changes in current amplitudes (as plotted in Figs. 2-7) were determined by calculating the difference between the peak GABA-gated current amplitude measured immediately before drug application and the peak current amplitude measured 30 s after the drug application. Quantal events were analyzed using MiniAnalysis (Synaptosoft Inc., Decatur, GA). All events detected by the software were visually inspected to ensure correct peak and baseline selection. Data are presented as the mean ± SE. Analyses of statistical significance was performed using either the unpaired (Figs. 2 and 3) or paired (Figs. 5-8) t-test.
| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Cultured amacrine cells express GABAA receptors
Amacrine cells were identified based on their morphology as
previously described (Gleason et al. 1993
). Individual
amacrine cells voltage clamped at
70 mV produced an inward current in response to an external solution containing GABA. To determine the
dose-response relationship, currents were measured in response to a
range of GABA concentrations. A sigmoid fit to the data resulted in a
calculated EC50 of 50 ± 3 µM (Fig.
1A). To prevent
desensitization that is observed at high concentrations, experiments
were performed with 20 µM GABA. Voltage ramps delivered during GABA
(20 µM) application produced currents that reversed at
58.2 ± 0.9 mV (n = 5), near the predicted
Cl
reversal potential for the standard internal
and external solutions (Fig. 1B). GABA-gated current
run-down was consistently observed during the recording period
(routinely about 10 min, Fig. 1C). Use of the perforated
patch technique did not prevent the current run-down, suggesting that
wash out of cytosolic components by the internal recording solution was
not responsible for this run-down process.
|
To determine the identity of the ionotropic GABA receptors, whole cell
GABA-gated currents were recorded in the presence of a
GABAA receptor antagonist, bicuculline, or a
GABAC receptor antagonist, TPMPA. In all cells
tested (n = 9), bicuculline (50 µM) completely
blocked the GABA-gated currents, suggesting that GABAA receptors are expressed (Fig.
1D). TPMPA (20 µM) reduced peak GABA responses by
10.5 ± 1.2% (Fig. 1E, n = 3),
suggesting either that TPMPA interacted with
GABAA receptors (Ragozzino et al.
1996
) or that cultured amacrine cells expressed a small
population of GABAC receptors. To further
investigate the possibility of GABAC receptor
expression, the effects of CACA (100 µM), a
GABAC receptor agonist, were examined. CACA
consistently evoked small inward currents (11.8 ± 1.5 pA;
n = 11). Bicuculline blocked the CACA responses
(n = 5), but TPMPA was without effect
(n = 8; Fig. 1, F and G). Thus
the small effects of CACA were most likely due to interactions with a
population of
6-containing GABAA receptors (Wall 2001
, see DISCUSSION). These results
suggest that GABAA receptors are the only
ionotropic GABA receptors expressed by cultured amacrine cells.
Amacrine cells can express metabotropic GABAB
receptors (Catsicas and Mobbs 2001
; Tian and
Slaughter 1994
), and it is possible that the steady change in
GABA-gated current amplitudes (run-down) is due to slow modulation of
the GABAA receptors by
GABAB receptors. To address whether run-down was
due to activation of GABAB receptors, we applied
the GABAA receptor-specific agonist, isoguvacine
(100 µM), in place of GABA. As for currents elicited with GABA,
isoguvacine-dependent current amplitudes decreased over time (data not
shown, n = 4). These results indicated that activated
GABAB receptors were not responsible for the
GABAA receptor current run-down observed in cultured amacrine cells.
Activation of mGluR5 enhances GABA-gated currents
To determine if activation of mGluR5 modulates
GABAA receptor function, GABA-gated currents were
recorded in the presence of CHPG, an mGluR5-specific agonist
(Doherty et al. 1997
). In 9 of 14 cells initially
examined, application of CHPG (300 µM) enhanced GABA-gated currents
by 10.0 ± 1.5% (Fig. 2).
