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Volume 16, Number 10,
Issue of May 15, 1996
pp. 3166-3177
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Clustering of Gephyrin at GABAergic but Not Glutamatergic
Synapses in Cultured Rat Hippocampal Neurons
Ann Marie Craig1,
Gary Banker2,
Weiru Chang1,
Maureen E. McGrath1, and
Anna S. Serpinskaya1
1 Department of Cell and Structural Biology, University
of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801, and 2 Department of
Neuroscience, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia
22903
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
The molecular mechanisms underlying the establishment of a
postsynaptic receptor mosaic on CNS neurons are poorly understood. One
protein thought to be involved is gephyrin, a peripheral membrane
protein that binds to the inhibitory glycine receptor and functions in
clustering this receptor at synapses in cultured rat spinal cord
neurons. We investigated the possible association of gephyrin with
synapses in cultured rat hippocampal neurons, where glutamate and GABA
but not glycine are the principal transmitters. Gephyrin
immunoreactivity was detected in axons as well as dendrites, changing
from a predominantly axonal to a more dendritic distribution with time
in culture. Gephyrin staining was not distributed uniformly, but always
took the form of clusters. Small clusters of gephyrin (0.2 µm2), present throughout development, were
distributed widely and not restricted to synaptic sites. Larger
clusters of gephyrin (0.4-10.0 µm2, sometimes
composed of groups of small clusters), which developed in older cells,
were localized to a subset of contacts between axons and dendrites.
These large clusters were not present at glutamatergic synapses (marked
by immunostaining for GluR1), but were closely associated with
GABAergic synapses (marked by immunostaining for GABA and glutamic acid
decarboxylase). These results, together with previous findings, suggest
that gephyrin may function to anchor GABA and glycine receptors, but
not glutamate receptors, at postsynaptic sites on central neurons. They
also raise the possibility that gephyrin has additional functions,
independent of its role at synapses.
Key words:
synaptogenesis;
receptor clustering;
gephyrin;
GABA
receptor;
glutamate receptor;
hippocampal neuron;
postsynaptic site
INTRODUCTION
Synaptic function depends not only on controlled
release of neurotransmitter but also on regulation of the number and
distribution of receptors in the postsynaptic membrane. At the
neuromuscular junction, the primary model for the development of
postsynaptic sites, some of the key proteins that regulate the
distribution of the acetylcholine receptor have been identified. Agrin
and ARIA are two of the trans-synaptic signaling molecules, whereas the
43K protein and perhaps the dystroglycan complex function in anchoring
the receptor in the postsynaptic membrane (McMahan et al., 1992 ; Falls
et al., 1993 ; Froehner, 1993b ; Hall and Sanes, 1993 ; Fallon and Hall,
1994 ; Apel et al., 1995 ). It has become increasingly clear that
receptors are also clustered at postsynaptic sites on neurons [for an
elegant example, see Triller et al. (1985) ]. Furthermore, neuronal
receptors can cluster specifically opposite terminals that release the
corresponding transmitter (Craig et al., 1994 ).
The nature of the molecular signals that induce receptor clustering on
neurons is not known, but one of the anchoring proteins has been
identified and studied intensively by H. Betz and J. Kirsch and
colleagues. Gephyrin, a 93 kDa peripheral membrane protein, was
isolated originally by virtue of its co-purification with the glycine
receptor during affinity chromatography from mammalian spinal cord
(Pfeiffer et al., 1982 , 1984 ). Antisense oligonucleotides against
gephyrin inhibit glycine receptor clustering on cultured rat spinal
cord neurons (Froehner, 1993a ; Kirsch et al., 1993b ). Gephyrin binds to
the glycine receptor subunit and to tubulin and has been postulated
to anchor the glycine receptor to the subsynaptic cytoskeleton (Kirsch
et al., 1991 ; Kirsch and Betz, 1995 ; Meyer et al., 1995 ).
Gephyrin may also have other functions in addition to its role in
anchoring glycine receptors. Although it was once thought that gephyrin
immunoreactivity was restricted to glycinergic postsynaptic sites
(Triller et al., 1985 ), this view has subsequently come into question.
