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Volume 16, Number 16,
Issue of August 15, 1996
pp. 5014-5025
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Modification of NMDA Receptor Channels and Synaptic Transmission
by Targeted Disruption of the NR2C Gene
Alexander K. Ebralidze1,
David J. Rossi2,
Susumu Tonegawa1, and
N. Traverse Slater2
1 Center for Learning and Memory, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139-4307, and
2 Department of Physiology, Northwestern University Medical
School, Chicago, Illinois 60611-3008
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
A novel strain of mutant mouse has been generated with a deletion
of the gene encoding the NR2C subunit of the NMDA receptor, which is
primarily expressed in cerebellar granule cells. Patch-clamp recordings
from granule cells in thin cerebellar slices were used to assess the
consequences of the gene deletion. In granule cells of wild-type
animals, a wide range of single-channel conductances were observed
(19-60 pS). The disruption of the NR2C gene results in the
disappearance of low-conductance NMDA receptor channels (<37 pS)
normally expressed in granule cells during developmental maturation.
The NMDA receptor-mediated synaptic current is markedly potentiated in
amplitude, but abbreviated in duration (with no net difference in total
charge), and the non-NMDA component of the synaptic current was
reduced. We conclude that the NR2C subunit contributes to functional
heteromeric NMDA receptor-subunit assemblies at the mossy fiber synapse
and extrasynaptic sites during maturation, and the conductance level
exhibited by a given receptor macromolecule may reflect the
stochiometry of subunit composition.
Key words:
cerebellum;
granule cells;
NMDA receptors;
synaptic transmission;
patch-clamp;
gene knockout
INTRODUCTION
The NMDA subtype of glutamate receptor plays an
important role in a number of neuronal functions including synaptic
transmission, synaptic plasticity, and the migration and use-dependent
synapse stabilization of neurons during development (Constantine-Paton
et al., 1990 ; Bliss and Collingridge, 1993 ; Bear and Malenka, 1994 ;
Garthwaite, 1994 ; Slater and Rossi, 1996 ). Five subunits of NMDA
receptor have been cloned (rat: NR1, NR2A-D; mouse: 1, 1-4),
which, based on sequence homology, pharmacology, and biophysical
properties, make up the NMDA receptor subfamily (Kutsuwada et al.,
1992 ; Meguro et al., 1992 ; Monyer et al., 1992 , 1994 ). Functional NMDA
receptor channels in situ appear to be formed by the
heteromeric expression of NR1 with one or more NR2 subunits. Each
NR1-NR2 subunit combination will impart unique properties to the
receptor-channel complex, in terms of the gating kinetics, unitary
conductance, binding affinity, and kinetics of desensitization (Meguro
et al., 1992 ; Stern et al., 1992 ; Monyer et al., 1994 ). These
properties of receptor channels will be reflected in the ensemble
behavior of the receptors at synaptic and extrasynaptic locations.
Thus, the molecular composition of NMDA receptors in a given cell will
have profound consequences for the physiological behavior of the
neuron.
In the cerebellum, striking changes in the expression of NR2 subtype
mRNAs accompany the developmental migration and postmigratory
maturation of granule cells. During migration and immediately after
arrival in the internal granular layer, only the NR2B subunit is
expressed, and this expression then declines to undetectable levels in
the adult (Watanabe et al., 1992 , 1994b ; Monyer et al., 1994 ).
Expression of the NR2A subunit appears during the formation of synaptic
contacts and finally, a heavy expression of NR2C subunits appears
during synaptic pruning (Monyer et al., 1994 ; Watanabe et al., 1994a ).
These changes in subunit expression are matched by changes in the
properties of NMDA receptor channels recorded in outside-out patches.
During the period before the expression of NR2C, only channels of
relatively large unitary conductance (40-50 pS) are seen (Rossi and
Slater, 1993 ; Farrant et al., 1994 ), whereas after this period,
smaller-conductance channels also are observed (Farrant et al., 1994 ).
Because recombinant expression studies of oocytes transfected with
NR1-NR2A or NR1-NR2B cDNAs yield functional NMDA receptor channels of
large conductance, whereas oocytes expressing NR1-NR2C subunits
display channels of smaller conductance (Stern et al., 1992 ), it has
been suggested that the low-conductance channels recorded late in
cerebellar development represent the expression of NMDA receptor
channels made up of an NR1-NR2C subunit composition (Farrant et al.,
1994 ). The expression of NR2C also coincides with a reduction of the
proportional contribution of NMDA receptors to the synaptic current at
the mossy fiber-granule cell synapse (D'Angelo et al., 1993 ). In the
present study, we have used gene-targeting methods to disrupt
expression of the NR2C gene, which normally is most heavily expressed
in cerebellar granule cells, and examined the properties of individual
NMDA receptor channels and macroscopic synaptic currents in
situ.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Construction of the targeting vector. A mouse 129/SV
genomic library was screened with the mouse DNA fragments amplified by
the polymerase chain reaction. A phage clone was isolated containing
the 15 kb DNA fragment that included all four putative transmembrane
segments (M1-M4, amino acids 434-815) (Kutsuwada et al., 1992 ), as
demonstrated by partial sequencing, restriction enzyme mapping, and
Southern hybridization. To construct the targeting vector, segment M2
was substituted with the 1.8 pgk-neo gene cassette derived from PMC1NEO
(Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). The resulting construct was amplified,
purified, and linearized before introduction into embryonic stem (ES)
cells.