Throughout these experiments, CHPG modulated GABA-gated currents in
about 66% of the cells. For subsequent experiments, the data are
reported only for responding cells. Enhancement typically occurred
within 30 s and persisted for the duration of CHPG exposure. We
consistently observed that CHPG-enhanced GABA-gated currents had faster
decay kinetics than control (Fig. 2B). Dose-response
experiments showed that, in general, larger amplitude currents had
faster decay rates, suggesting this effect was not necessarily a direct
result of CHPG application. The rate of GABA-gated current run-down
persisted in CHPG-treated cells. Voltage ramps delivered during GABA
applications revealed no significant differences in the chloride
reversal potential before (58.2 ± 0.8 mV) and during (57.2 ± 2.8 mV) CHPG application (data not shown; P = 0.655, n = 5). This result indicates that the effect of mGluR5
activation on the GABA-gated current amplitude is not due to a shift in
the chloride reversal potential.
|
A previous study demonstrated that activating mGluR5 leads to increases
in intracellular calcium in cultured amacrine cells (Kreimborg
et al. 2001
). To determine whether these rises in cytosolic calcium are required for the modulation of GABA-gated currents, BAPTA,
a fast Ca2+ chelator, was added to the standard
internal solution to buffer the increases in intracellular calcium. For
all cells examined, including BAPTA (10 mM) in the recording pipette
blocked the current enhancement produced by CHPG (Fig.
3, A, B, and
E; n = 5). Changes in normalized current
amplitudes for BAPTA-treated cells following CHPG application averaged
2.0 ± 1.3% and were not significantly different
(P = 0.916) from those observed in control cells
(
1.6 ± 1.5%). Recordings made on the same day with the
standard internal solution (1.1 mM EGTA) demonstrated that cells were
responsive to CHPG if internal calcium buffering was reduced (Fig. 3,
C and D; n = 2). These results
are consistent with the modulation of GABAA
receptor currents through a calcium-dependent pathway.
|
Activation of PKC enhances GABA-gated currents
Although an increase in intracellular calcium by activated mGluR5
has the potential to stimulate multiple effectors, the conventional downstream signaling pathway associated with mGluR5 involves the lipid-
and calcium-dependent PKC isotypes. To determine if PKC activity
enhanced GABA-gated currents in amacrine cells, GABA-gated currents
were recorded in the presence of cell-permeable PKC activators. Within
30 s of application, (
)-7-octylindolactam V (250 nM) increased the mean current amplitude by 15.1 ± 1.8%, and current
amplitudes increased up to 27.6 ± 2.5% during the 2-min
application window (Fig. 4, A
and B; n = 6). I-V plots showed
that like CHPG, octylindolactam did not alter the reversal potential of
GABA-gated currents (n = 4, data not shown). A
diacylglycerol analog, OAG, and a phorbol ester, PMA, also reversibly
enhanced GABA-gated currents in a dose-dependent manner (Fig.
4C). In most cases, the GABA-gated current enhancement
achieved with activation of PKC was considerably larger than that
observed with activation of mGluR5. One possible explanation for this
discrepancy is that only Ca2+-dependent PKC
isotypes are activated by the mGluR5 signaling pathway, whereas the PKC
activators stimulate all subtypes of PKC. Alternatively, this
discrepancy might indicate that the PKC activators stimulate a larger
fraction of available PKC molecules.
|
Although 500 nM octylindolactam produced larger increases in GABA-gated current amplitudes, 250 nM octylindolactam was less toxic to the cells and allowed for experiments with longer application times. Recordings routinely became unstable during OAG and PMA applications, even at the lowest concentrations used. Therefore in most subsequent experiments, octylindolactam (at 250 nM) was used to activate PKC. Together, the results from the three PKC activators suggest that activation of PKC also leads to enhancement of currents through GABAA receptors in amacrine cells.
