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J Neurophysiol (January 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00667.2002
Submitted on Submitted 13 August 2002; accepted in final form 3 September 2002.
Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, California 94305
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ABSTRACT |
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Porcello, Darrell M.,
Stephen
D. Smith, and
John R. Huguenard.
Actions of U-92032, a T-Type Ca2+ Channel Antagonist,
Support a Functional Linkage Between IT and
Slow Intrathalamic Rhythms.
J. Neurophysiol. 89: 177-185, 2003.
Thalamic relay neurons express high levels of T-type
Ca2+ channels, which support the generation of
robust burst discharges. This intrinsically mediated form of phasic
spike firing is thought to be critical in the generation of slow (3-4
Hz) synchronous oscillatory activity of absence epilepsy. Recordings
made from brain slices or whole animals have shown that slow
synchronous absence-like activity can be abolished when
Ca2+-dependent burst firing in relay neurons is
interrupted by the pharmacological or genetic inactivation of
T-channels. Because succinimide drugs act as incomplete and nonspecific
antagonists, we tested whether the novel T-channel antagonist U-92032
could provide stronger support for a role of T-channels in slow
oscillatory activity. Ca2+-dependent rebound
(LTS) bursts were recorded using whole cell current clamp in relay
cells of the ventral basal complex (VB) from thalamic slices of adult
rats. We used LTS kinetics to measure the availability of T-channels in
VB cells after TTX. U-92032 (1 and 10 µM) reduced the maximum rate of
depolarization of the isolated LTS by 51% and 90%, respectively,
compared with the 35% reduction due to 2 mM methylphenylsuccinimide
(MPS), the active metabolite of the antiabsence drug methsuximide.
U-92032 (1 and 10 µM) also suppressed evoked, slow oscillations in
thalamic slices with a time course similar for observed intracellular
effects. Unlike MPS, we observed no substantial effects of short-term
U-92032 applications (
2 h) on the generation of action potentials in VB cells. Our findings show U-92032 is a more potent, effective, and
specific T-channel antagonist than previously studied succinimide antiabsence drugs and that it dramatically reduces epileptiform synchronous activity. This suggests that U-92032 or other specific T-channel antagonists may provide effective drug treatments for absence epilepsy.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Cortical
rhythmogenesis has a profound effect on routine brain functions such as
attention, sensory transmission, and sleep. Multiple experimental
approaches including brain lesions (Avanzini et al.
1993
; Morison and Basset 1945
; Vergnes et
al. 1990
), pharmacological perfusions (Avanzini et al.
1989
, 1993
), in vivo recordings (Gloor and Fariello
1988
; Spiegel and Wycis 1950
; Steriade et
al. 1985
; Vergnes et al. 1987
; Williams
1953
), and computational modeling (Destexhe and
Sejnowski 1997
) have suggested a central role for the thalamus
in the transition of desynchronized cortical activity to a synchronized
state. During sleep spindles, and slower, 3- to 4-Hz oscillations
associated with absence epilepsy, the thalamocortical circuit is likely
entrained by intrathalamic oscillations that are dependent on
interactions between the thalamic reticular nucleus (RTN) and
thalamocortical relay (TC) nuclei (Jahnsen and Llinas 1984
; McCormick and Bal 1997
; Steriade et
al. 1993
). While it has been shown for both intact
thalamocortical systems and isolated cortex that synchronization can be
driven by intracortical activity (Destexhe et al. 1999
;
Steriade and Contreras 1998
), clear cellular mechanisms
have been defined within thalamic circuits (see next paragraph)
that likely support the genesis of thalamocortical absence seizures.
RTN and TC cells are reciprocally connected, with RTN cells providing
inhibitory input onto excitatory TC cells (Jones 1985
). Because TC cells can generate rebound bursts in response to inhibition, their excitatory output can complete a cycle of activity within the
intrathalamic circuit (Steriade and Deschenes 1984
;
Ulrich and Huguenard 1997
). A low threshold
Ca2+-conductance mediated by "transient" or
T-type calcium channels (IT) drives
burst firing in both RTN and TC cells. Bursting produces robust
synaptic outputs that sustain rhythmicity between the two thalamic cell
groups and reinforce thalamocortical oscillatory activity
(Huguenard and Prince 1994b
; Jahnsen and Llinas
1984
; von Krosigk et al. 1993
).
