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Volume 16, Number 12,
Issue of June 15, 1996
pp. 3912-3924
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Synchronous GABA-Mediated Potentials and Epileptiform Discharges
in the Rat Limbic System In Vitro
Massimo Avoli1,
Michaela Barbarosie1,
Anne Lücke2,
Takeki Nagao3,
Valeri Lopantsev1, and
Rüdiger Köhling2
1 Montreal Neurological Institute and Departments of
Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Physiology, McGill University, Montreal,
Quebec, Canada H3A 2B4, 2 Institut für Physiologie,
Universität, 48149 Münster, Germany, and
3 Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Women's Medical
College, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, 162, Japan
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Application of 4-aminopyridine (4AP, 50 µM)
to combined slices of adult rat hippocampus-entorhinal cortex-induced
ictal and interictal epileptiform discharges, as well as slow field
potentials that were abolished by the µ-opioid agonist
[D-Ala2,N-Me-Phe4,Gly-ol5]
enkephalin (DAGO, 10 µM) or the
GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline methiodide
(BMI, 10 µM); hence, they represented
synchronous GABA-mediated potentials. Ictal discharges originated in
the entorhinal cortex and propagated to the hippocampus, whereas
interictal activity of CA3 origin was usually recorded in the
hippocampus. The GABA-mediated potentials had no fixed site of origin
or modality of propagation; they closely preceded (0.2-5 sec) and thus
appeared to initiate ictal discharges. Only ictal discharges were
blocked by the antagonist of the NMDA receptor
3,3-(2-carboxypiperazine-4-yl)propyl-1-phosphonate (CPP, 10 µM), whereas the non-NMDA receptor antagonist
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX, 10 µM) abolished all epileptiform activities. The
GABA-mediated potentials continued to occur synchronously in all
regions even after concomitant application of CNQX and CPP.
[K+]o elevations were
recorded in the entorhinal cortex during the ictal discharge (peak
values = 13.9 ± 0.9 mM) and the synchronous
GABA-mediated potentials (peak values = 4.2 ± 0.1 mM); the latter increases were presumably
attributable to postsynaptic GABAA-receptor
activation because they were abolished by DAGO or BMI. Their role in
initiating ictal activity was demonstrated by using DAGO, which
abolished both GABA-mediated synchronous potentials and ictal
discharges. These data indicate that NMDA-mediated ictal discharges
induced by 4AP originate in the entorhinal cortex; such a conclusion is
in line with clinical evidence obtained in temporal lobe epilepsy
patients. 4AP also induces GABA-mediated potentials that spread within
the limbic system when excitatory transmission is blocked and may play
a role in initiating ictal discharge by increasing
[K+]o.
Key words:
entorhinal cortex;
seizures;
GABA;
excitatory amino
acids;
rat;
4-aminopyridine
INTRODUCTION
The in vitro hippocampal slice
preparation is a valuable tool for identifying the fundamental
mechanisms that are involved in neuronal synchronization, including the
generation of epileptiform discharges recorded in patients with
temporal lobe epilepsy (Schwartzkroin, 1993 ). This experimental
approach takes advantage of the lamellar organization of the
hippocampus (Andersen et al., 1966a ,b, 1971). However, as some
structures of the temporal lobe (e.g., the amygdala and the entorhinal
cortex) are removed during slicing, phenomena such as the initiation
and the spread of epileptiform activity within the limbic system may
not be fully appreciated in this preparation.
An additional limitation encountered in studies performed in the
``isolated'' hippocampal slice relates to the type of epileptiform
activity that occurs in this preparation. Spontaneous epileptiform
activity recorded in medium containing physiological
[K+] most often consists of brief events that
resemble interictal discharges observed in situ, whereas
prolonged epileptiform discharges (which are the equivalent of the
status epilepticus seen in humans or in vivo animal models)
are only rarely observed (Schwartzkroin and Prince, 1978 ; Rutecki et
al., 1985 , 1987 ; Dingledine et al., 1986 ). Clinical and experimental
findings indicate that status epilepticus may cause hippocampal
neuronal loss resembling the histopathological pattern of hippocampal
sclerosis found in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (Ben-Ari, 1985 ;
Babb and Brown, 1987 ; Gloor, 1991 ).
The absence of prolonged epileptiform discharges has also been
documented by analyzing the effects induced by the convulsant drug
4-aminopyridine (4AP) in isolated hippocampal slices obtained from
adult rodent brain (Voskyul and Albus, 1985 ; Rutecki et al., 1987 ;
Perreault and Avoli, 1991 , 1992 ). 4AP induces interictal epileptiform
activity that is abolished by non-NMDA receptor antagonists at a time
when GABA-mediated inhibitory mechanisms are potentiated (Rutecki et
al., 1989 ; Perreault and Avoli, 1991 ). In addition, 4AP also induces
synchronous GABA-mediated potentials, which continue to occur and to
spread within the hippocampal slice when excitatory synaptic
transmission is blocked by specific antagonists of NMDA and non-NMDA
receptors (Michelson and Wong, 1991 ; Perreault and Avoli, 1991 ,
1992 ).
To avert some of the limitations inherent in the classic hippocampal
slice preparation, we have used in the present study combined slices of
the rat hippocampus-entorhinal cortex with field potential recording
techniques to analyze the modalities of initiation and propagation, as
well as the pharmacological profile of the different types of
synchronous activity induced by 4AP in the limbic system maintained
in vitro. Here we report that bath application of 4AP
induces different patterns of spontaneous activity, including a novel,
ictal-like epileptiform discharge that originates in the entorhinal
cortex and is caused by an NMDA-dependent mechanism. In addition, we
used ion-selective recordings to measure the extracellular
K+ concentration
([K+]o) associated with
the 4AP-induced synchronous activity recorded in the entorhinal
cortex.
Some of these findings have appeared in abstract form (Barbarosie et
al., 1995 ; Köhling et al., 1995 ).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (200-250 gm) were decapitated
under halothane anesthesia, and the brains were quickly removed. A
block of brain tissue containing the retrohippocampal region was placed
in cold (1-3°C), oxygenated artificial CSF (ACSF). Horizontal slices
(500 µm thick) were cut using a vibratome and were then transferred
to a tissue chamber where they lay in an interface between ACSF and
humidified gas (95% O2/5%
CO2) at 34-35°C, pH 7.4. The composition of
the ACSF was (in mM): NaCl 124, KCl 2, KH2PO4 1.25, MgSO4 2, CaCl2 2, NaHCO3 26, and glucose 10. 4AP (50 µM), 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione
(CNQX, 10 µM),
3,3-(2-carboxypiperazine-4-yl)-propyl-1-phosphonate (CPP, 10 µM), bicuculline methiodide (BMI, 10 µM), and
[D-Ala2,N-Me-Phe4,Gly-ol5]
enkephalin (DAGO, 10 µM) were applied to the
bath. All chemicals were acquired from Sigma except CNQX and CPP, which
were obtained from Tocris Cookson.
Slices consisted of both entorhinal cortex and hippocampal formation,
including the subicular cortex. Field potential recordings were made
with glass microelectrodes that were filled with 2 M NaCl or ACSF (resistance 2-10 M ) and were
positioned in the medial portion of the entorhinal cortex (see Fig.
8A), in the granule layer or in the dendritic region of the
dentate gyrus, and in the stratum radiatum of CA3 and CA1 subfields.
Signals were fed to high-impedance amplifiers. The recorded signals
were displayed on a Gould chart recorder and were digitized and stored
on videotape for subsequent analysis. Time-delay measurements were
performed using a digital oscilloscope. For each trace, the onset of
the different types of 4AP-induced synchronous potentials was
determined by visual inspection as the time of the earliest deflection
of the baseline recording. Measurements of the
[K+]o were obtained from
the medial portion of the entorhinal cortex using double-barreled
ion-selective microelectrode based on the valinomycin ion exchanger
Fluka 60398. The ion-selective microelectrode had tip diameters of 2-6
µm. The reference channel was backfilled with 150 mM NaCl and the ion-selective channel with 100 mM KCl. In calibration solutions containing 124 mM NaCl, the electrode showed a potential change
of ~57 mV to a 10-fold increase in [K+]. In
this series of experiments, field potential activity was recorded
through the reference channel of the ion-selective microelectrode.
Fig. 8.
A, Schematic drawing of a
hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slice; the entorhinal region where
recordings were made is indicated by the dotted area.
B, Simultaneous field potential (top trace in
each pair) and [K+]o
recordings (bottom trace in each pair) performed at
different depths of the entorhinal cortex as indicated by the
numbers to the left of each pair. C,
Plots of the maximal values of the
[K+]o increases and of
the amplitude of the population spikes and of the DC shift associated
with the ictal discharges recorded at different depths in three
slices.
[View Larger Version of this Image (28K GIF file)]
A series of cutting experiments was performed using a microknife to
establish the origin and the pathway(s) involved in the propagation of
the synchronous activity induced by 4AP. To further establish the
efficacy of this procedure, the tissue on both sides of the cut was
gently separated by a distance of 100-500 µm.
The data base for the results presented here includes more than 120 combined hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slices. In 30 slices, field
potential activity and the
[K+]o were analyzed at
different sites along an axis that was normal to the pial aspect of the
entorhinal cortex. The data obtained in the course of these experiments
were segregated into four different groups according to the distance
from the pia (i.e., 0-400, 400-800, 800-1200, and 1200-1600 µm).
Measurements throughout the text are expressed as mean ± SEM unless
otherwise stated, and n indicates the number of slices or
neurons studied under each experimental procedure. The results obtained
were compared with the Student's t test or the ANOVA test
and were considered significantly different if p < 0.05.
RESULTS
Synchronous field potentials induced by 4AP
Simultaneous field potential recordings from entorhinal cortex and
hippocampus during 4AP application revealed several types of
spontaneous synchronous activity. Figure 1 illustrates a
typical pattern that was seen in more than 80 slices and consisted of
the following three types of field potential activity. (1) Ictal-like
epileptiform discharges (hereafter termed ictal discharges) that
occurred in both entorhinal cortex and all hippocampal areas, and
showed electrographic features that were reminiscent of tonic-clonic
seizures (continuous line in Fig. 1A).
These ictal discharges lasted 20-480 sec, had intervals of occurrence
of 71-1000 sec, and were characterized by high-frequency trains of
population spikes riding on a steady shift of negative polarity that
was of larger amplitude in entorhinal recordings. (2) Brief (80-150
msec) interictal-like epileptiform discharges (hereafter termed
interictal discharges) that were recorded only in the hippocampus
proper at intervals of 0.7-11.5 sec (arrows in Fig.
1A). (3) ``Slow'' events (asterisk in Fig.
1B) that occurred synchronously at intervals of 22-103 sec
in the different areas of the hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slice and
were mainly of negative polarity both in the entorhinal neocortex and
in the dendritic regions of the hippocampus proper. When the recording
microelectrodes were positioned in the pyramidal or granule layer,
these slow events were of positive polarity (e.g., dentate gyrus
recording in Figs. 1, 2, 3; cf. Perreault and Avoli, 1992 ). Because these
``slow'' field potentials were abolished by application of BMI or
DAGO (see below), they will be referred to as GABA-mediated potentials.
The GABA-mediated events recorded in the entorhinal cortex had
durations of 0.9-3.9 sec.
Fig. 1.
Field potential recordings performed
simultaneously in the entorhinal cortex (middle layers) and in
different hippocampal areas (apical dendrites of CA1 and CA3, and
dentate granule layer) during application of 4AP demonstrate the
occurrence of three different types of activity. The first
(continuous line in A) is recorded synchronously
in all areas and consists of a sustained ictal-like epileptiform
discharge. The second type (arrows in A) is seen
in the hippocampal regions only and consists of continuous
interictal-like events. The third type of synchronous activity,
referred to as GABA-mediated potential, is recorded in all areas and is
characterized by a slow field potential that is of negative polarity in
all areas except dentate gyrus (asterisk in B).
A and B are continuous recordings.
[View Larger Version of this Image (28K GIF file)]
Fig. 2.
Expanded traces of simultaneous field potential
recordings performed in the entorhinal cortex and in different
hippocampal areas (same experimental conditions as in Fig. 1) show the
modalities of onset and spread of ictal discharges (A),
hippocampal interictal events (B), and GABA-mediated
potentials (C). Note that the onset of the ictal discharges
occurs first in the entorhinal cortex (a and b in
panel A), and different sites of origin characterize
the different examples of GABA-mediated potentials (a-d in
panel C).
[View Larger Version of this Image (16K GIF file)]
Fig. 3.
Effects induced by sectioning the perforant
pathway (A) or both the perforant pathway and the subicular
area to achieve a complete separation between the entorhinal cortex and
the hippocampus proper (B). The location and the extent of
the cuts are shown at the top of each panel. A,
Lesioning the perforant pathway only abolishes ictal discharges in all
hippocampal areas; under these conditions, the interictal activity of
hippocampal origin continues to occur, and GABA-mediated potentials can
be recorded synchronously in both entorhinal cortex and hippocampus.
B, The complete surgical separation of the entorhinal cortex
and hippocampus makes the GABA-mediated potentials occur asynchronously
in entorhinal cortex and hippocampal areas.
[View Larger Version of this Image (37K GIF file)]
As shown in Figures 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, the ictal discharge was preceded (and thus it
appeared to be initiated) by the GABA-mediated potential, which
occurred 0.2-5 sec before the onset of the ictal event. However, only
11.7 ± 1.2% of the GABA-mediated events (data obtained from 9 slices)
were followed by an ictal discharge. A further type of interictal
activity occurred in the entorhinal cortex in 13 of the 89 slices
studied during 4AP application (see Fig. 5C). These
interictal discharges lasted longer than those recorded in the
hippocampus proper only, and were observed simultaneously in the
dentate gyrus and CA3 and CA1 sectors (not illustrated). GABA-mediated
events were hardly distinguishable in the entorhinal cortex whenever
this type of interictal discharge occurred (see Fig. 5C).
The values of the duration and of the rate of occurrence of the
different types of spontaneous activity recorded in the entorhinal
cortex and the CA3 subfield of hippocampus during 4AP application are
summarized in Table 1.
Fig. 4.
Effects induced by the NMDA receptor
antagonist CPP (10 µM) on the spontaneous field
potential activity induced by 4AP. Note that the ictal discharges are
abolished and replaced by a sequence of interictal events
(arrowheads) that appear synchronously in the entorhinal
cortex and hippocampus proper; by contrast, the interictal activity
recorded in the hippocampus proper continues to occur at a higher rate
than in control. Note also that the synchronous GABA-mediated
potentials are not affected by CPP application.
[View Larger Version of this Image (61K GIF file)]
Fig. 5.
Effects induced by the non-NMDA receptor
antagonist CNQX on the spontaneous synchronous activity induced by 4AP.
A, CNQX abolishes all types of epileptiform discharges in
both entorhinal cortex and hippocampus, whereas GABA-mediated field
potentials continue to occur synchronously in most of the cases, even
after further addition of the NMDA receptor antagonist CPP.
B, Plot of the changes induced by CNQX on the amplitude and
rate of occurrence of the GABA-mediated potential analyzed in the
entorhinal cortex and CA3 of six slices. C, Effects induced
by CNQX on the epileptiform activity recorded in the entorhinal cortex
at different depths (as indicated by the numbers on the
left) from the pia; in this experiment, both interictal and
ictal discharges were recorded under control conditions, whereas after
CNQX application only a synchronous event reminiscent of the
GABA-mediated potential is seen.
[View Larger Version of this Image (44K GIF file)]
Table 1.
Duration and intervals of occurrence of the different types
of synchronous activity induced by 4AP
|
Ictal
discharge
|
Entorhinal interictal
discharge
|
Hippocampal interictal
discharge
|
GABA-mediated field potential
|
| Duration
(sec) |
Interval (sec) |
Duration (sec) |
Interval (sec) |
Duration
(msec) |
Interval (sec) |
Duration (sec) |
Interval
(sec) |
|
| Entorhinal cortex |
109.8
± 19.4 |
459.6 ± 47.6 |
2.1 ± 0.3 |
3.8
± 0.5 |
- |
- |
1.6
± 0.9 |
36.8
± 17.7 |
|
n
= 25 |
n = 18 |
n = 5 |
n
= 5 |
- |
- |
n
= 24 |
n = 26 |
| CA3 area |
106 ± 26.8 |
444.5
± 45.4 |
2.0 ± 0.4 |
3.8 ± 0.6 |
111.4 ± 9.9 |
0.9
± 0.06 |
1.9 ± 0.5 |
45.0
± 14.4 |
|
n = 18 |
n
= 13 |
n = 4 |
n = 4 |
n
= 7 |
n = 6 |
n = 10 |
n
= 10 |
|
Time-delay analysis of the onset of the three types of spontaneous
activity recorded in the hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slices
suggested that the ictal discharges originated in the entorhinal cortex
from where they propagated successively to the dentate area and CA3 and
CA1 subfields (Fig. 2Aa,b). This type of
analysis also indicated that hippocampal interictal discharges occurred
in the CA3 subfield earlier than those simultaneously recorded in the
CA1 area (Fig. 2B). In agreement with a previous study
(Perreault and Avoli, 1992 ), this type of interictal activity was of
very small amplitude (or not detectable at all) in the dentate gyrus
compared with that recorded in the CA3 or CA1 areas. Moreover, each
dentate interictal event did not have any time delay when compared with
the corresponding field potential observed in either CA3 or CA1 area.
Therefore, the interictal events recorded in the dentate area did
represent a volume conduction phenomenon (cf. Perreault and Avoli,
1992 ). As illustrated in Figure 2C, there was no single area
of origin for the GABA-mediated field potentials; in 23% of the cases
(n = 90 events analyzed in 6 slices), these field potentials
appeared first in the entorhinal cortex (Fig. 2Ca), whereas
in 15, 23, and 18% of the cases they started in dentate, CA3, and CA1,
respectively (Fig. 2Cb-d). In the remaining cases, the
GABA-mediated field potentials appeared in more than one area at the
same time, suggesting a site of origin that was located somewhere
between the recorded areas, and then propagated toward them. A summary
of the time delays of the onset of the ictal events of entorhinal
origin and of the interictal discharges seen in the hippocampus proper
is shown in Table 2.
Effects of fiber pathway cuts on the 4AP-induced
synchronous activity
The origin and the modalities of propagation of the different
types of synchronous activity induced by 4AP was also studied in
sectioning experiments, where fiber pathways were severed, thus
isolating some areas of the slice from one or more input pathways. Cut
performed at the level of the subiculum only (a procedure that should
interrupt most of the connections between the CA1 subfield and the
entorhinal cortex) did not modify the rate of occurrence, the duration,
or the degree of synchronization of any of the spontaneous activities
recorded under control conditions (not illustrated; n = 3 slices).
Sectioning the perforant pathway (n = 5 slices) made ictal
discharges disappear in the hippocampus, but did not affect the
occurrence of interictal epileptiform activity recorded in the CA1 and
CA3 areas (Fig. 3A). This procedure induced a
15-32% decrease in the rate of occurrence of the GABA-mediated field
potential and modified the degree of synchronicity. Although some of
these events remained synchronous in all the areas of the
hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slice, 46 ± 5% of them occurred
independently in the entorhinal cortex compared with the hippocampus
proper. However, when the cut was extended to the subiculum and the two
portions of the slice were gently separated (n = 2 slices),
all GABA-mediated field potentials were generated in an asynchronous
fashion in the entorhinal cortex and in the different hippocampal areas
(Fig. 3B).
Hippocampal interictal discharges disappear in CA1 after a cut of the
Schaffer collateral (n = 4 slices), whereas ictal discharges
of entorhinal origin could still be recorded in the dentate gyrus and
CA3 subfield, not in the CA1 area (not illustrated). This type of
lesion did not influence the synchronicity of the GABA-mediated field
potentials recorded in the different sectors of the hippocampus and
entorhinal cortex (not illustrated).
Pharmacological properties of the spontaneous
synchronous activity
Bath application of the NMDA receptor antagonist CPP (n = 5 slices) abolished the ictal discharges of entorhinal origin in all
experiments. In the presence of CPP, series of interictal-like events
could be recorded in the entorhinal cortex after some of the
GABA-mediated field potentials (Fig. 4,
arrowheads in the CPP panel). This type of
recurrent interictal activity propagated to the hippocampus proper. In
agreement with previous studies (Perreault and Avoli, 1991 , 1992 ), the
interictal activity recorded in the hippocampus proper was not
influenced by CPP. Moreover, neither the rate of occurrence nor the
duration and shape of the GABA-mediated field potentials were modified
by this NMDA receptor antagonist. The effects of CPP were reversible
after wash (Fig. 4, WASH).
Non-NMDA receptor antagonist CNQX application (n = 6 slices)
made all types of epileptiform discharge disappear, whereas
GABA-mediated field potentials persisted in both entorhinal cortex and
hippocampus (Fig. 5A;CNQX). CNQX induced a
nonsignificant decrease in the amplitude of the negative component of
the GABA-mediated field potentials recorded in both entorhinal cortex
and hippocampal areas, while markedly reducing the initial positive
component of this potential whenever present (e.g., Fig. 5A,B;
CNQX). The occurrence rate of the GABA-mediated events recorded in
the entorhinal cortex during CNQX application decreased in 2 of 6 experiments, but remained unchanged in the hippocampus proper (Fig.
5B); this effect probably reflected a decrease of
synchronicity for these field potentials between the entorhinal cortex
and the hippocampus. Further application of CPP to medium containing
CNQX and 4AP did not induce additional changes (Fig. 5A;
n = 5 slices). The interictal activity recorded in the
entorhinal cortex of two slices was abolished by CNQX along with the
ictal discharges (Fig. 5C).
In line with previous experiments performed in isolated hippocampal
slices (Perreault and Avoli, 1989 , 1992 ; Barbarosie et al., 1994 ), the
synchronous GABA-mediated potentials recorded in the
hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slice during application of 4AP, CNQX,
and CPP were abolished by application of the
GABAA receptor antagonist BMI (n = 8 slices, not illustrated) or of the µ-opioid receptor agonist DAGO,
which is expected to prevent GABA release from inhibitory interneurons
(Madison and Nicoll, 1988 ; Lambert et al., 1991 ; Cohen et al., 1992 ;
Capogna et al., 1993 ) (n = 3 slices, not illustrated). These
findings, therefore, indicate that the synchronous field potentials
recorded in the different areas of the hippocampus-entorhinal cortex
during application of 4AP and ionotropic excitatory amino acid receptor
antagonists represent mainly a GABAA-type,
postsynaptic response of principal neurons to GABA released from
inhibitory interneurons.
In six experiments, we also studied the effects induced by DAGO on the
synchronous activity recorded in the combined hippocampus-entorhinal
cortex slice during application of 4AP only. Also in these experiments,
the µ-opioid receptor agonist abolished the occurrence of
GABA-mediated field potentials in all areas, an effect that was
accompanied by the disappearance of ictal discharges (Fig.
6A). These changes were associated with the
appearance of entorhinal interictal discharges (duration 0.2-1
sec) that propagated to the hippocampus proper and made interictal
activity of hippocampal origin decrease in rate (Fig. 6A). A
quantitative summary of these effects is provided in Figure
6B.
Fig. 6.
Effects induced by DAGO on the synchronous
activity recorded in the entorhinal cortex and CA3 area during
application of 4AP. Note in A that during DAGO, both
GABA-mediated field potentials and ictal discharges disappear, whereas
interictal discharges propagating to the hippocampus proper appear in
the entorhinal cortex. This effect is accompanied by a decrease in the
rate of occurrence of hippocampal interictal discharges. B,
Plot of the changes induced by DAGO on the rate of occurrence of
GABA-mediated potentials, ictal discharges, and interictal events in
five slices.
[View Larger Version of this Image (58K GIF file)]
Potassium measurements in the entorhinal cortex
The spontaneous activity induced by 4AP was also analyzed in the
entorhinal cortex with simultaneous field potential and
[K+]o recordings. As
illustrated in Figure 7A (left
panel), the GABA-mediated field potentials recorded 600-800 µm
from the pial surface were accompanied by transient increases in
[K+]o that attained peak
values of 3.5-9.3 mM (4.2 ± 0.1 mM) and had overall durations of 5-50 sec (25.3 ± 1.42 sec; n = 14 slices). These
[K+]o elevations were not
followed by undershoots. Ictal discharges recorded at the same depths
were associated with sustained increases in
[K+]o that attained peak
values of 11-17 mM (13.9 ± 0.9 mM; n = 6 slices) in coincidence with
the tonic phase, 4-7 sec after the discharge onset (Fig.
7A). These
[K+]o elevations slowly
declined over time, but additional, transient increases in
[K+]o (up to 13 mM) coincided with each clonic-type discharge
(Fig. 7B, asterisk). The overall duration of the
[K+]o increases recorded
throughout the ictal discharge was 97-250 sec (147 ± 17.5 sec;
n = 6 slices); in most cases,
[K+]o undershoots to
2.6-2.8 mM followed the termination of the
discharge (Fig. 7B).
Fig. 7.
Field potential (top trace) and
[K+]o (bottom
trace) recordings in the middle layers of the entorhinal
cortex during application of 4AP. The GABA-mediated field potentials
are associated with transient increases in
[K+]o (left
panel in A), while a sustained elevation is seen during
the tonic phase of the ictal discharge; note that the ictal discharge
is initiated by an increase in
[K+]o that is larger than
the elevations associated with the isolated GABA-mediated field
potential. Note in B that distinct increases in
[K+]o accompany clonic
discharges during return of
[K+]o toward baseline
values (asterisk) and that a pronounced undershoot follows
the termination of the ictal discharge.
[View Larger Version of this Image (14K GIF file)]
The [K+]o elevation
coinciding with the GABA-mediated field potential preceding the onset
of the ictal discharge appeared to initiate such event. Thus, as
illustrated in Figure 7A,
[K+]o increased up to 6.5 mM during the initial GABA-mediated field
potential, and ictal activity appeared shortly (0.5-1 sec) after. The
[K+]o increases
associated with the GABA-mediated potentials temporally related with
the ictal discharges were larger than those observed in isolation. For
instance, in the experiment of Figure 7, the GABA-mediated
[K+]o elevations recorded
between ictal events reached peak values of 4.4 ± 0.3 mM (n = 17 events), whereas those
preceding the ictal discharges had values of 6.0 ± 0.2 mM (n = 6 events).
Field potential and [K+]o
recordings made at different depths of the entorhinal cortex
(n = 3 slices) revealed that
[K+]o increases
associated with the ictal discharge reached their maximal values in the
deep layers of the entorhinal cortex (at ~1000-1400 µm from the
pia), which was also the site where the field potential, DC shift
showed maximal negative values (Fig. 8). By contrast,
the negative-going population spikes that overrode the negative DC
shift were of maximal amplitude at 600 µm from the pia (Fig. 8).
In keeping with the findings reported above, application of CNQX and
CPP (n = 17 slices) abolished the spontaneous epileptiform
discharges recorded in the entorhinal cortex with field potential and
K+-selective microelectrodes (Fig.
9A). Under these experimental conditions,
both GABA-mediated events and concomitant
[K+]o increases still
occurred, although at a decreased rate (from 1.8 ± 0.7/min under
control conditions to 1.4 ± 0.6/min during CNQX and CPP application;
n = 14 and 17 slices, respectively). Comparison of the
[K+]o elevations recorded
at equivalent depth of the entorhinal cortex under these two
experimental conditions did not yield any significant difference.
Therefore, CNQX and CPP only induced a significant decrease of the rate
of occurrence of the GABA-mediated potentials, but no change in the
amplitude or duration of the associated
[K+]o increases.
Fig. 9.
A, Effects induced by the excitatory
amino acid receptor antagonists CNQX and CPP on the 4AP-induced
synchronous activity recorded in the entorhinal cortex with
simultaneous field potential and
[K+]o recordings.
B, Field potential and
[K+]o recordings
performed in the entorhinal cortex at different depths from the pia (as
indicated by the numbers at top of each panel)
during application of 4AP, CNQX, and CPP. C, Plots of the
peak values and duration of the
[K+]o increases as well
as of the amplitude of the GABA-mediated field potentials recorded at
different depths in five entorhinal cortex slices during application of
4AP, CNQX, and CPP.
[View Larger Version of this Image (27K GIF file)]
Field potential and [K+]o
recordings performed at different depths of the entorhinal cortex
during application of 4AP and excitatory amino acid receptor
antagonists indicated that, in most cases, the largest
[K+]o increases
associated with the GABA-mediated events occurred in the deep layers
(1000-1400 µm) (Fig. 9B). However, these differences were
not significant when data obtained from 17 slices were pooled together.
The synchronous GABA-mediated field potentials and the associated
increases in [K+]o were
abolished by application of BMI (n = 1 slice, not
illustrated) or DAGO (n = 5 slices, not illustrated). Both
pharmacological procedures did not induce any evident change in the
baseline [K+]o.
DISCUSSION
Origin and spread of the 4AP-induced epileptiform activity
Application of 4AP to slices of the hippocampus-entorhinal cortex
induces prolonged epileptiform discharges that are seen in all regions
and resemble the electrographic seizure activity seen in animal models
of epilepsy in situ (Matsumoto and Ajmone-Marsan, 1964 ).
These ictal discharges originate in the entorhinal cortex, from which
they propagate to the different areas of the hippocampus proper
following the well known trisynaptic loop (Andersen et al., 1966a ,b,
1971). This evidence rests on both time-delay measurements of ictal
discharge onset and sectioning experiments, which show that severing
the perforant path can abolish the occurrence of the ictal discharges
in the hippocampus proper. Moreover, cutting the Schaffer collateral
makes ictal discharges disappear in the CA1 area, indicating that
excitatory inputs from the CA3 area are necessary for entraining CA1
pyramidal cells to generate the ictal epileptiform discharge.
As the ictal discharge propagates from the entorhinal cortex to the
hippocampus proper via the perforant path, such activity appears to
overcome the gating function of the dentate gyrus; this filtering
mechanism has been documented in other models of limbic discharge
(Dreier and Heinemann, 1991 ; Lothman et al., 1993 ), including those
recorded in the isolated guinea pig brain preparation (Paré et
al., 1992 ). However, in contrast to findings obtained in the isolated
guinea pig brain preparation, we could not document any reentering
activity from the CA1 area to the entorhinal cortex via the subiculum.
This finding is in line with the lack of changes in discharge pattern
seen in the entorhinal cortex after a subicular cut. Similar data have
been reported for the ictal activity induced by pilocarpine (Nagao et
al., 1996 ) and for interictal discharges induced by
GABAA receptor antagonists (Jones and Lambert,
1990a ,b) in combined slices of hippocampus-entorhinal cortex. However,
this experimental evidence should be regarded with caution when
extrapolating to the mechanisms of limbic seizure in vivo,
because connections from the hippocampus to the entorhinal cortex are
functional in temporal lobe epilepsy patients (Rutecki et al.,
1989 ).
Profile analysis of the field potentials recorded in the entorhinal
cortex during the ictal discharge induced by 4AP indicates that the
largest negative shifts and
[K+]o increases occur in
the deep layers (i.e., ~1000-1600 µm from the pia), although
population spikes have maximal negative amplitudes at depths of
~600-800 µm. These
[K+]o elevations had
values similar to those reported in the entorhinal cortex during
Mg2+-free-induced ictal discharges (Dreier and
Heinemann, 1991 ); in this study as well, the largest negative shifts
and [K+]o increases were
seen in the entorhinal deep layers.
The role of the entorhinal cortex in generating robust epileptiform
activity that resembles ictal discharges is in keeping with experiments
performed in combined hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slices that were
bathed in Mg2+-free medium (Walther et al., 1986 ;
Wilson et al., 1988 ; Jones and Lambert, 1990a ,b; Dreier and Heinemann,
1991 ), GABAA receptor antagonists (Jones and
Lambert, 1990a ,b), pilocarpine (Nagao et al., 1996 ), or elevated
[K+] (Bear and Lothman, 1993 ). Moreover, the
entorhinal cortex plays a prominent role in the generation of limbic
seizures induced in vivo by electrical stimulation of the
hippocampus (Stringer and Lothman, 1992 ). A dysfunction of the
entorhinal cortex has been documented in temporal lobe epilepsy
patients (Rutecki et al., 1989 ; Deutsch et al., 1991 ; Spencer and
Spencer, 1994 ) in whom surgical removal of the entorhinal cortex is
essential for achieving seizure control (Goldring et al., 1992 ).
Interictal epileptiform discharges were recorded in the
hippocampus proper during application of 4AP. In agreement with
previous studies performed in the isolated hippocampal slice
preparation (Perreault and Avoli, 1991 , 1992 ), these interictal
epileptiform discharges originate in the CA3 area and propagate to CA1
via the Schaffer collaterals. This type of interictal activity does not
propagate to the entorhinal cortex, further indicating that synchronous
discharges of hippocampal origin do not excite the entorhinal cortex
neurons in our slice preparation. Pilocarpine induces an analogous type
of interictal discharge in the CA3 and CA1 areas, not in the entorhinal
cortex (Nagao et al., 1996 ).
Pharmacology of the 4AP-induced epileptiform activity
Activation of ionotropic non-NMDA receptors plays a primary role
in the generation of all types of epileptiform discharge induced by 4AP
in the hippocampal-entorhinal cortex slice, as indicated by the
experiments performed with CNQX. The results observed in the
hippocampus proper are identical to those reported for the interictal
epileptiform activity induced by 4AP or tetraethylammonium in isolated
hippocampal slices (Perreault and Avoli, 1991 , 1992 ; Fueta and Avoli,
1993 ), whereas those obtained in the entorhinal cortex are analogous to
the effects of non-NMDA receptor antagonists on the epileptiform
discharges induced by GABAA receptor antagonists
(Jones and Lambert, 1990a ,b) or pilocarpine (Nagao et al., 1996 ).
Our results also reveal that activation of NMDA receptors is
instrumental for the occurrence of the ictal discharges of entorhinal
origin. The involvement of NMDA-mediated mechanisms in the initiation
and propagation of seizure activity has been reported in many
experimental models of epileptiform discharge (Dingledine et al., 1986 ;
Hwa and Avoli, 1991 ). However, with the obvious exception of the
epileptiform discharges induced by Mg2+-free
medium (Mody et al., 1987 ; Tancredi et al., 1990 ; Avoli et al., 1991 ),
these previous studies have shown that blockade of the NMDA receptor
only decreases the duration of the epileptiform discharge. Hence, the
present findings, along with those obtained in the pilocarpine model
(Nagao et al., 1996 ), indicate that in the entorhinal cortex NMDA
receptor may play a unique role in seizure generation. This conclusion
is in line with the demonstration of prolonged NMDA-mediated
depolarizations in entorhinal neurons (Jones and Heinemann, 1988 ;
Jones, 1994 ). Our results also confirm that the interictal activity
recorded in the hippocampus proper during application of 4AP is not
influenced by NMDA-receptor antagonists (cf. Perreault and Avoli,
1991 ).
GABA-mediated synchronous potentials and the initiation of
ictal discharges
4AP also induces slow potentials that occur simultaneously in all
hippocampal areas and in the entorhinal cortex, which represent
GABA-mediated, synchronous events (cf. Perreault and Avoli, 1989 , 1992 ;
Barbarosie et al., 1994 ). Time-delay analysis indicates that there is
no single area of origin for these GABA-mediated potentials, because
they can appear first in any of the regions simultaneously recorded in
the hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slice or in more than one area at
the same time. Therefore, our findings extend to those reported by
Perreault and Avoli (1992) in the isolated hippocampal slice and
indicate that the pacemaker of the 4AP-induced, synchronous
GABA-mediated potential is not confined to a single region of the
limbic system. Moreover, the GABA-mediated potentials do not propagate
to the other regions of the hippocampus or of the entorhinal cortex in
a constant and predictable pattern, as is the case for the different
types of epileptiform discharge induced by 4AP. Such a conclusion also
rests on the findings obtained by sectioning different pathways of the
hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slice.
GABA-mediated potentials still occur during application of CNQX
(as well as CPP), although at a reduced rate in the entorhinal cortex.
Because this decrease in rate of occurrence was not seen in the
hippocampus, we are inclined to conclude that it reflects the failure
of some GABA-mediated synchronous potentials originating in the
hippocampus to propagate to relatively distant sites, such as the
entorhinal cortex. Therefore, similar to that reported in the isolated
hippocampal slice (Perreault and Avoli, 1992 ) and in the human
neocortex (Avoli et al., 1994 ), the spread of the GABA-mediated field
potentials within the combined hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slice
does not depend solely on a ``classic'' mechanism of pathway
excitatory transmission.
It has been proposed (Perreault and Avoli, 1992 ) that the GABA-mediated
event is initiated by the synchronous firing of inhibitory interneurons
located in any region of the hippocampus (and in the present
experiments of the entorhinal cortex) from where it propagates after
the recruitment of other interneurons located nearby, and in other
regions via the spatial dispersion of
[K+]o, which increases
after the initial process of interneuron-firing GABA release and the
subsequent postsynaptic activation of GABAA
receptors that may be located on neurons and glial cells. According to
this hypothesis, the
[K+]o elevation
depolarizes and makes neighboring interneurons fire, thus producing a
positive feedback mechanism through which the GABA-mediated phenomenon
can spread. This K+ accumulation mechanism is
supported by our pharmacological data as well as by the occurrence of a
transient [K+]o elevation
in coincidence with the GABA-mediated event. Increases in
[K+]o have been recorded
during synchronous GABA-mediated potentials induced by 4AP in adult or
juvenile rat hippocampus (Louvel et al., 1994 ; Köhling et al.,
1996 ; Morris et al., 1996 ) and entorhinal cortex (Lücke et al.,
1995 ).
Several mechanisms may contribute to the increase in
[K+]o caused by the
activation of GABAA receptors that are located
postsynaptically on neuronal and glial elements. These processes
include an outward counter/cotransport of K+ with
Cl /HCO 3 anion shift (Kaila et
al., 1992 ; Kaila, 1994 ), voltage-dependent K+
currents (Rudy, 1988 ), and Na+-dependent GABA
uptake (Kaila et al., 1992 ). A GABAA-mediated
depolarization attributable to an inward Cl
current has been recorded in glial cells (MacVicar et al., 1989 ;
Steinhäuser et al., 1994 ). It has been shown that application
of GABA to hippocampal slices induces a GABA receptor-mediated
[K+]o augmentation
(Barolet and Morris, 1991 ).
The GABA-mediated synchronous potential plays a facilitory role in the
initiation of the 4AP-induced ictal activity of entorhinal origin.
Moreover, this mechanism may rely on the increase in
[K+]o that is caused by
GABAA receptor activation. These conclusions rest
on two main pieces of evidence. First, the pattern of ictal discharge
initiates during the
[K+]o elevation
associated with the GABA-mediated potential, and whenever ictal
activity appears, it is preceded by GABA-dependent
[K+]o increases that are
of larger amplitude than those seen to occur in isolation between ictal
events. Second, application of the µ-opioid agonist DAGO to medium
containing 4AP abolishes both GABA-mediated potentials and concomitant
[K+]o increases, along
with the subsequent ictal discharges; this pharmacological procedure
does not abolish interictal epileptiform activity.
These results, therefore, indicate that the GABA-mediated potential may
be instrumental in initiating ictal discharges and suggest that in this
model, at least, [K+]o
increases in the adult rat entorhinal cortex represent a causal factor
for the occurrence of ictal epileptiform activity. Several studies have
demonstrated that [K+]o
increases during seizure activity (Heinemann et al., 1977 ; Benninger et
al., 1980 ; Heinemann and Dietzel, 1984 ; Somjen and Giacchino, 1985 ). It
was unclear, however, whether these
[K+]o elevations were the
result of seizure activity or its causal factor. A mechanism similar to
that proposed here for the initiation of ictal discharge in the
entorhinal cortex may also be operant in the CA3 area of isolated
hippocampal slices obtained from young rats during application of
a similar concentration of 4AP (Avoli et al., 1993 ).
FOOTNOTES
Received Dec. 20, 1995; revised March 14, 1996; accepted March 29, 1996.
This study was supported by the Medical Research Council of Canada
(Grant MT-8109 to M.A.) and travel grants from the Wellcome GmBH to
A.L. and R.K. M.A. was an FRSQ Chercheur-Boursier and M.B. a Savoy
Foundation Fellow. We thank Mr. V. Epp for clerical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Massimo Avoli, 3801 University, Room 794, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A
2B4.
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