PKC activity is required for mGluR5-dependent modulation of GABAA receptors
To test whether mGluR5-dependent modulation of GABA-gated currents occurs via PKC activation, and if so, whether the mGluR5-dependent enhancement could be occluded, PKC was stimulated before activation of mGluR5. To accomplish this, octylindolactam was applied until a plateau in the PKC-dependent enhancement of GABA-gated current was achieved. CHPG was then applied in the continued presence of octylindolactam. When CHPG was applied to a cell that had been prestimulated with octylindolactam, no additional enhancement was observed (Fig. 5; n = 7). Both CHPG (300 µM) and octylindolactam (250 nM) independently enhanced GABA-gated currents by 8.4 ± 1.4% and 20.7 ± 3.2%, respectively.
|
If PKC activity is critical for the mGluR5-dependent enhancement of
GABA-gated currents, then inhibiting PKC activity should block this
effect. Exposure of the general PKC inhibitors, such as staurosporine
(150 nM), sphingosine (3 um), and calphostin C (2.5 and 0.5 µM),
caused the recordings to become unstable. Interestingly,
Ca2+ imaging experiments performed with the
Ca2+ indicator fluo-3 revealed large and usually
irreversible increases in cytosolic calcium during exposure to
sphingosine consistent with cell damage (unpublished observations).
Gö6976, a selective inhibitor of Ca-dependent isotypes of PKC,
was less toxic than other PKC inhibitors when used at 25-35 nM, a
concentration slightly above its reported EC50
value of 7.9 nM (Martiny-Baron et al. 1993
). Application
of Gö6976 by itself enhanced GABA-gated currents by 3.3 ± 1.4% (n = 20). This finding was unexpected, given the enhancement observed with the PKC activators. Application of other general PKC inhibitors also enhanced GABA-gated currents before their
toxic effects were observed. The exact source of this effect is unknown
but may be attributable to the inhibition of basal PKC activity.
To establish that Gö6976 inhibited PKC-dependent GABA-gated current enhancement, currents were recorded while octylindolactam was applied alone and in the presence of Gö6976. Octylindolactam (100 nM) alone enhanced GABA-gated currents by 13.25 ± 2.49%, (n = 8), and Gö6976 alone significantly enhanced GABA-gated currents by 1.55 ± 1.18%. Preapplication of Gö6976 significantly suppressed the effects of octylindolactam (P = 0.016), reducing the current enhancement to only 5.08 ± 0.94% (Fig. 6).
|
To determine whether inhibition of PKC also inhibits the mGluR5-dependent enhancement of GABA-gated current, the effects of Gö6976 on CHPG responses were examined. In co-application experiments similar to those described previously, activation of mGluR5 with CHPG (300 µM) alone enhanced the GABA-gated currents by 13.3 ± 3.3% (n = 5). After washing out the CHPG, applying Gö6976 (35 nM) alone also enhanced the currents, in this subset of cells, by 8.2 ± 3.3% (n = 5). However, no CHPG-dependent enhancement was observed in the presence of the inhibitor. Importantly, CHPG-dependent enhancement was restored after washing out the Gö6976 (Fig. 7). Together, these results suggest that activated mGluR5 enhances whole cell GABA-gated currents via activation of PKC in cultured amacrine cells.
|
CHPG increases mean amplitude of quantal events
Isolated amacrine cells form GABAergic synapses onto themselves,
or autapses, after 9-10 days in culture, as previously described (Frerking et al. 1995
; Gleason et al.
1994
). Thus it was possible to ask whether activation of mGluR5
modulated postsynaptic GABAA receptors
specifically. Using perforated patch voltage-clamp recordings to
minimize wash out of synaptic activity, quantal release was promoted at
autapses by holding the cell's membrane potential between
40 and
50 mV, near the foot of the activation curve for voltage-gated
calcium currents (Gleason et al. 1994
). To provide better resolution of the quantal events, a high
Cl
internal solution was used that gave a
predicted ECl of 0 mV.
In agreement with previous recordings of synapses between pairs of
amacrine cells (Gleason et al. 1993
), the amplitude
distribution of quantal events recorded was positively skewed and
exhibited some very large and rare events (Fig.