A solid link between IT and absence
epilepsy has been established from experiments showing a deficit of
GABAB agonist-dependent absence seizures in
T-channel knockout mice (Kim et al. 2001
), the
upregulation of thalamic T-channels in rodent absence models (Talley et al. 2000
; Tsakiridou et al.
1995
; Song et al. 2001
; Zhang and Noebels
2001
;), and the rescue of one absence phenotype by crossing
against a strain lacking the major form of thalamic T-channel
(Song et al. 2001
). Further support for this link comes from the reduction of IT in acutely
dissociated TC cells of the ventral basal complex (VB) by antiepileptic
drugs (or their active metabolites), effective against absence
epilepsy, including ethosuximide (ES), methsuximide, and
trimethadione (Coulter et al. 1989
, 1990
).
As predicted by the hypothesis that T-channel-dependent bursting in
thalamus is central to absence epilepsy when ES was applied to thalamic
slices, the inhibition of IT
correlated with a network-level suppression of evoked experimental
absence seizures (Huguenard and Prince 1994b
; Kao
and Coulter 1997
). However, Leresche et al.
(1998)
have recently shown that other cellular actions,
reductions in persistent Na+ currents and/or
Ca2+-dependent K+ currents,
may play important roles in the anti-oscillatory effects of ES in
thalamus. These and other findings have led to some controversy regarding the T-channel-dependent hypothesis of intrathalamic rhythmicity (reviewed in Crunelli and Leresche 2002
;
Huguenard 2002
).
U-92032,
(7-[[4-[bis(4-fluorophenyl)methyl]-1-piperazinyl]methyl]-2-[(2-hydroxyethyl)amino]4-(1-methylethyl)-2,4,6-cycloheptatrien-1-one), has been shown to block IT in guinea
pig atrial cells (Xu and Lee 1994
), mouse
neuroblastoma cells (Ito et al. 1994
), and isolated hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons (Avery and Johnston
1997
). While the Ca2+-current
antagonism ascribed to U-92032 is specific for
IT compared with higher threshold
currents at low concentrations (<10 µM), there is evidence for a
significant effect on voltage dependent Na+
channels, with 33% blockade at 1 µM (Avery and Johnston
1997
). To provide additional pharmacological support of a
central role for T-channels in intrathalamic rhythmicity, we show that
U-92032 acts as a potent and specific T-channel antagonist in the
thalamus resulting in clear cellular and circuit level effects.
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METHODS |
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Thalamic slice preparation
Adult Sprague-Dawley rats, of either sex, were anesthetized with
50 mg/kg of pentobarbital and decapitated. Brains were blocked, removed, and immediately transferred to ice cold, oxygen equilibrated (95% O2-5% CO2),
sucrose-cutting solution (in mM): 234 sucrose, 11 glucose, 24 NaHCO3, 2.5 KCl, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 10 MgSO4, and 0.5 CaCl2. After
being submerged for 2 min, brains were glued to a petri dish and
sectioned into horizontal slices on a Vibratome (TPI, St. Louis, MO).
Slices were bisected and trimmed to only thalamus and parts of adjacent
striatum before being placed into an incubator containing artificial
cerebral spinal fluid (ACSF, in mM): 124 NaCl, 5 KCl, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 2 CaCl2, 2 MgSO4, 10 glucose, and 26 NaHCO3, continuously bubbled with 95%
O2-5% CO2 at 35°C
1 h
prior to recording.
Pharmacology
Na+-dependent action potentials were
blocked in some experiments by bath application of 1µM TTX
(Sigma-RBI, St. Louis, MO) or inclusion of 5 mM QX-314 (Sigma-RBI) in
the internal pipette solution.
-Methyl-
-phenylsuccinimide (MPS,
Sigma-RBI) was dissolved in ACSF at a final concentration of 2 mM.
U-92032 (provided kindly by Upjohn Pharmaceuticals, Kalamazoo, MI) was
dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at a 1:1,000 stock concentration
and used at a final concentration of either 1 or 10 µM.