Gephyrin has been observed postsynaptic to GABA terminals or
colocalized with GABAA receptor subunits in the
rat spinal cord, cerebellum, and retina (Triller et al., 1987 ; Mitchell
et al., 1993 ; Bohlhalter et al., 1994; Cabot et al., 1995 ;
Sassoè-Pognetto et al., 1995 ). In all of these regions, both GABA
and glycine are primary inhibitory transmitters and can coexist in the
same cells and the same terminals (Ottersen et al., 1988 ; Todd and
Sullivan, 1990 ; Chen and Hillman, 1993 ; Koontz et al., 1993 ). Thus,
co-utilization of both transmitters at the same bouton may partly
explain the presence of gephyrin at GABAergic synapses in these
systems, although this explanation seems inadequate to account for the
preponderance of GABAergic synapses that contain gephyrin [>95% of
GABAergic sympathetic preganglionic neuron inputs as determined by
Cabot et al. (1995) ]. In addition, gephyrin immunoreactivity in the
retinal inner plexiform layer showed a better correspondence with
immunoreactivity for the GABAA receptor 2
subunit than for glycine receptors (Sassoè-Pognetto et al.,
1995 ). Furthermore, gephyrin is expressed abundantly in regions of the
brain that lack the ligand-binding subunit of the glycine receptor,
although these regions do express the glycine receptor subunit
(Malosio et al., 1991 ; Kirsch and Betz, 1993 ; Kirsch et al., 1993a ). In
fact, gephyrin is expressed in many non-neural tissues, including
kidney, lung, and liver (Prior et al., 1992 ). The presence of
alternative splice variants at four sites in the N-terminal-half of
gephyrin also supports the idea of multiple functions (Prior et al.,
1992 ).
To assess further the possible association of gephyrin with
nonglycinergic synapses, we studied its expression and distribution in
cultures of rat hippocampal neurons. These cultures are composed
primarily of glutamatergic pyramidal cells together with a small number
(~6%) of GABAergic interneurons (Goslin and Banker, 1991 ; Benson et
al., 1994 ). The cultured neurons form structurally and functionally
competent synapses and cluster glutamate and GABA receptors at
postsynaptic sites opposite terminals releasing the corresponding
transmitters (Bartlett and Banker, 1984 ; Fletcher et al., 1991 , 1994 ;
Craig et al., 1993 , 1994 ; Eshhar et al., 1993 ). GABA is the predominant
inhibitory transmitter in the hippocampus, whereas there is no evidence
for glycinergic transmission in the hippocampus or in hippocampal
cultures. Synaptically activated inhibitory currents in hippocampal
cultures are blocked by GABA receptor antagonists (Collingridge et al.,
1984 ; Segal and Barker, 1984 ; Bekkers and Stevens, 1991 ). mRNAs
encoding the 2 and subunits of the glycine receptor are
expressed in the embryonic hippocampus (Malosio et al., 1991 ), however,
and strychnine-sensitive responses to application of glycine can be
recorded transiently during hippocampal development (Ito and Cherubini,
1991 ). Thus, it is quite possible that glycine receptors are present
but lack a synaptic function in the hippocampal cultures.
We found that prominent clusters of gephyrin immunoreactivity were
associated selectively with GABAergic but not glutamatergic synapses,
suggesting a possible role in anchoring GABA receptors as well as
glycine receptors. Smaller clusters of gephyrin immunoreactivity were
distributed broadly within both axons and dendrites and bore no
relationship to synaptic sites. This raises the possibility that
gephyrin has additional functions in neurons, unrelated to receptor
anchoring.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Cell cultures. Hippocampal cultures were prepared as
described previously (Banker and Cowan, 1977 ; Goslin and Banker, 1991 ).
Briefly, hippocampi from 18-d-old rat embryos were dissociated by
treatment with trypsin and trituration with a constricted Pasteur
pipette. The cells were plated on
poly-L-lysine-coated glass coverslips in minimal
essential medium (MEM) with 10% horse serum. Plating densities ranged
from 48 to 7200 cells/cm2. After the cells had
attached to the substrate, the coverslips were transferred to dishes
containing a monolayer of astroglial cells and oriented so that the
neurons faced the glia but did not contact them. Cultures were
maintained in serum-free MEM with N2 supplements (Bottenstein and Sato,
1979 ), 0.1% ovalbumin, and 0.1 mM pyruvate.
Cytosine arabinoside (5 µM) was added 2-3 d
after plating to inhibit the proliferation of non-neuronal cells.
Antibodies. MAb 7a specific for gephyrin was obtained from
Boehringer Mannheim (Indianapolis, IN; now discontinued) and was
used at 2-4 µg/ml (Pfeiffer et al., 1984 ; Kirsch and Betz, 1993 ).
MAb bd17 against the GABAA receptor 2/3
subunits was also obtained from Boehringer Mannheim and used at 5-10
µg/ml (Ewert et al., 1990 ). Rabbit antisera against
microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) was a gift of Shelley Halpain,
University of Virginia, and was used at a 1:10,000 dilution (Halpain
and Greengard, 1990 ). Rabbit anti-neurofilament 200 antibodies (Sigma,
St. Louis, MO) were used at 1:2000. Rabbit antibodies against
synaptophysin were provided by Pietro DeCamilli, Yale University, and
used at 1:8000 dilution (Navone et al., 1986 ). Guinea pig antibodies
against the glutamate receptor GluR1 were obtained from Richard
Huganir, Johns Hopkins University, and used at 1:1000 (crude sera) or
5-10 µg/ml (affinity-purified antibodies) (Blackstone et al., 1992 ).
