The Journal of Neuroscience, November 3, 2004, 24(44):9888-9896; doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2608-04.2004
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Cellular/Molecular
Glial Nitric Oxide-Mediated Long-Term Presynaptic Facilitation Revealed by Optical Imaging in Rat Spinal Dorsal Horn
Hiroshi Ikeda and
Kazuyuki Murase
Department of Human and Artificial Intelligence Systems, University of Fukui, Fukui 910-8507, Japan
We investigated a presynaptic form of long-term potentiation (LTP) in horizontal slices of the rat spinal cord by visualizing presynaptic and postsynaptic excitation with a voltage-sensitive dye. To record presynaptic excitation, we stained primary afferent fibers anterogradely from the dorsal root. A single-pulse test stimulation of C fiber-activating strength to the dorsal root elicited action potential (AP)-like or compound AP-like optical signals throughout the superficial dorsal horn. After conditioning (240 pulses at 2 Hz for 2 min), the presynaptic excitation was augmented. Furthermore, new excitation was elicited in the areas that were silent before conditioning. For postsynaptic recording, projection neurons in spinal lamina I were stained retrogradely from the periaqueductal gray in the brain stem. The test stimulation elicited AP-like or EPSP-like optical signals in the stained neurons. After conditioning, the EPSP-like responses were augmented, and previously silent neurons were converted to active ones. Results obtained with a nitric oxide (NO) donor, NO synthase inhibitors, metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) agonist and mGluR1 antagonist, and a glial metabolism inhibitor suggest that after conditioning, presynaptic excitation is facilitated by NO released from glial cells via the activation of mGluR1. The results also indicate the possible presence of additional presynaptic and postsynaptic mechanism(s) for the LTP induction. Activity-dependent LTP of nociceptive afferent synaptic transmission in the spinal cord is believed to underlie central sensitization after inflammation or nerve injury. This glial NO-mediated control of presynaptic excitation may contribute to the induction at least in part.
Key words: long-term potentiation; LTP; hyperalgesia; optical imaging; spinal dorsal horn; nitric oxide; glia
Received June 30, 2004;
revised September 3, 2004;
accepted September 14, 2004.
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