Electrophysiology
Intracellular recordings were performed on 200-µm-thick slices gently weighed down under a nylon net and superfused with a constant flow of ACSF (2 ml/min) equilibrated with 95% O2-5% CO2 at 34 ± 1°C. Glass electrodes (KG-33 borosilicate glass; ID, 1.0 mm; OD, 1.5 mm; Garner Glass, Claremont, CA) were pulled in multiple stages using either a Flaming-Brown (model P-87, Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA) or a Narishige micropipette puller (model PP-830, Narishige International USA, East Meadow, NY). All recordings were made from identified neurons within the boundaries of the either the ventral posterior medial or the ventral posterior lateral thalamic nucleus (components of VB). Neurons in slices were visualized with a fixed-stage upright microscope (Axioskop, Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Thornwood, NY) equipped with an insulated 63× objective, Nomarski optics, and an infrared-sensitive video camera (Cohu, San Diego, CA). Current-clamp recordings were obtained with an Axoclamp 2B microelectrode amplifier (Axon Instruments) using a K-gluconate filling solution (in mM): 120 K-gluconate, 11 KCl, 1 MgCl2, 1 CaCl2, 10 HEPES, 11 EGTA (Sigma-RBI, pH =7.3).
Voltage-clamp recordings were obtained with a List-Medical EPC-7
(patch-clamp amplifier, Darmstadt, Germany) using a cesium chloride
filling solution (in mM): 135 CsCl, 5 lidocaine N-ethyl bromide (QX-314, Sigma-RBI), 2 MgCl2, and 10 EGTA
(pH = 7.3) at a holding potential of
60 mV. To improve the fidelity
of the voltage clamp, we used younger animals (postnatal day 8) in
which the dendrites of relay neurons are significantly less extensive than in adults (Warren and Jones 1997
). All signals were
filtered at 1 kHz and digitized with pClamp v.5.5 (Axon Instruments).
Thalamic oscillations
Extracellular multiunit recordings were performed on
400-µM-thick slices perfused with normal ACSF containing low
Mg2+ (0.2 mM) and the GABAA
antagonist bicuculline methiodide (BMI, 2-20 µM, Sigma-RBI) in an
interface-type recording chamber. Oscillatory responses were evoked
with an extracellular stimulus (20-60 V, 30 µs, 0.05 Hz) applied to
the internal capsule (IC) via a bipolar tungsten electrode. Recordings
were made using monopolar tungsten electrodes (1-5 M
) placed in RTN
and VB. Signals were band-pass filtered (30 Hz-3 kHz) and digitized at
10 kHz, using Axotape, v.2 (Axon Instruments). Vehicle (0.1% DMSO) was
included in all solutions (control and U-92032).
Data analysis
Single action potentials and spike trains were initiated near
spike threshold (
50 mV) set by DC current. A liquid junction potential of 10 mV was subtracted from all recorded membrane potentials in this study. Maximum rates of depolarization and spike train frequencies were obtained with the customized software Metatape v.14
and Spike v.5 (J. R. Huguenard), respectively. Autocorrelograms were calculated for spikes detected in extracellular multiunit recordings with time shifts over a total time window of 2-4 s with a
10-ms bin size. A modified Gabor function was fitted to the
autocorrelograms by means of a simplex algorithm (Ulrich and Huguenard 1995
). Data were further analyzed with Origin v.6.1 (OriginLab, Northampton, MA), and statistical significance was measured
using a Student's t-test (Microsoft Excel 97, Microsoft, Redwood, WA). All quantitative data below are expressed as mean ± SE.
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RESULTS |
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Low threshold spikes in ventral basal complex neurons
At physiological temperatures (33-36°C), mean resting membrane
potential (
69.0 ± 0.7 mV) and mean input resistance (162.5 ± 8.8 M
) of VB cells (n = 50) were similar to
values reported in previous rodent studies (Ulrich and Huguenard
1996
). To assess the steady-state inactivation of T-type
Ca2+ channels in current-clamp mode, we elicited
Ca2+-dependent rebound (or LTS) bursts by
injecting hyperpolarizing current prepulses followed by a
depolarizing current push-pulse (Fig.
1A) (similar to Zhan et
al. 2000
). We used a family of decreasing prepulse currents
beginning with a hyperpolarization to a membrane potential sufficient
to de-inactivate the maximum amount of T-channels (
100 mV)
(Huguenard and Prince 1992
). After this precondition hyperpolarization, we used a 50- to 250-pA depolarizing current push-pulse that proved to be a reliable means to activate LTS bursts.