GABAergic axons and terminals were identified with rabbit anti-GABA
(Sigma; 1:10,000) and rabbit K-2 anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase
(anti-GAD) (Chemicon, Temecula, CA; 1:1000; Kaufman et al., 1991 ). All
of these primary antibodies have been well characterized previously by
Western blot analysis and immunohistochemistry. Secondary antibodies
and avidin conjugates were obtained from Vector Labs (Burlingame, CA)
and used at 2-5 µg/ml.
Immunocytochemistry. Neurons usually were fixed with 4%
formaldehyde, 4% sucrose in PBS for 15 min at 37°C and permeabilized
with 0.25% Triton X-100 for 5 min. The addition of 0.1%
glutaraldehyde to the fixative or permeabilization with NP40 instead of
Triton X-100 resulted in decreased intensity but no change in the
pattern of gephyrin immunoreactivity. Cells were preincubated in 10%
bovine serum albumin (BSA) for 30 min at 37°C and then incubated in
primary antibody in 3% BSA either 2 hr at 37°C or overnight at
4°C. For double-labeling, both primary antibodies were incubated
together except for those experiments involving the K-2 anti-GAD. In
those experiments, primary antibodies were incubated sequentially:
anti-gephyrin, anti-GAD, and then both secondary antibodies. Secondary
antibodies were usually combinations of Texas red- or fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated horse anti-mouse, goat anti-rabbit, or
goat anti-guinea pig IgGs. For greater sensitivity in some experiments,
biotinylated secondary antibodies were used in combination with FITC-
or Texas red-avidin D. Controls included incubations with no primary
antibody and comparisons of double- and single-labeled samples to
ensure the independence of labeling in the double-label experiments.
Coverslips were mounted in elvanol with 2%
1,4-diazabicyclo[2,2,2]octane. Cells were photographed with Kodak
TMAX P3200 film through 25-100 × objectives on a Zeiss microscope.
Images were prepared for presentation using a Nikon Coolscan scanner,
Adobe Photoshop, and Shinko dye sublimation printer. In some cases,
images were collected directly with a Photometrics series 250 cooled
CCD camera.
Quantitation. For quantitative analysis, digital images were
collected with a Photometrics series 250 cooled CCD camera and stored
on a Pinnacle rewriteable optical drive. Images were analyzed with
IPLab software. After background subtraction of the dark current image,
threshold intensity was set for gephyrin images to include for
measurements only the clusters, i.e., only pixels above a user-defined
intensity. Threshold intensity was chosen manually for each image to
include the maximum number of individual clusters with minimal
coalescence of clusters in brighter areas. Intensity and area were then
measured for each spot above threshold. Raw intensity values were
linearly scaled relative to the brightest spot for each image to yield
the relative intensity values (see Table 1). A gephyrin image with
numbered hot spots was overlaid with the corresponding GABA image, and
each gephyrin hot spot was classified as GABA-positive (colocalization)
or GABA-negative (no colocalization). Regions immediately surrounding
the soma were excluded from analysis because of high background
fluorescence from the thickness of the cell body. The results of these
measurements were analyzed in Cricketgraph and Microsoft Excel (see
Table 1).
RESULTS
Distribution of gephyrin in axons and dendrites
Embryonic rat hippocampal neurons in low-density culture were
assayed for the expression and localization of gephyrin using the
previously characterized monoclonal antibody 7a (Pfeiffer et al., 1984 ;
Kirsch and Betz, 1993 ). Specificity of the gephyrin antibody was
confirmed by Western blot analysis on rat forebrain tissue. As
expected, a single strongly immunoreactive band of 93 kDa was obtained
(data not shown). In hippocampal cultures, gephyrin immunoreactivity
was observed in all neurons at all ages examined, from 2 to 26 d in
culture. Immunoreactivity was not uniformly distributed but was present
in a pattern of small puncta.
Surprisingly, in light of previous results (Triller et al., 1985 , 1987 ;
Mitchell et al., 1993 ; Cabot et al., 1995 ), gephyrin was not restricted
to dendrites but was clearly present in axons as well. In fact, in
younger neurons (2-10 d in culture), gephyrin was more abundant in
axons than in dendrites (Fig. 1A-C).