Targeting experiments. A D3 mouse ES cell line was cultured
on a monolayer of mitotically inactivated LIF-producing STO feeder
layers as described (McMahon and Bradley, 1990 ). Cells were
trypsinized, resuspended at a concentration of
107 cells/ml in PBS, and electroporated with a
Bio-Rad Gene Pulcer (800 V, 3 mF with a 0.4 cm electrode distance)
using 50 µg of DNA. Cells were immediately plated after transfection,
allowed to recover for 24 hr, and grown in the presence of G418 (200 µg/ml) for 8 d. Chimeras were generated as described (Bradley,
1987 ). C57BL/6J blastocysts were isolated at day 3.5 and injected with
15-20 ES cells. Mice heterozygous for the mutation (NR2C +/ ) were
obtained by crossing the chimeras to C57BL/6J mice. The heterozygotes
were intercrossed further to obtain the mutation homozygotes. The mice
then were genotyped by Southern blot analysis of tail DNA.
Preparation of brain slices. Patch-clamp recordings from
visually identified granule cells in thin cerebellar slices obtained
from C57BL/6J mice or Sprague-Dawley rats were performed as described
previously (Edwards et al., 1989 ; Silver et al., 1992 ; Rossi and
Slater, 1993 ; Rossi et al., 1995 ). Animals of either sex, age 14-18
postnatal (P) d were anesthetized using Isoflurane by inhalation, and
killed by decapitation using a small animal guillotine while under
general anesthesia. The brain was removed rapidly by dissection and
placed in an ice-cold (0-5°C) extracellular solution of the
following composition (in mM): NaCl 124, KCl 3, CaCl2 2.4, MgSO4 1.3, NaH2PO4 1.25, NaHCO3 26, and D-glucose 10 (gassed with 95%
O2/5%CO2), pH 7.4. Thin
(150 µm thick) parasagittal slices of cerebellar vermis were cut and
maintained at room temperature after an initial hour of incubation
until needed for recording. For recording, slices were placed in a
submersion chamber on the stage of an upright microscope (Leitz
Laborlux) and viewed with a Zeiss 40× (0.75 numerical aperture) water
immersion objective with Hoffman Contrast Optics. The slices were
perfused continuously throughout the experiment with external medium at
room temperature (20-22°C).
Patch-clamp recording and synaptic stimulation. Patch
recording pipettes were constructed from thick-walled borosilicate
glass capillaries (direct current resistance 4-12 M ) and were
filled with an internal solution containing (in
mM): K gluconate 145, MgCl2
2, K2ATP 5, EGTA 0.1, and HEPES 5, pH = 7.2, osmolarity adjusted to 290 mOsm). Patch pipettes were coated with
SYLGARD resin (Dow Corning, Midland, MI), mounted in the headstage
input of a stage-mounted micromanipulator, and positioned over the soma
of the neuron by visual control. To construct
I-V curves of synaptically activated
conductances, K gluconate was replaced by cesium methanesulphonate (145 mM) and QX-314 (10 mM) to
block voltage-gated K+ and
Na+ currents, respectively. Transmembrane voltage
and current were recorded using an Axopatch 1D amplifier (filtered at
10 kHz; 3 dB), stored on video tape (VR-10C, Instrutec), and played
back off-line for analysis using pClamp (v.6.0.1) software (Axon
Instruments, Foster City, CA) running on a PC-compatible 486 microcomputer (Dell 450/l). In whole-cell recordings, the access
resistance (Ra) was estimated from
measurements of membrane capacitance (Cm)
and the time constant of the capacity current in response to voltage
steps ( ) (Marty and Neher, 1983 ), where
Ra = /Cm,
and was monitored continuously throughout the experiment. The very
small size and consequent electrotonic compactness of granule cells
(Mugnaini et al., 1974 ; Silver et al., 1992 ; D'Angelo et al., 1993 ;
Gabbiani et al., 1994 ) allow one to directly visualize single-channel
events in the whole cell, providing a unique opportunity to correlate
the molecular composition of NMDA receptor channels with the behavior
of an intact nerve cell. All single-channel records were filtered at 2 kHz and analyzed manually with a threshold detection set at ~50% of
the open-channel amplitude (determined by a Gaussian fit). In the
majority of experiments, single-channel conductance levels were
calculated from the slope of the current amplitudes over a range of
membrane potentials with respect to the measured reversal potential
(see Figs. 2D, 5D, 7C) after
subtraction of liquid junction potentials. After analysis, some records
were filtered at 1 kHz for clarity of display.
Fig. 2.
Whole-cell recording of spontaneous NMDA receptor
channels in mature wild-type granule cells. A,
Representative records of spontaneous NMDA receptor-mediated currents
in a mature wild-type mouse granule cell. Two channel opening events
with distinct unitary conductance and gating kinetics are clearly
resolvable. B, Dwell-time distribution of open times with
the fit of a double exponential (solid line) superimposed.