In the presence of 1 µM TTX, the addition of the push-pulse produced
a robust gradation of isolated LTSs (LTS bursts in the absence of
action potentials, Fig. 1, B and C), which was
not possible with prepulses alone (Fig. 1D).
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Steady-state inactivation curves were generated by plotting the maximum
rate of depolarization (dV/dt; V/s) during an
isolated LTS against prepulse membrane potential (mV). Prepulses were
1 s long to allow for the hyperpolarization-activated inward
current (IH) dependent sag to
stabilize (McCormick and Huguenard 1992
) (Fig.
1B, arrows). With the push-pulse protocol, plots of maximum dV/dt versus conditioning prepulse voltage
produced steady-state inactivation curves that were consistent across
different VB cells, and resembled those from voltage-clamp recordings
in acutely dissociated VB cells (Huguenard and Prince
1992
) with a mean V1/2 of
77.2 ± 1.0 mV (n = 25; Fig. 1C). A
protocol without a push-pulse produced sudden, all or none changes in
the LTS that were not likely related to T-channel availability.
Therefore all measures of the effectiveness of T-type
Ca2+ channel antagonists in current-clamp mode
were made with steady-state inactivation curves using a push-pulse protocol.
Low threshold spikes with MPS and U-92032
MPS and U-92032 both reduced the maximum LTS depolarization rate
(Fig. 2, A and C).
The mean maximum LTS depolarization rate in VB cells (Fig.
3, 12.2 ± 0.4 V/s,
n = 25) was significantly diminished by 2 mM MPS (Fig.
3, 7.9 ± 0.7 V/s, n = 9, P < 0.0001) and 1 µM U-92302 (Fig. 3, 6.0 ± 0.4 V/s,
n = 4, P < 0.0001). U-92032 (10 µM)
virtually blocked the LTS altogether (Fig. 3, maximum LTS
dV/dt: 1.2 ± 0.6 V/s, P < 0.0001, n = 7). The percent change in maximum
dV/dt from control in 2 mM MPS and 1 µM U-92302
was comparable with changes in peak current amplitudes in voltage-clamp recordings made in younger animals (2 mM MPS, Fig. 2B:
35% vs.
52%, 1 µM U-92302, Fig. 2D:
51% vs.
67%) and previous studies on IT
antagonists (Avery and Johnston 1997
; Coulter et
al. 1990
).
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In addition to a clear difference in potency, MPS and U-92302 blockades exhibited several other differences described below. First, the effects of 2 mM MPS on the steady-state inactivation curve were readily reversible in all cases (Fig. 2A, n = 9). By contrast, a partial reversal of U-92032 effects was only seen in one cell, and that required almost 3 h of wash out. Second, the effects of 2 mM MPS were immediate, usually reaching a peak within 10-15 min, compared with the gradual, almost 1 h long, decrement observed in maximum LTS depolarization rates with 1 µM U-92032 (Fig. 2, C and D). Third, current-clamp recordings in 2 mM MPS revealed a strong reduction in LTS half-width, with almost no change in amplitude (Fig. 2A, inset). Conversely, 1 µM U-92032 applications dramatically attenuated LTS amplitude (Fig. 2C, inset). Fourth, 2 mM MPS caused a large shift in holding current in voltage-clamp recordings, while 1 µM U-92032 did not (Fig. 2, B and D).
The above differences between MPS and U-92032 suggest that MPS may be
less specific and have a wider variety of effects on multiple ion
channels. We next investigated the possible effects of these compounds
on action potential generation in VB cells. Some drugs that block
T-channels, including U-92032 and zonisamide, have also been shown to
inhibit Na+ currents (Avery and Johnston
1997
; Suzuki et al. 1992
). To quantify effects
of U-92032 and MPS on INa in VB
neurons, we used two measures: maximum rate of depolarization for
near-threshold action potentials and the firing frequency versus
current injection (F/I) relationship. We also
examined effects on Na+ spikes in LTS bursts
using the steady-state inactivation protocol with pre- and push-pulses.
In the absence of TTX, this protocol produced maximal LTS bursts with a
mean of 5.1 ± 0.4 spikes (n = 30). As with
recordings in TTX (Fig. 2), MPS and U-92032 had distinct effects on the
shape of the LTS, primarily affecting duration (Fig.
4A3) and amplitude (Fig.
4B3), respectively. While both 2 mM MPS (n = 3) and 1 µM U-92032 (n = 2) reduced the number of
spikes per LTS burst to one or none, MPS appeared to have a substantial
effect on action potential generation itself.
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Associated with the reduction of the LTS, maximum
Na+ spike depolarization rate was also
significantly reduced by MPS (2 mM) from 215.4 ± 32.3 to
61.8 ± 16.7 V/s (P < 0.05, Fig. 4A1).
The suppression in action potential generation by MPS (2 mM) was
immediate and reversible, similar to its effect on
IT. This contrasts with the effects of
U-92032 (1 µM), which also suppressed LTS bursts, but had no
significant effect on Na+ spike shape during
prolonged intracellular recordings (80 min, Fig. 4B1). This
difference was also reflected in repetitive firing: MPS severely
impaired the ability of VB cells to fire spike trains (Fig.
4A2), while no such effects were observed with U-92032 (Fig. 4B2). Even at higher concentrations known to strongly
inhibit Na+ currents in hippocampal neurons (10 µM) (Avery and Johnston 1997
), U-92032 appeared to
have little effect on either the membrane potential (mean percentage
change:
1.2 ± 2.5%, n = 5, P > 0.05), input resistance (mean percentage change:
2.4 ± 3.0%, n = 5, P > 0.05), or
Na+-dependent action potential generation (Fig.
5A left). Exposure to 10 µM U-92032 did not significantly affect the maximum
depolarization rates of action potentials (P > 0.05, n = 3) or F/I slope (Fig. 5B) at times when LTS burst suppression was complete (Fig.
5A, right). There was no significant effect of 1 or 10 µM U-92032 on F/I slope after maximum
inhibition in the LTS had been reached (Fig. 5C; control:
0.32 ± 0.03 Hz/pA vs. U-92032: 0.30 ± 0.02 Hz/pA,
n = 5, P > 0.05). Maximum inhibition
of the LTS was routinely achieved faster in 10 µM U-92032 (
30
min), compared with the longer applications times necessary for 1 µM
U-92032. Because the wash-in time of U-92032 is very slow, we used
slice preincubations with 1 µM and 10 µM U-92032 in the following
experiments to ensure equilibrium actions of drug effects.
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Preincubations with U-92032
We recorded from four VB cells from slices preincubated with U-92032 from 2 to 5 h and compared their maximum action potential depolarization rates and F/I slopes to mean control values (Fig. 6). In 1 µM U-92032, two VB cells showed little qualitative changes in action potentials corresponding to a representative control, obtained after 3 h of exposure to normal ACSF (Fig. 6A). The maximum depolarization rate for Na+ spikes for these two cells were 219.7 and 190.4 V/s for 2 and 3 h of 1 µM U-92032 respectively, compared with a mean control value of 200.3 ± 8.3 V/s (n = 20). F/I slopes also showed little deviation from control values (0.28 ± 0.2 Hz/pA, n = 18), with slopes of 0.23 and 0.27 Hz/pA in 2 and 3 h of 1 µM U-92032, respectively (Fig. 6B). With no evidence for INa modulation by 1 µM U-92032, we increased the concentration to 10 µM.
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After a 2.5-h incubation of 10 µM U-92032, one VB cell demonstrated a maximum action potential depolarization rate (183.9 V/s) and F/I slope (0.26 Hz/pA), similar to mean control values. Only after 5 h of 10 µM U-92032 did we observe a VB cell with substantially impaired action potentials. Both maximum action potential depolarization rate (115.2 V/s) and F/I slope (0.13 Hz/pA) were almost one-half of mean control values. The efficacy of U-92032 on IT in preincubations was confirmed in each cell by consistent inhibition of LTS bursts (Fig. 6C).
U-92032 and thalamic oscillations
Given the prominence of T-type Ca2+ channels
in the generation of intrathalamic oscillations (Huguenard and
Prince 1994b
), we next investigated how U-92032 might influence
the rhythmic activity recorded in acute thalamic slices. Phasic
oscillations (
3 Hz) can be observed in VB and RTN multiunit
recordings after an extracellular stimulation of cortical thalamic
fibers running though internal capsule (Fig.