8B). Application of CHPG reversibly enhanced the mean peak amplitude of quantal events in five
of six cells examined. For the remaining cell, the mean peak amplitude
was slightly, but nonsignificantly, increased (P = 0.610) in the presence of CHPG. On average, CHPG significantly increased the mean quantal current amplitude by 18% (P = 0.014, n = 6; control = 9.0 ± 0.8 pA,
CHPG = 11.6 ± 0.8 pA; Fig. 8C). In three of the
five responding cells, cumulative frequency curves from data collected
in CHPG were shifted to the right over the full range of amplitudes
(Fig. 8D, a and b). In the other two cells,
the shift was biased toward larger events (Fig. 8Dc).
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Our results indicate that cultured retinal amacrine cells express GABAA, but not GABAC, ionotropic GABA receptors. Furthermore, the activity of these GABAA receptors is enhanced by mGluR5 activation, and experiments with BAPTA-loaded amacrine cells indicate that this effect is Ca2+-dependent. Pharmacological experiments suggest that the mGluR5-dependent enhancement is mediated by PKC, and recordings of quantal events indicate that mGluR5 activation specifically enhances currents through postsynaptically localized GABAA receptors. Together, these observations are consistent with glutamate release from bipolar cells acting as a modulator of amacrine cell function.
Modulation of GABA-gated currents by PKC
Activation of PKC was shown to modulate
GABAA receptors in other systems, but the
outcomes of the modulation have been variable (for review see
Moss and Smart 1996
; Swope et al. 1999
).
Previous studies on both native and heterologously expressed receptors demonstrated that pharmacological activation of PKC produces inhibition of GABAA receptor-mediated currents
(Brandon et al. 2000
; Connolly et al.
1999
; Filippova et al. 2000
; Gillette and
Dacheux 1996
; Kellenberger et al. 1992
;
Krishek et al. 1994
; Leidenheimer et al.
1992
; Sigel et al. 1991
; Tapia et al.
1997
). This inhibition was attributed to either direct
phosphorylation of receptor subunits (Brandon et al.
2000
) or to alterations in the levels of
GABAA receptor surface expression
(Connolly et al. 1999
; Filippova et al.
2000
).
In contrast to these reports of PKC-dependent inhibition of GABA-gated
currents, intracellular delivery of constitutively active PKC subunits
enhanced GABAA receptor-mediated currents through
recombinant receptors expressed in mouse L929 cells (Lin et al.
1994
, 1996
). Similarly, addition of constitutively active PKC
subunits into rat dentate gyrus cells also increased the conductance of
GABAA receptor-mediated synaptic currents
(Poisbeau et al. 1999
). Although these results implied
that the method of PKC activation (pharmacologically vs. introduction
of active subunits) correlated with the outcome of
GABAA receptor modulation, our results showing enhancement of GABA-gated currents after pharmacological activation of
PKC argue against this scenario. Instead, the different modulatory effects of PKC on GABA-gated currents are likely to be due to factors
intrinsic to different neuronal cell types. In support of this,
Poisbeau et al. (1999)
demonstrated that introducing constitutively active PKC subunits into dentate gyrus granule cells
enhanced GABAA receptor function, but had no
effect in CA1 pyramidal cells.
The different modulatory effects of PKC may be due to the heterogeneity
of GABAA subunit expression in different neuronal populations. The binding patterns of subunit-specific antibodies in the
IPL of the mammalian retina indicate that GABAA
receptors can be assembled in a variety of subunit combinations
(Greferath et al. 1995
; Wässle et al.