C, Amplitude-frequency histogram with the fit of a double
Gaussian distribution superimposed. Both conductances have extrapolated
reversal potentials near 0 mV (D) and have corresponding
conductances of 42 and 31 pS. All data were recorded in the same
granule cell voltage-clamped at 60 mV in the absence of extracellular
Mg2+.
[View Larger Version of this Image (32K GIF file)]
Fig. 5.
Whole-cell recordings of spontaneous NMDA receptor
channel activity in mature NR2C / granule cells are made up
exclusively of large conductance events. A, A representative
recording from a P16 / mouse granule cell at 60 mV. The open time
(B, dwell time) and amplitude-frequency
(C) distributions were fit by single-component functions
(m = 43 pS; = 2.9 msec). D, The
single-channel currents displayed linear I-V
relations and reversed near 0 mV.
[View Larger Version of this Image (26K GIF file)]
Fig. 7.
Synaptically activated single NMDA receptor
channels of NR2C / granule cells are made up exclusively of
high-conductance events. A, In the presence of nonsaturating
concentrations of the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist
D-AP5, the pharmacologically isolated NMDA
receptor-mediated mossy fiber-evoked EPSC (i) (macroscopic
EPSC recorded before the application of D-AP5) is
made up of a flurry of directly resolvable single-channel openings
(ii-iv). These channels closely resemble the
spontaneously active NMDA receptor channels (B,
C, open circles), as well as the channels activated by
NMDA in an excised patch from the same cell (B,
C, filled circles) and do not appear to express any
small-conductance openings. The complete lack of small-conductance
openings at any cellular locus argues against a nonspecific effect of
localization. The similarity of synaptic and somatic channels lends
credence to inferences about synaptic currents based on somatic
receptors in preparations in which synaptic receptors are not as
accessible.
[View Larger Version of this Image (33K GIF file)]
Concentric bipolar tungsten stimulating electrodes (Rhodes Medical
Instruments, Woodland Hills, CA) were placed in the white matter to
activate mossy fiber inputs to granule cells. Care was taken to place
the stimulating electrode at locations within the white matter remote
from the recording pipette to avoid contaminating the rising phase of
the fast synaptic response by the stimulus artifact. In all
experiments, stimuli of 100 µsec duration were used and were
conducted in the presence of bicuculline (10 µM) to block GABAA
receptor-mediated inhibitory synaptic currents from neighboring Golgi
cells. Measurements of the NMDA receptor-mediated EPSCs in granule
cells were made in the presence of both CNQX (10 µM) and glycine (10 µM).
RESULTS
Production of the NR2C knockout mutant
To introduce an NR2C null mutation by homologous recombination in
mouse ES cells, a replacement vector was generated in which the M2
segment, which has been proposed to be a hairpin pore region (Wo and
Oswald, 1995 ; Wood et al., 1995 ), was replaced by a neomycin resistance
cassette (pgk-neo) (Fig. 1A). The
pgk-neo cassette was used as a positive selection marker. The targeting
vector contained 6.7 kb of homologous sequences from the NR2C gene
locus. A D3 mouse ES cell line was transfected with the linearized
targeting vector, and the cells were selected for resistance to G418
for 8 d. Of the 288 ES clones analyzed, 5 were found to have the
targeted mutation. All five of the recombinant ES clones were injected
into C57BL/6J blastocysts, and two of these clones yielded male and
female chimeric mice that transmitted the targeted allele through the
germline (Fig. 1B). Intercross between the heterozygotes
gave rise to homozygotes and wild types at the expected frequency of
1:2:1 (Mendelian inheritance). To confirm that the mutation introduced
into the NR2C gene was in fact a null mutation, littermates from
heterozygous intercrosses were subjected to Northern blot analysis,
which detected no NR2C mRNA in the brain of NR2C / mice (Fig.
1C). Both male and female mutant mice displayed normal
fertility and developed normally without any obvious disturbances of
health, motor activity, or behavioral problems.
Fig. 1.
Targeted disruption of the NR2C gene.
A, Schematic representations of the targeting vector,
wild-type allele, mutant allele, and the strategy for NR2C knockout.
Four putative segments (M1-M4) are shown as open boxes. The
location of the 5 - and 3 -external probes is shown. Both probes
hybridize to a 15 kb EcoRI fragment from the wild-type
allele and to 4.5 and 10.5 kb EcoRI fragments from the
mutated allele, respectively. B, Southern blot analysis of
progeny from intercross of heterozygotes (NMDA 2C +/ ). 5 -External
probe was used in this experiment. A similar result was obtained using
the 3 -external probe (data not shown). C, Northern blot
analysis of wild-type and mutated mice. Poly(A+)
RNA was isolated from total brain tissue from 4-d-old animals. RNA was
separated in a formaldehyde gel and transferred to a nylon membrane
(Hybond-N+, Amersham). Membrane was hybridized with a fragment of NR2C
cDNA containing all four transmembrane segments. The same filter was
rehybridized with a -actin probe.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
Single NMDA receptor-gated channels in mouse granule cells
Single NMDA receptor-activated channels in granule cells were
studied in wild-type and homozygous mutant mice using both whole-cell
recording of tonic channel activity, and in excised outside-out patches
from the cell soma. The tonic activation of NMDA receptor channels
could be readily visualized in whole-cell recordings of mouse granule
cells. This tonic NMDA receptor-channel activity has been described
previously in rat granule cells (Rossi and Slater, 1993 ; Slater and
Rossi, 1996 ), and is believed to originate from a paracrine release of
glutamate within developing cerebellum (Komuro and Rakic, 1993 ).
Because of the small size and electrical compactness of granule cells,
the opening of single NMDA receptor channels in response to the binding
of glutamate at all locations on the neuron can be observed. In older
(>P14) wild-type mice, spontaneous NMDA receptor-mediated
single-channel events could be recorded, which displayed a wide range
of conductance levels that correspond to the high- and low-conductance
channels observed previously in excised patches from the soma of mature
wild-type rat granule cells (Farrant et al., 1994 ). In many neurons,
the tonic activation of both high- and low-conductance levels could be
visualized simultaneously (Fig. 2), and Gaussian fits of
the current amplitude distributions yielded 2-4 peaks. Dwell-time
histograms also revealed two characteristic open times (Fig.
2B). These observations are consistent with the
conclusion that mature granule cells express two distinct populations
of NMDA receptor channels: a large-amplitude and longer-open time
population, and a population characterized by a smaller-conductance
level and shorter open time, corresponding to the expression of
NR1-NR2A and NR1-NR2C subunit combinations, respectively (Stern et
al., 1992 ; Farrant et al., 1994 ). It should be noted that the measured
conductance levels observed in this study are ~10 pS lower than those
reported in other studies in which a lower extracellular calcium
concentration ( 1 mM) was used (Howe et al.,
1991 ; Gibb and Colquhoun, 1992 ; Silver et al., 1992 ; Farrant et al.,
1994 ), but are similar to the large-conductance level in the presence
of 2.5 mM extracellular calcium in rat neurons
(Gibb and Colquhoun, 1992 ; Rossi and Slater, 1993 ; Slater and Rossi,
1996 ).
Excised outside-out patches from the soma of mature +/+ mouse granule
cells exposed to bath-applied NMDA (10-50 µM
with 10 µM glycine) also displayed a wide range
of conductance levels (Fig. 3). Some patches displayed
only large (Fig. 3ii)- or small (iii)-conductance
openings, whereas others displayed both types of channel in varying
proportions (Fig. 3i,iv). When the peaks
of Gaussian fits of individual recordings (both whole cell and excised
patch) of mature +/+ mice were plotted with respect to their frequency
of occurrence (Fig. 4A, derived from 33 granule cells in 23 different animals), it can be seen that there is a
wide spectrum of conductance levels across the population of wild-type
cells, rather than discrete peaks at high- and low-conductance levels.
This would suggest that individual channels in vivo are made
up of different combinations of all three subunits, rather than two
distinct populations of channels made up of only two subunit types
(e.g., NR1-NR2A or NR1-NR2C).
Fig. 3.
NMDA receptor channels in excised outside-out
patches from mature wild-type granule cells. Left
traces illustrate representative examples of the conductance
levels displayed by NMDA-activated channels in excised patches from
four wild-type granule cells. Right graphs illustrate
the amplitude-frequency histogram of a larger data set obtained from
the patch shown to the left. Conductance levels in
picosiemens for each patch reflect the estimated conductance after
subtraction of junction potentials and estimation of the reversal
potential (as in Fig. 2D).
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
Fig. 4.
The distribution of conductance states expressed
by / mice is very similar to that observed in young rats.
A, The proportional distribution of measured conductance
levels in mature (>P14) wild-type mouse granule cells. B,
The proportional distribution of measured conductance levels in mature
(>P14) homozygous mutant ( / ) mouse granule cells
(filled columns) and those measured in young (<P12)
rat granule cells. All three groups show similar distributions of
conductances of >39 pS. There is a marked difference in the
distribution of conductances of <39 pS. The / mice appear to more
closely resemble the young wild types and completely lack the
low-conductance NMDA receptor channel.
[View Larger Version of this Image (26K GIF file)]
Recordings from mature (>P14) granule cells of homozygous mutant mice
revealed a different pattern (Fig. 4B) (derived from
whole-cell and excised patches of 13 / granule cells from eight
mice). In whole-cell recordings (Fig. 5), only
large-amplitude opening events were observed (37-53 pS), and
dwell-time histograms were best fit with a single exponential of a
longer duration (Fig. 5B), which corresponded to the longer
exponential observed in wild-type cells (Fig. 2B). This
absence of small-amplitude, shorter-duration events also was observed
in wild-type rat granule cells (Fig. 4B) studied at an age
range (<P12) in which the expression of the NR2C subunit is known to
be absent in the rat (Monyer et al., 1994 ) and mouse (Watanabe et al.,
1992 , 1994a ,b). Excised patches from / mouse granule cells also
displayed only the large-amplitude, long-duration opening events (Fig.
6).
Fig. 6.
NMDA receptor channels in excised outside-out
patches from mature NR2C / granule cells lack low-conductance
events. A, Single-channel currents activated by NMDA (20 µM) applied to a patch excised from a P15 NR2C
/ granule cell. Like the spontaneous channel openings observed in
whole-cell recordings (Fig. 5), the NMDA-activated single-channel
currents are made up exclusively of channels of large conductance
(B) and long mean open time (C).
[View Larger Version of this Image (24K GIF file)]
Mossy fiber-evoked macroscopic synaptic currents
The electrical compactness of granule cells also allows one to
examine single synaptically activated NMDA receptor channels under
conditions in which relatively few channels are simultaneously open.
This is the case for miniature EPSCs in granule cells (Silver et al.,
1992 ) or for evoked EPSCs in the presence of competitive antagonists.
In three granule cells of / mice, flurries of channel opening
events were observed after electrical stimulation of mossy fibers in
the presence of D-AP5 (10-22
µM), CNQX (10 µM), and
bicuculline (10 µM) (Fig.
7Aii-iv). In these cells, as in
other recordings of / mice (Figs. 5, 6), only large-amplitude,
long-duration events were observed (Fig. 7B,C).
In the cell illustrated in Figure 7, the conductance of the
synaptically activated channels was identical to that of spontaneous
channel events (open circles in Fig.
7B,C) and in an outside-out excised patch from
the soma of the same cell (filled circles in Fig.
7B,C).
Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings of the mossy fiber-evoked macroscopic
synaptic currents in mouse cerebellar granule cells of both wild-type
(+/+) and homozygous mutant ( / ) animals revealed dual-component
EPSCs similar in most respects to those observed previously in rat
cerebellar granule cells (Fig.
8A,B) (Silver et
al., 1992 ; D'Angelo et al., 1993 , 1994 ; Rossi et al., 1995 ). The fast
component of the EPSC in both cell types was blocked by the AMPA/KA
receptor antagonist CNQX (10 µM) (Figs.
8A,B,
9C) and exhibited fast activation (10-90%
rise time = 0.52 msec) and deactivation kinetics (Fig.
9B). This fast component was followed by a more slowly
activating NMDA receptor-mediated component, which could be blocked by
extracellular Mg2+ (1 mM)
and the NMDA receptor antagonists D-AP5 (50 µM) (Fig. 9B) and 7-chlorokynurenate
(200 µM) (data not shown). When
pharmacologically isolated in a medium containing CNQX (10 µM) and glycine (10 µM), the time course of the NMDA
receptor-mediated EPSC of wild-type mouse granule cells (Fig.
8A, Table 1A) displayed a slow rise
time (10-90% = 5.5 msec) and a biexponential decay
( f = 42.3 msec; s = 150.6 msec), as observed previously in rat granule cells (D'Angelo et
al., 1993 , 1994 ).
Fig. 8.
Mossy fiber-evoked macroscopic EPSCs in wild-type
(+/+) and NR2C / granule cells. A, B, The
composite mossy fiber-evoked EPSCs of granule cells in wild-type (+/+)
and NR2C-deficient ( / ) mice recorded under control conditions
(Control) and in the presence of CNQX (10 µM) and glycine (10 µM)
to pharmacologically isolate the NMDA receptor-mediated component.
C, The NMDA receptor-mediated components from the cells
illustrated in A and B are superimposed, with the
relative amplitudes vertically scaled to the mean observed in all cells
(Table 1A) to illustrate the similarity of the net charge in the two
cell types. D, The NMDA receptor-mediated currents from the
cells illustrated in A and B are superimposed
with their amplitudes scaled to the same peak, to illustrate the faster
rate of decay of the synaptic current in granule cells from NR2C /
mice.
[View Larger Version of this Image (27K GIF file)]
Fig. 9.
Properties of the mossy fiber-evoked EPSC in
homozygous mutant mouse granule cells. A, The mossy
fiber-evoked composite EPSC under control conditions [ 60 mV, 0 Mg2+, bicuculline (10 mM)]. The AMPA receptor- and NMDA
receptor-mediated components of the composite EPSC can be resolved
independently by the application of D-AP5 (50 µM) to illustrate the fast, AMPA
receptor-mediated component (B), or the application of CNQX
(10 µM) and glycine (10 µM) after recovery from
D-AP5 to illustrate the NMDA receptor-mediated
component (C). Insets in B and
C are faster time-base records with the control trace
overlaid. All traces are from the same NR2C / mouse granule cell
(P17). In D, the pharmacologically isolated NMDA
receptor-mediated EPSC is displayed at a slightly higher gain and
slower time base to display the biexponential decay of the EPSC; fit is
overlaid as a solid line.
[View Larger Version of this Image (14K GIF file)]
Dual-component EPSCs also were readily observed in granule cells of
knockout ( / ) mice (Figs. 8B, 9). The slow NMDA
receptor-mediated synaptic currents were pharmacologically isolated in
these cells (Figs. 8B, 9), and their amplitude and time
course compared with data obtained from cells in wild-type littermates
(Fig. 8A). The rise times of both the AMPA/KA and
NMDA receptor-mediated components were similar to those of wild-type
animals (Table 1), but some significant differences in the synaptic
currents also were observed (Fig. 8C,D). The most
striking differences were the absolute amplitudes of the fast and slow
components. In granule cells of homozygous mutant ( / ) mice, the
mean amplitude of the NMDA receptor-mediated EPSC (989 ± 187 pS,
n = 17) was more than twice the amplitude of the NMDA
component observed in wild-type animals (386 ± 40 pS,
n = 31). These differences were conserved
(p < 0.0002) when other factors, such as small
differences in the whole-cell capacitance (Table 2),
were accounted for (Amplitude in Table 1A). This would suggest that
there is an excess of NR2 subunits, and that they compete for a more
limited number of NR1 subunits to form functional channels in the
native membrane. Thus, deleting the more abundant NR2C subunits allows
more NR2A subunits to form functional channels with a more limited
number of available NR1 subunits, resulting in a larger ensemble
current because of the larger unitary conductance of NR1-NR2A
subunit-containing channels. A reciprocal change was observed in the
amplitude of the fast, AMPA/KA receptor-mediated component in
homozygous mutant mice, being smaller (641 ± 219 pS,
n = 34) than in wild-type mice of the same age group
(1174 ± 151 pS, n = 32; p < 0.034). When corrected for the membrane surface area, the current
density of the peak of the fast component was significantly smaller in
homozygous mutant mice (205 ± 56 pS/pF; p < 0.05) than in wild-type mice (434 ± 65 pS/pF). The time course of
the NMDA receptor-mediated synaptic current in homozygous mutant mice
also displayed a biexponential decay (Fig. 9D), as in
wild-type animals, but the time constant of the fast component of decay
was reduced significantly (23.0 ± 2.9 msec, n = 50; p < 0.001) compared with wild-type littermates
(42.3 ± 6.0 msec, n = 49). A shift of the
relative amplitudes of these two components of decay also was observed
(F/S in Table 1), with a significant increase in the amplitude of the
fast component of decay in / animals (Table 1).
These differences in amplitude and time course of the NMDA
receptor-mediated component result in a synaptic current of smaller
peak amplitude, but longer duration in +/+ animals (Fig.
8C). Consequently, the total charge passed was nearly
identical in each cell type (Qtotal in
Table 1). The differences in the NMDA currents, when combined with the
antipodal changes in the AMPA currents, result in composite EPSCs of
markedly different time course, the most obvious consequence being a
more prominent late, NMDA receptor-mediated component of the EPSC of
/ granule cells (Fig. 8B).
The fact that the two components of the EPSC vary in opposite
directions argues strongly against the observed differences being
attributable to differential distortion by passive properties of the
cell. Furthermore, the passive properties capable of distorting the
kinetics of the synaptic current (access resistance, input resistance,
whole-cell capacitance, and series resistance error) did not differ
significantly between the two cell types (Table 2). Finally, none of
the measured parameters of the synaptic current (amplitude and
exponential decay values) displayed any correlation with passive
properties (access resistance, input resistance, capacitance, and
series resistance error) of the recordings.
DISCUSSION
Expression of the NR2C gene results in NMDA receptor
channels with distinct biophysical properties
The results of these experiments demonstrate directly that the
appearance of NMDA receptor channels of low unitary conductance and
short mean open time in the third postnatal week is dependent on the
developmental expression of the NR2C subunit gene product. This had
been proposed previously (Farrant et al., 1994 ) based on the
observation that low-conductance channels are first observed at the
same developmental period when mRNAs for the NR2C subunit are detected
by in situ hybridization methods (Watanabe et al., 1992 ,
1994a ,b; Monyer et al., 1994 ), and in recombinant expression systems
low-conductance channels are observed when NR1 and NR2C are
co-expressed (Stern et al., 1992 ). When the gene encoding the NR2C
subunit was deleted, no low-conductance channels were observed (Figs.
4B, 5, 6, 7) at a postnatal period when these were expressed in
wild-type littermates (Figs. 2, 3, 4A). These data would,
therefore, strongly support the hypothesis that the developmental
expression of low-conductance NMDA receptor channels during granule
cell maturation is controlled by the gene encoding the NR2C subunit.
Furthermore, it would appear that the subunit composition of NMDA
receptor channels in situ displays similar biophysical
properties to that observed in recombinant expression systems (Stern et
al., 1992 ).
Individual NMDA receptor channels may contain multiple NR2
subunit forms
NMDA receptor channels of mature wild-type granule cells displayed
a wide range of unitary conductances (Fig. 4A). Although the
range of conductances for the whole population of cells appeared to
approximately vary around two distinct means (~32 and ~42 pS) (Fig.
4A), many individual cells also exhibited more than two
clearly distinct populations of conductance states (Fig.
3i). As many as five clearly separable conductance states
could be observed in a single cell. This wide range of conductance
states has not been reported for recombinantly expressed NMDA receptors
containing just the NR1 and one type of NR2 subunit (Stern et al.,
1992 ; Tsuzuki et al., 1994 ), but has been reported in situ
(Cull-Candy and Usowicz, 1987 , 1989 ; Jahr and Stevens, 1987 ; Ascher et
al., 1988 ). Some of this variability is likely created by
subconductance states of a single channel, because direct transitions
between two conductance states have been reported for NMDA receptors
in situ (Jahr and Stevens, 1987 ; Cull-Candy and Usowicz,
1989 ; Howe et al., 1991 ) and when recombinantly expressed (Stern et
al., 1992 ; Tsuzuki et al., 1994 ). In the present study, clear direct
transitions between two conductance states also were observed (data not
shown). However, some cells exhibited approximately equal distributions
of up to four distinct conductance states with few direct transitions.
Although a statistical analysis of the frequency of direct transitions
and isolated openings to different conductance states was not
performed, it seems unlikely that all of the variability is
attributable to subconductance states alone. An interesting alternative
is that NMDA receptors in mature granule cells are multimeric complexes
with varying stochiometric ratios of the NR2A and NR2C subunits.
Immunoprecipitation and protein cross-linking studies have suggested
that endogenous NMDA receptors can be made up of trimeric complexes of
NR1-NR2A-NR2B (Sheng et al., 1994 ) or NR1-NR2A-NR2C (Chazot et al.,
1994 ). Additionally, the affinity profile of mature granule cell NMDA
receptors in situ for MK-801 and related compounds most
closely resembles that of recombinantly expressed NMDA receptors
containing the NR1, NR2A, and NR2C subunits (Chazot et al., 1994 ).
Therefore, it may be that the different conductance levels seen here in
granule cells of wild-type mice may represent NMDA receptor channels
with differing proportions of NR2A and NR2C. The large conductance
events presumably would reflect the opening of channels made up of NR1
and NR2A alone, whereas the smallest conductance events may reflect the
activity of NR1- and NR2C-containing receptors, and channels with
intermediate conductance levels represent complexes with all three
subunits in varying stochiometries.
NMDA receptor channels containing the NR2C subunit are
tonically activated
The function of the NR2C subunit was assessed by comparing some of
the properties of NMDA receptor-mediated currents in transgenic mice
with those of age-matched wild-type mice. With the confirmation that
the small conductance openings indeed result from the expression of the
NR2C subunit, it can be concluded that NMDA receptors containing the
NR2C subunit are, like their NR2A-containing counterparts, tonically
activated by endogenous glutamate (Fig. 2). There is good evidence that
the tonic activation of NMDA receptors influences biochemical
differentiation (Moran and Patel, 1989 ), neuronal migration (Komuro and
Rakic, 1993 ), and neurite outgrowth (Pearce et al., 1987 ) in granule
cells. The tonic activation of NMDA receptors in vivo will
be controlled by the interaction of many factors including ambient
glutamate and glycine concentration, and also by the voltage-dependent
block of NMDA receptor channels by external Mg2+.
NMDA receptor channels that contain the NR2C subunit are less sensitive
to Mg2+ (Mishina et al., 1993 ; Monyer et al.,
1994 ) and more sensitive to glycine than NR2A-containing receptors
(Stern et al., 1992 ; Mishina et al., 1993 ). NR2C-containing receptors
also are less susceptible to desensitization (Monyer et al., 1994 ).
Consequently, NR2C subunit-containing receptors will be more likely to
pass current in a given physiological situation. The developmental
expression of the NR2C subunit may therefore reflect in part changing
requirements for tonic activation as well as synaptic transmission.
Expression of the NR2C subunit modifies synaptic currents
The expression of the NR2C subunit appears to affect several
aspects of the mossy fiber-granule cell EPSC. Thus, in / mice, the
NMDA receptor-mediated EPSC was of a significantly larger amplitude but
shorter duration than EPSCs of wild-type peers (Fig. 8; Table 1A).
Surprisingly, the non-NMDA receptor-component of the EPSC was
significantly smaller in the / mice (Table 1B). The net result of
these changes is a dramatically different EPSC profile (Fig. 8).
It might appear paradoxic that eliminating the expression of NR2C,
which is heavily expressed in granule cells with maturation, should
result in an EPSC with a larger peak amplitude. However, these observed
changes in the time course of the NMDA receptor-mediated EPSC in /
animals, in which the EPSC is presumably mediated by receptors composed
exclusively of NR1-NR2A subunits, are readily explicable. If the
inclusion of one or more NR2C subunits in a multimeric receptor-channel
complex result in a reduced unitary conductance and shorter open time,
as the single-channel data would suggest, then the amplitude and time
course of EPSCs of granule cells in +/+ animals will reflect these
properties. At the peak of the ensemble current, most NMDA receptors
will be bound by glutamate, and the absolute value of the macroscopic
current will reflect the opening probability and mean conductance of
the channels that open.
The reduced amplitude of the fast, AMPA receptor-mediated component of
the EPSC in homozygous mutants is less intuitive. One possible
explanation is that the tonic activation of calcium-permeable,
NR2C-containing receptors modulates the density or subunit composition
of AMPA receptors at the synapse. This could occur through the
participation of calcium in the activation of immediate early genes,
which in turn regulate the expression of genes coding for AMPA
receptors.
The net result of the elimination of the expression of the NR2C subunit
is a composite EPSC (Figs. 8, 9A), which is strikingly
similar to the EPSC of immature wild-type granule cells (D'Angelo et
al., 1993 ). This would be expected, because NMDA receptor channels of
the mutant presumably have the same molecular composition as those of
immature wild-type neurons. This would infer that the maturational
changes in synaptic currents in these neurons are governed principally
by the expression of the NR2C gene and incorporation of the gene
product into assembled receptor channels in the membrane. The previous
switch in expression of NR2B to NR2A, which accompanies synapse
formation in the initial postmigratory period, likely subserves
different physiological requirements. NR1-NR2B-containing receptor
channels do not desensitize readily and are well suited to participate
in the migration of neurons, which is mediated in part by the tonic
activation of NMDA receptors by resting glutamate concentrations in the
extracellular space (Komura and Rakic, 1993; Rossi and Slater, 1993 ;
Slater and Rossi, 1996 ). As synapse formation occurs, NR2B subunits are
replaced by NR2A, which display faster desensitization kinetics (Monyer
et al., 1992 , 1994 ), which may be better suited to participate in
transmission. The sequential expression of the genes coding for these
three NMDA receptor subunits during development and maturation thus
produces an elegant concert of events that result in the expression of
NMDA receptor channels tailored in their kinetic properties to the
physiological roles they play. Because activation of more than one
afferent mossy fiber is required to evoke an action potential in
granule cells (D'Angelo et al., 1995 ), the increased duration of the
EPSC in mature cells (expressing NR2C) will enhance the probability of
temporal summation of individual EPSCs and, thus, increase the efficacy
of cooperative transmission.
FOOTNOTES
Received March 22, 1996; revised May 29, 1996; accepted June 3, 1996.
This work was supported by grants from the U.S. Public Health Service
(S.T., N.T.S.) and the Office of Naval Research (N.T.S.). We are
grateful to Drs. N. Agoypan, S. G. Cull-Candy, and M. Farrant for
helpful discussions, and to Drs. David Attwell and Enrico Mugnaini for
comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. N. Traverse Slater,
Department of Physiology M211, Northwestern University Medical School,
303 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611.
Dr. Rossi's present address: Department of Physiology, University
College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT,
UK.
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L. S. Overstreet, G. A. Kinney, Y.-B. Liu, D. Billups, and N. T. Slater
Glutamate Transporters Contribute to the Time Course of Synaptic Transmission in Cerebellar Granule Cells
J. Neurosci.,
November 1, 1999;
19(21):
9663 - 9673.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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K. Hashimoto, M. Fukaya, X. Qiao, K. Sakimura, M. Watanabe, and M. Kano
Impairment of AMPA Receptor Function in Cerebellar Granule Cells of Ataxic Mutant Mouse Stargazer
J. Neurosci.,
July 15, 1999;
19(14):
6027 - 6036.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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E. D'Angelo, P. Rossi, S. Armano, and V. Taglietti
Evidence for NMDA and mGlu Receptor-Dependent Long-Term Potentiation of Mossy Fiber-Granule Cell Transmission in Rat Cerebellum
J Neurophysiol,
January 1, 1999;
81(1):
277 - 287.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. R. PICCIOTTO and K. WICKMAN
Using Knockout and Transgenic Mice to Study Neurophysiology and Behavior
Physiol Rev,
October 1, 1998;
78(4):
1131 - 1163.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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Y. Kiyama, T. Manabe, K. Sakimura, F. Kawakami, H. Mori, and M. Mishina
Increased Thresholds for Long-Term Potentiation and Contextual Learning in Mice Lacking the NMDA-type Glutamate Receptor epsilon 1 Subunit
J. Neurosci.,
September 1, 1998;
18(17):
6704 - 6712.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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S. Vicini, J. F. Wang, J. H. Li, W. J. Zhu, Y. H. Wang, J. H. Luo, B. B. Wolfe, and D. R. Grayson
Functional and Pharmacological Differences Between Recombinant N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptors
J Neurophysiol,
February 1, 1998;
79(2):
555 - 566.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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E. A. Lumpkin, R. E. Marquis, and A. J. Hudspeth
The selectivity of the hair cell's mechanoelectrical-transduction channel promotes Ca2+ flux at low Ca2+ concentrations
PNAS,
September 30, 1997;
94(20):
10997 - 11002.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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G. A. Kinney, L. S. Overstreet, and N. T. Slater
Prolonged Physiological Entrapment of Glutamate in the Synaptic Cleft of Cerebellar Unipolar Brush Cells
J Neurophysiol,
September 1, 1997;
78(3):
1320 - 1333.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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B. A. Clark, M. Farrant, and S. G. Cull-Candy
A Direct Comparison of the Single-Channel Properties of Synaptic and Extrasynaptic NMDA Receptors
J. Neurosci.,
January 1, 1997;
17(1):
107 - 116.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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E. T. Costa, D. S. Olivera, D. A. Meyer, V. M. M. Ferreira, E. E. Soto, S. Frausto, D. D. Savage, M. D. Browning, and C. F. Valenzuela
Fetal Alcohol Exposure Alters Neurosteroid Modulation of Hippocampal N-Methyl-D-aspartate Receptors
J. Biol. Chem.,
December 1, 2000;
275(49):
38268 - 38274.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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