This distribution changed with development. In older neurons, gephyrin
seemed to be more abundant in dendrites than in axons (Fig.
1D-F). Although some of the immunoreactivity associated
with dendrites in older cultures may have been attributable to axons
coursing along the edges of dendrites, most isolated axons lacked
immunoreactivity. Moreover, immunoreactive puncta were present
throughout the breadth of dendrites, even in very low-density cultures
where dendrites are contacted by few axons.
Fig. 1.
Segregation of gephyrin first to axons and then to
dendrites during the development of hippocampal neurons in culture.
Neurons were double-labeled for gephyrin (B, E) and the
dendritic protein MAP2 (C, F) after 8 d (A-C) or
22 d (D-F) in culture. Phase-contrast micrographs (A,
D) reveal the increase in complexity of the axonal and dendritic
network. In the younger neurons, gephyrin immunoreactivity was strong
in axons (arrow) but undetectable in dendrites
(arrowhead). In the more mature neurons, gephyrin was
restricted mainly to dendrites (arrowhead) but still
detectable in dispersed puncta in a small subset of axons
(arrow). The presence of gephyrin immunoreactivity in axons
was confirmed in additional experiments by double-label
immunocytochemistry for neurofilament 200 (data not shown). Gephyrin
immunoreactivity was always detected in a punctate pattern. Scale bar
(shown in A): 20 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (102K GIF file)]
The transition from a predominantly axonal to a predominantly dendritic
localization occurred gradually. At 12 d in culture (Fig.
2A,B), there was both dendritic and
axonal immunoreactivity. Gephyrin was present in sparsely distributed
puncta in isolated axons and was particularly abundant near axonal
growth cones. Some of the immunoreactive puncta near dendrites were
actually outside the boundaries of the dendrites proper and were no
doubt attributable to axons coursing parallel to the dendrites. By 16 d
in culture (Fig. 2C,D), gephyrin immunoreactivity had nearly
disappeared from isolated axons, and immunoreactivity had increased
within the boundaries of dendrites. In mature cultures (>3 weeks),
gephyrin immunoreactivity was present primarily within the boundaries
of dendrites (see Figs. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9), but a small minority of axons continued
to express gephyrin.
Fig. 2.
Development of large gephyrin clusters on
dendrites. Hippocampal neurons were immunolabeled after 12 d (A,
B) or 16 d (C, D) in culture for gephyrin (A,
C) and the glutamate receptor subunit GluR1 (B, D).
GluR1 is segregated to dendrites and has begun to form postsynaptic
clusters on spines. At 12 d, gephyrin was present in both axons
(arrow) and dendrites. In dendrites, in addition to the
small clusters, a few large gephyrin clusters had formed
(arrowhead). By 16 d, axonal labeling had decreased but was
still detectable in spots (arrow), and the number of large
dendritic clusters had increased (arrowhead). Scale bars
(shown in A and C): 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (71K GIF file)]
Fig. 5.
Absence of a relationship between gephyrin
clusters and GluR1-labeled glutamate synapses. Hippocampal neurons
after 3 weeks in culture were immunolabeled for gephyrin (A,
C) and the glutamate receptor subunit GluR1 (B, D).
Large gephyrin clusters (arrow) did not colocalize with
GluR1 clusters (arrowhead). The large gephyrin clusters were
always present on dendritic shafts, whereas GluR1 clusters were
predominantly on dendritic spines. A minority of GluR1-labeled spines
contained small clusters of gephyrin, but the majority of GluR1-labeled
synapses contained no detectable gephyrin and the majority of small
gephyrin clusters did not colocalize with GluR1 clusters. Scale bars
(shown in A and C): 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (70K GIF file)]
Fig. 6.
Similar distribution patterns of gephyrin and the
GABAA receptor 2/3 subunits on different
pyramidal cells. Hippocampal neurons after 3 weeks in culture were
labeled for either gephyrin (A, B) or
GABAA receptor 2/3 subunits (C, D).
This was not a double-label experiment, because these two antibodies
are from the same species. The overall distribution patterns were
similar for both proteins in that large clusters of both proteins were
of roughly the same size, were elongated in shape, and were present on
dendritic shafts but not on spines. There were additional small
clusters of gephyrin that did not have a GABA receptor counterpart.
Although it may not be apparent here, the diffuse dendritic staining
was generally higher for the GABA receptor subunits than for gephyrin.
Scale bars: A, C, 20 µm; B,
D, 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (103K GIF file)]
Fig. 7.