7, A and B).
Application of 1 µM U-92032 progressively decreased the number of
oscillatory cycles and total spike number (Fig. 7, A and
B). Additionally, the period of the oscillation was
modestly, but significantly, increased by 1 µM U-92032 (Fig. 7C). To quantify the effects of U-92032 on the thalamic
oscillations, we fitted autocorrelograms to multiunit recording spike
outputs with a modified Gabor function (Fig.
8A) (Konig
1994
). The peak amplitude of the Gabor function (Fig.
8B), a measure of total cell firing, showed a significant
reduction with 1 µM U-92032 at 15 (76.9 ± 5.4% of control,
n = 22, P < 0.001), 30 (65.0 ± 7.7% of control, n = 22, P < 0.001),
and 60 min (43.8 ± 7.7% of control n = 17, P < 0.0001). Reflecting the dose dependence seen in
intracellular recordings above, 10 µM U-92032 had a larger and faster
effect on amplitude demonstrated at 15 (38.7 ± 11.4% of control,
n = 4, P < 0.05) and 30 min (10.3 ± 7.0% of control n = 3, P < 0.005).
This dose dependence was also observed in the decay time constant
(
D) and period of the Gabor function,
representing duration and frequency of the oscillations, respectively
(Fig. 8, C and D). By 30 min, 1 and 10 µM
U-92032 had reached a
D of 81.1 ± 4.5%
and 55.4 ± 17.0% of control values, respectively (Fig. 8C, n = 20, n = 2). The
increase in period observed in Fig. 7C was shown in the
small but significant increase in period (Fig. 8D) of the
Gabor function for both 1 (30 min: 104.9 ± 1.1% of control,
n = 20, P < 0.001) and 10 µM U-92032
(15 min: 110.4 + 1.5% of control, n = 4, P < 0.01).
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DISCUSSION |
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In this study we have demonstrated that U-92032 can act as a T-channel antagonist in TC cells and suppress evoked intrathalamic oscillations believed to be dependent on IT. U-92032 blocked LTS bursts recorded from TC cells at lower concentrations (1 and 10 µM) and greater magnitudes (50-90%) compared with a representative succinimide antiabsence drug (MPS). Unlike MPS, U-92032 did not interfere with action potential generation or repetitive firing until high concentrations and long exposure times were reached (10 µM and 3+ h). After establishing the intracellular effects of U-92032, we demonstrated that 1 and 10 µM U-92032 decreased the number of cycles and overall spike count of evoked intrathalamic oscillations. These results provide further support for a central role of T-channels in epileptiform intrathalamic rhythmicity as discussed in the next section.
Advantages to current-clamp recordings
All intracellular experiments presented here were conducted in
current-clamp mode, with the exception of the results shown in Fig. 2,
B and D. Although this necessitated an indirect
measure of IT in the form of maximum
LTS depolarization rate, we chose this paradigm for two notable
reasons. First, a combination of imaging (Munsch et al.
1997
; Zhou et al. 1997
), physiological, and
computational studies of have suggested that TC cells have a
significant, if not major, contribution of dendritic T-channels (Destexhe et al. 1998
). Voltage-clamp errors
(Destexhe et al. 1998
; Spruston et al.
1993
; Velte and Miller 1996
), active dendritic conductances (Williams and Stuart 2002
), or simply
having a significant, or distinct, population of T-channels located
distally from the soma, may have contributed to the inconsistent
results of ES across different preparations (e.g., acutely
dissociated, cultured, in vitro slice). To be certain of the efficacy
of U-92032 we based our results on an unclamped potential, recorded
from TC cells believed to have a large percentage of their dendritic
arborization intact.
Second, in view of a previous report showing that U-92032 inhibited
voltage-dependent Na+ channels in hippocampal CA1
pyramidal cells (Avery and Johnston 1997
), we needed to
confirm any possible effects on action potential generation before we
could conclude the suppression of intrathalamic oscillations was
primarily due to the T-channel antagonism of U-92032. In current-clamp
mode, we simultaneously observed LTS bursts and tonic firing during
U-92032 applications, and found essentially no effect on repetitive
firing during short term (<2 h) applications of either 1 and 10 µM
U-92032. We did not further explore the reasons for this discrepancy
between results obtained in hippocampal cells (Avery and
Johnston 1997
) and with thalamic VB neurons in this study. It
is notable that the time-dependent suppression of intrathalamic
oscillations by U-92032 closely paralleled the effects on LTS
inhibition, with no significant deficits in action potential generation
during the same time frame.
In support of a T-channel-dependent hypothesis of intrathalamic rhythmicity
Reduction in the maximum rate of LTS depolarization occurred
gradually in 1 µM U-92032, usually reaching a plateau after 1 h
(Fig. 2, C and D). This delay, not observed in
experiments using isolated cells (Avery and Johnston
1997
), was most likely caused by the lipophilic nature of
U-92032 that would result in slow tissue penetration into brain slices.
We also observed this slow onset in the decrease in amplitude and
D, and the increase in period of evoked
intrathalamic oscillations after 1 µM U-92032 (Fig. 8,
B-D). Similar dose dependence was also observed in both intracellular and extracellular recordings. U-92032 (10 µM)
completely abolished both LTS bursts (Fig. 5A,
right) and intrathalamic oscillations (Fig. 8B)
quickly (<30 min), compared with the slower, and more incomplete block
by 1 µM U-92032. Other cellular actions of ES have been proposed to
contribute to the anti-oscillatory effects of succinimides and related
compounds, including reductions in Ca2+-activated
K+ and persistent Na+
currents (Leresche et al. 1998
). Such effects might
alter neuronal excitability in ways independent of LTS bursts. However,
we found that U-92032 had no substantial effect on single
Na+ spikes or on repetitive firing (Figs. 4 and
5), thus suggesting that the altered excitability of VB neurons
produced by U-92032 resulted solely from T-current blockade. Given
these results, U-92032's actions on intrathalamic rhythmicity are most
likely due to inhibition of T-channels.
Although we did not specifically test for the suppression of synaptic
transmission between RTN and TC cells in the presence of U-92032, the
increase in period observed in intrathalamic oscillations (Figs.
7C and 8D) would argue against any decrement
(Sohal and Huguenard 1998
). High-threshold
Ca2+ currents, known to support synaptic
transmission, are not significantly affected by U-92032 at the
concentrations used in the present study (Avery and Johnston
1997
). Modeling the intrathalamic circuit shows that assuming
sufficient excitatory TC
RTN synaptic activity, a decrease in the
power of RTN
TC IPSCs would initially shorten the period of
oscillations by reducing the time necessary for the membrane potential
to repolarize to the LTS threshold (Sohal and Huguenard
1998
). However, with fewer T-channels available, as would occur
in the presence of U-92032, the period of oscillations should increase
(cf. Figs. 7C and 8D). This follows because a reduction in T-channel availability would establishes a new, more depolarized LTS threshold that would require a longer time to achieve
on the termination of RTN
TC inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) (Bal et al. 1995
; Sohal and Huguenard
1998
).
Targeted antiabsence drugs
While the pharmacological control of absence seizures is effective
in the majority of patients, there is still room for improvement in
antiabsence therapies, with only 19% of patients completely seizure-free following treatment with one of the most commonly used
antiabsence drugs, ES (Browne et al. 1975
). The two most promising routes of control are 1) augmentation of intra-RTN
anti-oscillatory connections (Huguenard and Prince
1994a
; Huntsman et al. 1999
; Porcello et
al. 2001
) and 2) block of thalamic T-type
Ca2+ channels. Two older classes of drugs used to
treat absence epilepsy, benzodiazepines and succinimides, apparently
work through these mechanisms; however, improved drugs with greater
efficacy and target specificity should be possible. With the recent
cloning of three T-channel genes (
1G, H, and I) and the finding that a1G is the primary T-channel gene expressed in thalamus (Talley et al. 1999
), it may be possible to produce a subunit-specific, and therefore location-specific, block of
IT in those suffering from absence
epilepsy. We believe the present findings of a clear, and complete,
block of T-channels by U-92032 associated with a strong disruption of
absence-like rhythmicity will justify further efforts to exploit a
T-channel-dependent hypothesis of absence epilepsy in the pursuit of
new therapies.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests: J. R. Huguenard, Dept. of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA 94305-5122 (E-mail: John.Huguenard{at}Stanford.EDU).
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