1998
). Although the full complement of
GABAA subunits expressed by these GABAergic
amacrine cells is currently unknown, two pieces of evidence suggest
that cultured amacrine cells express
6 subunits. Wall
(2001)
demonstrated that GABAA receptors
containing
6 subunits produced CACA-dependent currents that were
insensitive to TPMPA. Thus our finding that bicuculline-sensitive and
TPMPA-insensitive currents were elicited by CACA in theses cells is
consistent with the expression of the
6 subunit. GABA-gated currents
in cultured chick amacrine cells were found to be sensitive to
furosemide (S. Borges and M. Wilson, personal communication),
an agent known to selectively inhibit GABA-gated currents in
6-expressing cells (Korpi et al. 1995
; Wafford
et al. 1996
; Thompson et al. 1999
).
Additionally, two novel GABAA subunits,
4 and
4, were identified and sequenced from chick whole brain cDNA
libraries (Bateson et al. 1991
; Harvey et al.
1993
). These subunits are capable of forming functional
channels (Forster et al. 2001
; Liu et al.
1998
), but little is known concerning their modulation by PKC.
Although functional expression of the
4 and
4 subunits in the
retina has not yet been demonstrated, in situ hybridization revealed that mRNA for the
4-subunit is present in the inner nuclear layer of
the retina, suggesting that a population of amacrine cells express this
novel GABAA subunit (Harvey et al.
1994
). Further elucidation of the subunit expression pattern in
amacrine cells may shed light on the mechanisms underlying the effects
of PKC on GABAA receptors.
Role of mGluR5 at amacrine cell synapses
The finding that activated mGluR5 enhances GABA-gated postsynaptic
currents in cultured GABAergic amacrine cells indicates that, in the
retina, glutamate might modulate synaptic interactions between amacrine
cells. Activation of mGluRs was previously shown to affect GABAergic
signaling at central synapses, but in each case the modulation targeted
presynaptic mechanisms (Stefani et al. 1994
;
Gereau and Conn 1995
; Poncer et al. 1995
,
2000
; Schrader and Tasker 1997
; Semyanov
and Kullmann 2000
). The mGluR5-dependent enhancement of mean
quantal event amplitudes suggests that a postsynaptic mechanism is
targeted in amacrine cells. This interpretation is supported by our
observation that whole cell GABA-gated currents are also enhanced.
Interestingly, the percent of current enhancement of the quantal events
is almost twice that observed for whole cell currents. There are two
possible interpretations of this observation. It may be that the
components of the signaling apparatus that sub-serve the effects of
mGluR5 activation are postsynaptically (with respect to incoming
GABAergic synapses) localized to preferentially target synaptic
GABAA receptors for modulation. There is
precedence for such an arrangement where
2
adrenergic receptors, components of their signaling pathway, and their
targets (L-type Ca2+ channels) are co-localized
by virtue of interactions with cytoskeletal elements (Davare et
al. 2001
). It has also been demonstrated that GABAA
subunits can be physiologically
associated with PKC (Brandon et al. 1999
).
The second scenario is that activation of mGluR5 also has an effect on
presynaptic function. Multiple potential targets can be envisioned. One
possibility is that at the synapse, activation of mGluR5 also augments
filling of vesicles such that an enhancement in current amplitude is
due to both changes in receptor behavior and the presence of a higher
concentration of GABA. Another possibility is that mGluR5-dependent
Ca2+ elevations increase the frequency of
exocytosis and may generate simultaneous vesicle fusions that would be
detected postsynaptically as a single, large quantal event
(Llano et al. 2000
). At present, we think this is
unlikely because activation of mGluR5 in the absence of voltage-gated
Ca2+ channel activation has not been observed to
stimulate exocytosis in this preparation. It remains possible, however,
that mGluR5-dependent release of Ca2+ from
internal stores, together with voltage-gated Ca2+
channel activation would be sufficient to trigger simultaneous fusion
events. Simultaneous events such as these might explain the increase in
large amplitude quantal events that we observed in two of the six cells
examined (see Fig. 8Dc).