Selective clustering of gephyrin at sites of
contact between dendrites and GABAergic axons. Hippocampal neurons
after 3 weeks in culture were labeled for gephyrin (A) and
GABA (B). Gephyrin was detected in small clusters throughout
the soma and dendrites and in larger clusters, or closely spaced groups
of small brighter clusters, at points of contact with GABA axons
(arrows). The cell shown is a pyramidal cell; the GABAergic
axon originated from a nearby interneuron. Scale bar (shown in
A): 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (70K GIF file)]
Fig. 8.
Selective clustering of gephyrin at GABAergic
synapses. Hippocampal neurons after 3-4 weeks in culture were
immunolabeled for gephyrin (B, E, H) and GAD, a marker of
GABAergic terminals (C, F, I). There was a largely
one-to-one correspondence between large gephyrin clusters and
GAD-labeled boutons. Presynaptic versus postsynaptic sites were not
distinguishable at this level of resolution, and so the apparent
colocalization is consistent with apposition of presynaptic GAD and
presumably postsynaptic gephyrin. Smaller gephyrin clusters, most
prominent in H, did not colocalize with GAD. The
phase-contrast micrographs (A, D, G) indicate the presence
of many unlabeled axons and regions of dendrites. The cells shown here
are all pyramidal cells; the GABAergic axons originated from nearby
interneurons. Scale bars: A-F, 20 µm; G-I, 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (90K GIF file)]
Fig. 9.
Correlation of gephyrin cluster size with
GABAergic innervation. Hippocampal neurons after 24 d in culture were
labeled for gephyrin (A, C, E) and GABA (B, D,
F). Panels on the right show an enlargement
of gephyrin staining in one of the dendrites. Gephyrin cluster size was
uniformly small in dendrites lacking GABAergic innervation (A,
B). Innervated dendrites exhibited either very large clusters
(C, D), or more commonly, both large and small clusters
(E, F). The cells shown here are all pyramidal cells from a
single coverslip; the GABA-staining in the cell bodies is background
because of the greater thickness of the cell bodies. Scale bars:
A-F, 20 µm; right panels, 5 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (111K GIF file)]
As the neurons matured in culture, the distribution of gephyrin changed
in another way: larger clusters of gephyrin immunoreactivity appeared.
These larger clusters could first be observed in a few cells at 10-12
d in culture (Fig. 2) and were present in most cells by 3 weeks in
culture. Gephyrin clusters were present in the somata and dendrites of
both the GABAergic interneurons and the non-GABAergic pyramidal cells
(Fig. 3A,B). Because gephyrin was detected in
only a minority of mature axons, we wondered whether these might
correspond to the axons of GABAergic cells. This proved not to be the
case. Although a few gephyrin-immunoreactive GABAergic axons were
observed, most of the gephyrin-immunoreactive axons were not GABAergic,
and most GABAergic axons lacked detectable gephyrin immunoreactivity
(Fig. 3C,D).
Fig. 3.
Gephyrin expression by both pyramidal and
GABAergic neurons. Hippocampal neurons were immunolabeled after 21-24
d in culture for gephyrin (A, C) and GABA (B, D).
Gephyrin immunoreactivity was detected in a punctate dendritic pattern
in both pyramidal neurons (cell at left in A, B)
and GABAergic interneurons (cell at right in A,
B). The apparent staining of the pyramidal cell soma by GABA is
background that is attributable to the greater thickness of the cell
body. The fine-staining of processes surrounding the pyramidal cell
soma is typical of GABA axon staining. The minority of axons exhibiting
gephyrin immunoreactivity in mature cultures (C) generally
did not correspond to GABA axons (D). As in the example
shown, gephyrin immunoreactivity in axons of older neurons was
typically strongest at the tip. Scale bars: A, B,
30 µm; C, D, 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (54K GIF file)]
Relationship of gephyrin with synapses
Are the gephyrin clusters associated with either glutamatergic or
GABAergic synapses? This question was addressed by labeling
simultaneously for gephyrin and a marker of glutamatergic synapses
(GluR1)(Fig. 5), or markers of GABAergic synapses (either GABA itself,
GAD, or the GABAA receptor 2/3 subunits)
(Figs. 6, 7, 8, 9), or the general synaptic marker synaptophysin (Fig.
4). The localization of the small gephyrin clusters bore
no relationship to any of the pre- or postsynaptic proteins listed
above. Because of the sheer number of clusters in older neurons, there
was occasional overlap in staining for gephyrin and synaptophysin as a
marker for synaptic vesicles, but the majority of puncta did not
overlap (Fig. 4). Similarly, there was no correspondence between the
small gephyrin clusters and either GluR1-labeled glutamatergic synapses
or GAD-labeled GABAergic synapses (Figs. 5, 8). The
small gephyrin clusters seemed to be distributed randomly and were not
associated with any clearly discernible morphological feature.
Fig. 4.
Nonsynaptic localization of small gephyrin
clusters. Hippocampal neurons after 2 weeks in culture were
immunolabeled for gephyrin (B) and the synaptic vesicle
protein synaptophysin (C). Only one elongated gephyrin
cluster (arrowhead) exhibited a clear synaptic localization
evidenced by colocalization with synaptophysin. The vast majority of
the small round gephyrin clusters were present at nonsynaptic sites
(arrows), and the vast majority of synaptic vesicle clusters
contained no detectable gephyrin. These conclusions were confirmed by
superposition of color images (not shown). Scale bar (shown in
A): 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (61K GIF file)]
The large gephyrin clusters were observed on dendritic shafts or cell
bodies but not on dendritic spines. Thus it seemed unlikely that they
would be associated with glutamatergic synapses, which are particularly
prominent on dendritic spines (Craig et al., 1993 ). Double-labeling
experiments bore this out (Fig. 5). The large gephyrin clusters did not
colocalize with GluR1-labeled synapses but had a distinct,
nonoverlapping distribution. The pattern of the large gephyrin clusters
was reminiscent of the pattern of
GABAA receptors (as marked by staining with
antibodies that recognize the 2 and 3 subunits; see Craig et al.,
1994 ). Because the gephyrin and GABA receptor antibodies available were
raised in the same species, it was not possible to compare their
distributions in the same cells by double-labeling; however, from
single-labeling experiments, the patterns of labeling of the two
proteins were strikingly similar. Both types of clusters were of
approximately the same size, both tended to be elongated in shape, and
both were present on dendritic shafts but not on spines (Fig.
6). The only obvious difference between the staining
patterns of the GABAA receptor subunits and
gephyrin in mature cells was that the latter was also present in small
clusters.
Double-labeling with GABA revealed that the large gephyrin clusters
occurred at sites of contact between dendrites and GABAergic axons
(Fig. 7). Although GABA is present along the length of
GABAergic axons, the synthetic enzyme GAD is concentrated in terminals
and thus is a more specific marker for GABAergic boutons.
Double-labeling with gephyrin and GAD confirmed that sites of large
gephyrin clusters are indeed GABAergic synapses (Fig.
8). On most cells, there was a nearly one-to-one
correspondence between large gephyrin clusters and GAD-labeled boutons.
On some cells, the large gephyrin clusters seemed to be continuous
structures, whereas on other cells (e.g., Fig. 7), the ``large
gephyrin clusters'' were actually composed of groups of closely spaced
small clusters. Because there are relatively few GABAergic neurons in
these cultures, the density of GABAergic innervation varies. Some
dendrites received no GABAergic input; these dendrites exhibited small
gephyrin clusters but no large gephyrin clusters (Fig.
9A,B). Dendrites that received GABAergic
input and had large gephyrin clusters tended to have fewer small
gephyrin clusters (Fig. 9C,D), although this was not always
the case (Fig. 9E,F).
The characteristics of the gephyrin clusters, and the nature of their
association with GABAergic innervation, were quantified from digital
images of cells double-labeled for gephyrin and GABA (Table
1). Each region of gephyrin immunofluorescence above a
user-defined threshold intensity was considered a cluster, and its size
and intensity were determined. Images were then examined in the second
fluorescent channel to determine whether the gephyrin cluster occurred
at a site of GABA labeling or at a site that lacked GABA innervation.
Pyramidal cells with variable extents of GABAergic innervation were
studied, and depending on the cell, anywhere between 4% and 72% of
the gephyrin clusters occurred at sites of GABA innervation. The
gephyrin clusters associated with GABAergic fibers were on average
fourfold larger than those elsewhere along the dendrites (0.86 µm2 vs 0.23 µm2,
p < 0.001). The clusters not associated with GABA
innervation were typically circular, with a diameter of 0.5-0.6 µm,
whereas the clusters associated with GABA innervation were typically
more elongated in shape and sometimes seemed to be composed of 4-10 of
the small clusters. The fluorescence intensity of GABA-associated
clusters was also slightly but significantly greater
(p < 0.001).
Finally, it is important to note that there was considerable
variability among cells in the size and staining intensity of gephyrin
clusters. Large clusters were not present in all cells, including some
cells in mature cultures that received significant GABAergic
innervation. When large clusters were present, their number and
distribution generally paralleled the extent and pattern of GABA
innervation. As is the case for postsynaptic receptor clustering, which
also varies from cell to cell and to a greater degree from one culture
preparation to another, the extent to which large clusters of gephyrin
formed seemed to be a characteristic of both the postsynaptic cell and
the extent of innervation.
DISCUSSION
Our results reveal several novel features about the localization
of gephyrin in hippocampal neurons, a class of cells that receive no
glycinergic synapses. First, gephyrin immunoreactivity in hippocampal
neurons always takes the form of clusters. There are two types of
clusters, which differ in size and in subcellular localization. Larger
clusters of gephyrin are localized selectively to GABAergic but not
glutamatergic synapses. Smaller clusters of gephyrin are not restricted
to synaptic sites or even to dendrites. They arise early in
development, well before synaptogenesis, and initially are distributed
preferentially to axons. As the cells mature, axonal staining declines
and dendritic staining becomes more prominent. On the basis of this
distribution pattern, gephyrin is likely to have multiple functions in
neurons, perhaps mediated by different forms of the protein.
Selective clustering of gephyrin at GABAergic synapses
Previous studies, based on immunoelectron microscopy or on
immunofluorescence staining of tissue sections, have shown that
gephyrin is present at GABAergic synapses in the retina and spinal cord
(Cabot et al., 1995 ; Sassoè-Pognetto et al., 1995 ). Here we have
demonstrated a close correspondence between large gephyrin clusters and
GABAergic synapses in hippocampal cultures, a system that lacks
glycinergic transmission. Furthermore, using a low density culture
system, we presented a clear picture of gephyrin distribution within
entire individual neurons and demonstrated a specific association with
sites of GABAergic but not glutamatergic innervation.
Definitive evidence of whether the large synaptic clusters of gephyrin
in hippocampal neurons are pre- or postsynaptic will require
immunoelectron microscopy, but three lines of reasoning support a
postsynaptic localization. First, all previous studies have observed
that the gephyrin present at synapses is postsynaptic. Second, at 3 weeks in culture, when we observed the striking clusters at GABAergic
synapses, gephyrin was predominantly dendritic. A small minority of
isolated axons were immunoreactive, but these generally did not
correspond to GABAergic axons. Finally, the large synaptic gephyrin
clusters formed much later in development than synaptic vesicle
clusters did, but with roughly the same time course as postsynaptic
receptor clusters (Fletcher et al., 1991 , 1994 ; Craig et al., 1993 ,
1994 ). The formation of large gephyrin clusters also exhibited a high
degree of variability from cell to cell and from one culture
preparation to the next. Postsynaptic receptor clustering in cultured
neurons is also quite variable, whereas the formation of synaptic
vesicle clusters is consistent among different culture
preparations.
The obvious inference from these results is that gephyrin may function
to anchor GABAA receptors at postsynaptic sites
in hippocampal neurons, just as it anchors glycine receptors in spinal
cord neurons. Consistent with this possibility, GABA and glycine
receptors share significant sequence homology, but exhibit no homology
with members of the glutamate receptor family. On coexpression of
gephyrin and GABAA receptor subunits in
fibroblasts, 3 but not other subunits showed a partial
colocalization with gephyrin in intracellular aggregates (Kirsch et
al., 1995 ). Although Meyer et al. (1995) found that recombinant
gephyrin interacts directly with the glycine receptor subunit, they
were unable to detect interaction with the most closely related
GABAA receptor subunits, including 3, by
direct biochemical methods. It may be that some
GABAA receptor subunits such as 3 interact
with a particular post-translational modification of gephyrin.
Nonsynaptic clusters of gephyrin
Two findings in this study were completely unexpected. In light of
previous immunoelectron microscopic studies of gephyrin localization,
which demonstrated consistently that gephyrin was restricted to a
specific subset of postsynaptic sites (Triller et al., 1985 , 1987 ;
Mitchell et al., 1993 ; Cabot et al., 1995 ), we were surprised to find
that gephyrin was not restricted to dendrites but was also present in
axons; in fact, early in development gephyrin is concentrated
preferentially in axons. Equally surprising, gephyrin was associated
with clusters of two distinct sizes, and the smaller clusters bore no
relationship to synapses, even in mature cultures that were densely
innervated. At present we can only speculate about the significance of
these small clusters, which were found in both axons and dendrites. It
may be that these are sites where gephyrin is functioning to anchor
some other membrane protein to the cytoskeleton, or they may represent
intracellular aggregates, perhaps associated with vesicles in transit
to the cell surface. At any rate, the presence of widely distributed,
nonsynaptic clusters of gephyrin raises the possibility that this
protein subserves additional functions in neurons, independent of
receptor clustering. This possibility is consistent with the finding
that gephyrin is expressed in many cell types besides neurons (Prior et
al., 1992 ).
It is unclear at present how to relate our findings with previous
studies of gephyrin localization in spinal cord cultures. In 10-d-old
spinal cord cultures, when neurons are already innervated, only one
size class of gephyrin clusters has been described (0.28 µm2; Kirsch and Betz, 1995 ). These correspond
in size to the smaller clusters observed in hippocampal cultures, but
unlike those in hippocampal neurons, they are restricted largely to
synaptic sites. It is not clear whether this reflects a difference in
cell type or whether larger clusters also appear at later times in
spinal cord cultures. It is also possible that the size differences
simply reflect a difference in the imaging techniques used to make
these measurements.
Most proteins that exhibit a polarized distribution in hippocampal
neurons become polarized relatively early in development (for review,
see Craig and Banker, 1994 ). Most axonal proteins become segregated to
the axon as soon as it develops (at 1-2 d in culture), and most
dendritic proteins become segregated as dendrites begin to mature (at
4-6 d in culture). Thus, the gradual shift in localization of gephyrin
from axons to dendrites between 1 and 3 weeks in culture is unusual.
This change in localization could be attributable to a developmentally
regulated post-translational modification of gephyrin, to the
association of gephyrin with other proteins expressed at different
stages of development, or to developmental changes in the expression of
alternatively spliced forms of gephyrin. Gephyrin transcripts can exist
in different isoforms including or lacking four cassettes, C1-C4
(Prior et al., 1992 ). Expression of transcripts containing the C3
cassette decreases during embryonic development (Kirsch et al., 1993a ).
Thus it is possible that the C3 cassette, consisting of 36 amino acids,
directs gephyrin to axons, whereas forms lacking C3 may be dendritic.
Isoform-specific antibodies will be required to test this
hypothesis.
Implications for receptor clustering
It is clear from our results that gephyrin and
GABAA receptors are not always associated. At 1 week in culture, when gephyrin is punctate and axonal, the
GABAA receptor 2/3 subunits are diffusely
distributed in the plasma membrane and polarized to dendrites. Even in
older neurons, GABAA receptors and gephyrin are
colocalized at GABAergic synaptic sites, but
GABAA receptors are not associated with the
smaller, nonsynaptic gephyrin clusters. These results suggest that only
a specific form of gephyrin, either a splice variant or a
post-translationally modified form, can interact with
GABAA receptors. We have argued previously that
there must be some local control over receptor clustering to account
for its specificity: that GABA receptors cluster opposite GABAergic but
not glutamatergic terminals (Craig et al., 1994 ). Local control could
involve local modification of gephyrin, of GABA receptors, or of
another associated protein. A related issue pertains specifically to
cells that receive separate GABAergic and glycinergic input. Are GABA
and glycine receptors associated selectively with the appropriate
postsynaptic sites in such cells? If so, and if gephyrin anchors both
receptor types, this would imply that different splice variants or
post-translationally modified forms differ in the specificity of their
interactions with receptors. Even in developing hippocampal neurons,
although there is no evidence for glycinergic synaptic transmission,
some glycine receptor subunits may be expressed, including 2 and the
gephyrin-binding subunit, raising the question of whether and how
they may be segregated from GABA receptors and whether, for example,
they may be associated with the small nonsynaptic gephyrin clusters.
Additional studies aimed at understanding the functions of gephyrin in
hippocampal neurons will have to take into account both glycine and
GABA receptors as well as different forms of gephyrin.
Our results suggest that gephyrin is not involved in glutamate receptor
clustering. The hypothesis proposed by Kirsch and Betz (1995) that
gephyrin forms a bridge between microtubules and receptors is
reconciled more easily with a role in clustering receptors on dendritic
shafts than on spines, which lack microtubules. Even in shafts, the
distance between the plasma membrane and microtubules is rather large
to be bridged by a single molecule, but recent evidence that gephyrin
can form filaments in fibroblasts (Kirsch et al., 1995 ) may fill this
gap. Thus there seem to be at least three families of molecules that
are involved in anchoring transmitter receptors: the 43K protein for
acetylcholine receptors, gephyrin for glycine and likely GABA
receptors, and an additional family, possibly including PSD-95 (Kornau
et al., 1995 ), for glutamate receptors.
FOOTNOTES
Received Nov. 27, 1995; revised Feb. 28, 1996; accepted March 1, 1996.
This research was supported by the Lucille P. Markey Charitable Trust
and National Institutes of Health Grant NS33184 to A.M.C., National
Institutes of Health Grant NS17112 to G.B., and a Howard Hughes
Undergraduate Research Fellowship to W.C. We thank Hannelore Asmussen
for preparation of cell cultures, Drs. Pietro DeCamilli, Shelley
Halpain, and Richard Huganir for gifts of antibodies, and Dr. Anuradha
Rao for comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ann Marie Craig, Department of
Cell and Structural Biology, University of Illinois, 506 Morrill Hall,
505 South Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801.
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