Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 14, 821-833, Copyright © 1994 by Society for Neuroscience
Early postnatal development of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) expression, TRH receptor binding, and TRH responses in neurons of rat brainstem
DA Bayliss, F Viana, RK Kanter, CL Szymeczek-Seay, AJ Berger and DE Millhorn
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
We investigated the postnatal development of the thyrotropin-releasing
hormone (TRH)-containing raphe system in the brainstem of neonatal rats.
Postnatal changes in TRH expression in nucleus (n.) raphe obscurus (ROb)
and n. raphe pallidus (RPa) were evaluated by in situ hybridization using
an 35S-labeled oligonucleotide probe complementary to TRH precursor mRNA.
TRH mRNA expression was low at birth [postnatal day 0 (P0)], but was
clearly evident by P7 and increased from that time to reach sustained high
levels from P14 to P28. Consistent with this postnatal increase in TRH
expression, we found increases in the density of TRH-immunoreactive (IR)
fibers, which are derived from ROb and RPa, in the hypoglossal nucleus
(nXII). TRH-IR fibers in nXII were very sparse at P0, but increased
markedly over the first 2 postnatal weeks. The change in TRH innervation of
nXII was closely matched by concomitant increases in 3H-methyl-TRH binding
in nXII; specific TRH binding increased from very low levels at birth to
high levels of P14. Finally, we recorded intracellularly the
electrophysiological responses to TRH of hypoglossal motoneurons (HMs; n =
42) of neonatal rats (P0- P21) in a brainstem slice preparation. The
response of neonatal HMs to TRH, in contrast to adult HMs, was highly
variable. In some neonatal HMs, even at P0, TRH caused a depolarization
with a decrease in input conductance (GN) that was characteristic of the
response of all adult HMs. However, in other neonatal HMs, TRH was either
without effect or caused a slight depolarization with no apparent change in
GN, responses that were unlike those of adult HMs. A response was
considered typical (i.e., "adult-like") if GN decreased to < 85% of
control. The percentage of cells responding in a typical manner increased
progressively from 25% at P0-P2 to 100% after P11. In addition, we found
that the density of TRH-sensitive current (normalized to cell capacitance)
increased with postnatal age in HMs that responded in a typical manner,
suggesting that expression of the TRH-sensitive conductance is also
developmentally regulated. Together, these data indicate that the TRH raphe
neuronal system of the rat brainstem is not fully mature at the time of
birth but develops over the first few postnatal weeks. This was true of
levels of TRH mRNA in caudal raphe nuclei, density of TRH-IR fibers and
3H-methyl-TRH binding in nXII, and also the manner and magnitude of
electrophysiological responses of HMs to exogenously applied TRH.