How might the enhancement of GABAergic synaptic transmission affect
signaling in the inner retina? One simple scenario would involve an
amacrine cell process that is postsynaptic to a bipolar cell and also
postsynaptic to a GABAergic amacrine cell. In this configuration,
glutamate would enhance the efficacy of the synapse from the GABAergic
amacrine cell and suppress the depolarization mediated by ionotropic
glutamate receptors. This sort of anatomical arrangement has been
described for the wide-field A22 amacrine cell of the cat retina
(Kolb 1997
). This cell is itself GABAergic and a single
process can be postsynaptic to both bipolar cell and amacrine cell
processes. Given the recent estimate that 92% of nonribbon synapses in
the IPL are GABAergic (Marc and Liu 2000
), it seems
likely that contacts of this type frequently occur. These interactions
would have the potential to be highly localized because of the nature
(both serial and reciprocal) of amacrine cell synapses in the IPL.
It has been reported that bipolar cells can make ribbon synapses
directly onto amacrine cell bodies (Dowling and Boycott
1965
). Immunocytochemical evidence indicates that mGluR5 can
also be expressed at cell bodies of amacrine cells in the intact retina (Kreimborg et al. 2001
). Thus the
Ca2+ signaling engendered by activation of these
receptors might alter amacrine cell function on a more global and
long-term basis by activating Ca2+-dependent
transcriptional regulation pathways. This type of transcriptional regulation was previously observed in rat striatal neurons, where activation of group I mGluRs led to phosphorylation of the MAP-K signaling components, ERK and Elk-1, as well as the transcriptional activator, cAMP response element-binding (CREB) protein (Choe and Wang 2001
; Mao and Wang 2002
). Understanding
the degree to which activation of mGluR5 generates local signaling
events in amacrine cells will be important in elucidating the full
effect of glutamate on amacrine cell function and signaling in the IPL.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank J. Caprio and M. Wilson for critical reading of the manuscript.
This work was supported by National Eye Institute Grant EY-12204 to E. Gleason and Sigma Xi Grant in Aid of Research to B. K. Hoffpauir.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Address for reprint requests: E. L. Gleason, Dept. of Biological Sciences, 202 Life Sciences Bldg., Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge LA 70803 (E-mail: egleaso{at}lsu.edu).
Received 8 March 2002; accepted in final form 17 June 2002.
| |
REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
T. G. Banke and G. Gegelashvili Tonic activation of group I mGluRs modulates inhibitory synaptic strength by regulating KCC2 activity J. Physiol., October 15, 2008; 586(20): 4925 - 4934. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Kuwajima, M. H. Dehoff, T. Furuichi, P. F. Worley, R. A. Hall, and Y. Smith Localization and Expression of Group I Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors in the Mouse Striatum, Globus Pallidus, and Subthalamic Nucleus: Regulatory Effects of MPTP Treatment and Constitutive Homer Deletion J. Neurosci., June 6, 2007; 27(23): 6249 - 6260. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
Y. Lu Endogenous mGluR Activity Suppresses GABAergic Transmission in Avian Cochlear Nucleus Magnocellularis Neurons J Neurophysiol, February 1, 2007; 97(2): 1018 - 1029. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
B. Hoffpauir, E. McMains, and E. Gleason Nitric Oxide Transiently Converts Synaptic Inhibition to Excitation in Retinal Amacrine Cells J Neurophysiol, May 1, 2006; 95(5): 2866 - 2877. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
Y.-C. Yu, L.-H. Cao, and X.-L. Yang Modulation by Brain Natriuretic Peptide of GABA Receptors on Rat Retinal ON-Type Bipolar Cells J. Neurosci., January 11, 2006; 26(2): 696 - 707. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. Warrier, S. Borges, D. Dalcino, C. Walters, and M. Wilson Calcium From Internal Stores Triggers GABA Release From Retinal Amacrine Cells J Neurophysiol, December 1, 2005; 94(6): 4196 - 4208. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
B. K. Hoffpauir and E. L. Gleason Modulation of Synaptic Function in Retinal Amacrine Cells Integr. Comp. Biol., August 1, 2005; 45(4): 658 - 664. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |