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Volume 16, Number 19,
Issue of October 1, 1996
pp. 6286-6295
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Aging Changes in Voltage-Gated Calcium Currents in Hippocampal
CA1 Neurons
Lee W. Campbell,
Su-Yang Hao,
Olivier Thibault,
Eric M. Blalock, and
Philip W. Landfield
Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, University of
Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40536
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Previous current-clamp studies in rat hippocampal slice CA1 neurons
have found aging-related increases in long-lasting calcium
(Ca)-dependent and Ca-mediated potentials. These changes could reflect
an increase in Ca influx through voltage-gated Ca channels but also
could reflect a change in potassium currents. Moreover, if altered Ca
influx is involved, it is unclear whether it arises from generally
increased Ca channel activity, lower threshold, or reduced
inactivation. To analyze the basis for altered Ca potentials,
whole-cell voltage-clamp studies of CA1 hippocampal neurons were
performed in nondissociated hippocampal slices of adult (3- to
5-month-old) and aged (25- to 26-month-old) rats. An aging-related
increase was found in high-threshold Ca and barium (Ba) currents,
particularly in the less variable, slowly inactivating (late) current
at the end of a depolarization step. Input resistance of neurons did
not differ between age groups. In steady-state inactivation and
repetitive-pulse protocols, inactivation of Ca and Ba currents was not
reduced and, in some cases, was slightly greater in aged neurons,
apparently because of larger inward current. The current blocked by
nimodipine was greater in aged neurons, indicating that some of the
aging increase was in L-type currents. These results indicate that
whole-cell Ca currents are increased with aging in CA1 neurons,
apparently attributable to greater channel activity rather than to
reduced inactivation. The elevated Ca influx seems likely to play a
role in impaired function and enhanced susceptibility to neurotoxic
influences.
Key words:
hippocampus;
aging;
calcium currents;
inactivation;
afterhyperpolarization;
neurotoxicity;
barium currents;
calcium homeostasis;
Alzheimer's disease
INTRODUCTION
Increasing evidence gathered over more than a
decade has pointed to altered neuronal calcium (Ca) homeostasis as a
correlate of brain aging (for review, see Khachaturian, 1984 , 1989 ;
Gibson and Peterson, 1987 ; Landfield, 1987 , 1995 ; Landfield et al.,
1992 ; Michaelis et al., 1992 ; Disterhoft et al., 1993 , 1994 ; Michealis,
1994). Several Ca regulatory processes have been implicated in this Ca
dysregulation, including those involved in the buffering and extrusion
of cytosolic Ca (Michaelis et al., 1984 , 1989; Peterson and Gibson,
1984 ; Gibson and Peterson, 1987 ; Martinez-Serrano et al., 1992 ).
In addition, it appears that voltage-gated Ca influx may be elevated in
aged hippocampal neurons. An aging-related increase in
voltage-activated potentials that are Ca-mediated or Ca-dependent
[e.g., the Ca action potential and the Ca-dependent
afterhyperpolarization (AHP)] has been found consistently in CA1
neurons of rats (Landfield and Pitler, 1984 ; Kerr et al., 1989 ; Pitler
and Landfield, 1990 ) and rabbits (Moyer et al., 1992 ; Disterhoft et
al., 1993 ). Furthermore, hippocampal frequency potentiation
(facilitation), a form of short-term synaptic plasticity that is
impaired in aging rats, also is Ca-dependent. This type of facilitation
can be strengthened in aging rat hippocampal neurons by elevating
external magnesium (Mg) (Landfield et al., 1986 ), which blocks Ca
influx through both voltage- and receptor-operated Ca channels (Lansman
et al., 1986 ; Mayer and Westbrook, 1987 ).
Several factors could account for an aging-related increase in
long-lasting Ca-mediated potentials. Not all potassium (K) currents are
blocked under the current-clamp protocols measuring voltage, and
therefore reduced K currents could underlie the prolongation and/or
increased amplitude of Ca-mediated potentials. Alternatively, if the
aging changes do arise from altered Ca channel activity, several
possible factors could underlie these changes, including an increase in
available Ca channels (Thibault and Landfield, 1996 ), a decrease in
threshold for Ca current activation, or reduced sensitivity of Ca
currents to inactivation. However, these factors have not yet been
evaluated in detail in the CA1 neurons in which increased Ca-mediated
potentials have been found.
High-threshold voltage-gated Ca currents in neurons are subject to Ca
current-dependent inactivation as well as to voltage-dependent
inactivation in a wide range of excitable cells (Eckert and Chad, 1984 ;
Armstrong and Eckert, 1987 ; Obejero-Paz et al., 1991 ; Imredy and Yue,
1992 ), including hippocampal pyramidal neurons (Pitler and Landfield,
1987 ; Nistri and Cherubini, 1990 ; Kay, 1991 ). Moreover, independent
voltage- and Ca-dependent forms of inactivation processes coexist in
some of the same cell types (Hadley and Lederer, 1991 ; Kay, 1991 ;
Obejero-Paz et al., 1991 ). Clearly, a reduction of Ca- (or
voltage)-dependent inactivation processes in aged neurons could be a
factor in the increase in long-lasting Ca-mediated potentials in CA1
neurons. Rather than a reduction, several investigators instead have
observed aging-related increases or no age differences in the
inactivation of Ca currents, but this has been in other neuron types
and in the context of different overall results (Reynolds and Carlen,
1989 ; Kostyuk et al., 1993 ; Murchison and Griffith, 1995 ) (see
Discussion).
Thus, the mechanistic basis of the aging-related increase in Ca influx
in CA1 neurons or, in fact, whether such an increase in high-threshold
current even is observed in CA1 neurons under whole-cell voltage clamp
remains uncertain. To address these questions, voltage-clamp analyses
were carried out in the present study, using the intracellular sharp
electrode voltage-clamp (SEVC) method (Johnston et al., 1980 ) in
nondissociated hippocampal slices to minimize alteration of the
internal milieu of the neurons.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animals used in these experiments were healthy, male Fischer 344 (F344) rats obtained from the National Institute on Aging-sponsored
Harlan Industries specific-pathogen-free colony. Rats were 3-5 months
(young adult) or 25-26 months (aged) of age when used and were housed
in an air-barrier protected system before use. Slices were prepared and
maintained using techniques generally similar to those described
elsewhere (for review, see Dingledine, 1984 ) (see also Pitler and
Landfield, 1990 ; Thibault et al., 1994 ). After decapitation, the brains
were removed rapidly and chilled to 0°C in artificial CSF (ACSF). The
hippocampi were carefully dissected free and placed on the tissue
chopper. Approximately ten 450-mM-thick slices were cut
from the middle of each hippocampus transverse to its longitudinal
axis. The slices were maintained in an interface type recording chamber
at a temperature of 32.5°C.
A nylon mesh net supported slices at the interface of an atmosphere of
moistened 95% O2/5% CO2 and the ACSF bath
containing (in mM): NaCl 128, KH2PO4 1.25, glucose 10, NaHCO3 26, KCl 3, CaCl2 2, MgCl2 2. Before recording,
slices were allowed to equilibrate with the medium and recover for 1 hr.
Borosilicate glass micropipettes (World Precision Instruments,
Gaitherburg, MD), pulled on a Sutter Instruments P-80/PC puller
(Novato, CA) (70-100 M , filled with 2 M cesium
(Cs)Cl2, pH 7.15), were used to impale CA1 neurons. Data
were recorded in both current-clamp and discontinuous SEVC modes
(Axoclamp 2A, Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) and displayed on a
digital storage oscilloscope (Nicolet model 3091). Cells generally were
voltage-clamped with a 2-3 kHz sampling frequency using the continuous
output of the headstage to ensure full decay of voltage across the
electrode before each sampling point. The long time constants of these
neurons (15-25 msec) met the requirements for effective discontinuous
voltage clamp (e.g., membrane time constant electrode time
constant) even with these high resistance micropipettes (cf. Johnston
et al., 1980 ; Finkel and Redman, 1985 ). Leak subtraction was performed
digitally on-line by the method of fractional hyperpolarizing pulses.
The data were stored and analyzed off-line with cursors on a computer
equipped with TECMAR analog/digital converter and math coprocessor
using programs developed in the laboratory based on ASYST Technologies
software (L. Campbell, unpublished programs). Repeated-measures ANOVA
and post hoc Bonferroni group comparisons were used to
analyze responses of adult and aged rat neurons.
Although differences in the passive, electrotonic properties of the
cell could result in altered control of regenerative voltages (Johnston
and Brown, 1983 ; Spruston et al., 1994 ), this does not appear to be a
factor in the present studies. Most intracellular studies have found
that there are no major aging-related changes in the passive membrane
properties [input resistance (IR) and time constants]) of several
types of hippocampal neurons (cf. Barnes and McNaughton, 1980 ;
Landfield and Pitler, 1984 ; Kerr et al., 1989 ; Reynolds and Carlen,
1989 ; Pitler and Landfield, 1990 ; Potier et al., 1993 ; Moyer and
Disterhoft, 1994 ) (for review, see Barnes, 1994 ). In addition, although
estimates in CA1 pyramids indicate that the electrotonic length is
~0.9 (Brown et al., 1981 ; Johnston and Brown, 1983 ; Turner and
Schwartzkroin, 1984 ), the large dendritic shafts, which with the soma
contain the vast majority of L-type channels (Hell et al., 1993 ), are
electrotonically close to the soma (e.g., 0.1-0.2 space constants).
Cells in this study also were Cs-loaded, which presumably reduced
electrotonic distance significantly (Johnston et al., 1980 ), and many
of the currents were studied at the end of the pulse (late current)
from a holding potential of 40 mV, which enhanced clamp efficacy (see
Results).
Inconsistent viability of slices and neurons can affect substantially
the variance of Ca current recordings, making it extremely difficult to
detect subtle aging changes. Therefore, all slices and cells included
for analysis had to meet several rigorous criteria. A slice was
considered healthy and usable in the present study if a population
spike of 4-8 mV amplitude could be recorded by an extracellular
pipette (3-7 M ) located in the CA1 pyramidal layer in response to a
100 µsec, 300-400 µA pulse applied through a bipolar stimulating
electrode to the Schaffer-commissural fibers and if other slices in the
same well did not exhibit seizure-like activity during strong
repetitive stimulation (~1000 µA) at 2 Hz. IR measurements were
obtained from each cell (during a 40 msec, 0.2 nA constant current
hyperpolarizing pulse) from a holding potential of 70 mV. To reduce
variability attributable to either cell size or poor health, only cells
from healthy slices that exhibited sodium (Na) spikes of at least 75 mV, near-complete Cs blockade of the Ca-dependent AHP, and an IR
between 35 and 65 M were used in these studies. No age differences
were found in the proportions of neurons meeting these criteria.
For cells meeting the criteria above, tetrodotoxin (TTX) (1 × 10 6 M) was applied to the bath to block Na
spikes (Fig. 1). After Cs loading and application of
TTX, a Ca action potential (spike) was elicited in current-clamp mode
(Fig. 1B) by holding the cell at 70 mV and applying
an intracellular 40 msec constant current depolarizing pulse (at 150%
of threshold for the Ca spike). For subsequent study in voltage-clamp
mode, slices then were treated with tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA)
(5 mM) to block most remaining voltage-activated K
conductances (Storm, 1990 ). Efficacy of TEA block was assessed for each
neuron used in these studies by the occurrence of a substantial
prolongation of the plateau of the initial fast component of the Ca
spike (from ~30 msec without TEA to about ~3000 msec with TEA) and
was checked repeatedly throughout the experiment and strengthened by
adding TEA if necessary (Fig. 1C).
Fig. 1.
Voltage-response records of a Cs-loaded CA1
hippocampal neuron from a young animal. A, Intracellular
current injection induces a burst of Na action potentials. Note that 2 M CsCl in the pipette blocks the AHP. B,
Blocking Na action potentials with TTX unmasks a sharp Ca spike
followed by a slow lower amplitude (``hump'') phase lasting >200
msec. C, Additional block of repolarizing K conductances
with TEA prevents repolarization of the sharp spike component resulting
in a long Ca action potential plateau at near-maximum amplitude (~2
sec). All records are from the same cell and were recorded at a holding
potential of 70 mV; 400 msec horizontal scale bar applies to
C only.
[View Larger Version of this Image (9K GIF file)]
In some studies, the dihydropyridine (DHP) L-type Ca channel
antagonist nimodipine (Bayer, West Haven, CT) was applied to the bath
at a saturating final concentration of 10 mM. This
concentration is substantially higher than necessary to saturate L
channels (McCarthy and TanPiengco, 1992 ) but was used in light of the
variable drug availability and diffusion that occurs in a thick slice
preparation. Nimodipine was mixed in stock solutions with 100% ethanol
and protected from light during storage and throughout the experiments.
The stock solutions were mixed with ACSF to achieve a final alcohol
dilution of no more than 0.05%.
RESULTS
Calcium action potentials (spikes)
Before performing the voltage-clamp studies, it was important to
ensure that the particular cells being analyzed in this study also
showed the aging-related increases in Ca spikes that had been seen
previously. Therefore, before establishing voltage clamp, neurons were
run through a Ca spike measurement and inactivation protocol similar to
those used in previous studies. Under our conditions (Pitler and
Landfield, 1987 , 1990 ), Ca spikes exhibit two distinct phases: (1) a
fast spike component with a sharp onset and peak amplitude of ~80 mV,
lasting 20-30 msec, and (2) a subsequent lower amplitude plateau
phase, or ``hump,'' component lasting ~200-250 msec, followed by a
gradual return to resting membrane potential (Fig.
1B) (see also Disterhoft et al., 1993 ). After
stabilization, Ca spike duration, amplitude, and inactivation during a
2 Hz train of depolarizing current pulses (150% threshold) were
measured. As shown in Figure 2A, the
aged rat CA1 neurons in the present study exhibited longer Ca spike
durations than did neurons from young-adult rats
(F(1,39) = 14.9, p < 0.001;
adult cells, n = 28; aged cells, n = 13), replicating earlier findings (Pitler and Landfield, 1990 ;
Disterhoft et al., 1993 ). Again, no differences in peak spike amplitude
were observed. Inactivation of the Ca spike during repetitive
activation has been shown previously to be Ca-dependent, because it is
much reduced in barium (Ba) (Pitler and Landfield, 1987 ). The present
studies also replicated the observation that Ca-dependent inactivation
of the Ca spike is not reduced with aging (Pitler and Landfield, 1990 )
and, in fact, may have been somewhat increased in the present study, as
indicated by a significant interaction between age and the train of
five consecutive depolarizations elicited at 2 Hz
(F(4,156) = 7.80; p < 0.001)
(Fig. 2B). This interaction appears to reflect
somewhat steeper inactivation between the first and second pulses in
the aged neurons (Fig. 2B). Thus, this population of
neurons showed aging changes in long-lasting Ca-mediated potentials
similar to those seen previously and, therefore, provided an
appropriate population in which to investigate the underlying currents
in voltage-clamp mode. In addition, as in earlier studies in rat brain
neurons (Barnes and McNaughton, 1980 ; Landfield and Pitler, 1984 ; Kerr
et al., 1989 ; Potier et al., 1993 ; Barnes, 1994 ), IR of neurons did not
differ with aging (adult, 47 ± 3.1 M , aged 48.3 ± 2.7 M ), indicating that neurons from the two age groups generally were
similar in size and passive electrotonic structure.
Fig. 2.
Aging effects on Ca action potentials.
A, Representative examples of Ca spike potentials from
CA1 neurons of adult (top) and aged
(bottom) animals. The third trace
illustrates the intracellular constant current pulse (40 msec) used to
trigger the Ca spike. The ``hump'' or slow plateau phase is
consistently larger and prolonged in spikes from aged neurons. However,
peak amplitude of the fast spike phase is not different with aging.
B, Mean ± SEM. Effects of repetitive stimulation
(2 Hz train, 40 msec pulses) in 28 adult and 13 aged rat neurons on the
inactivation of Ca spike duration. Relative inactivation was unchanged
or slightly greater in the aged rat neurons, possibly reflecting larger
Ca influx.
[View Larger Version of this Image (13K GIF file)]
Ca currents
After voltage measures were obtained, neurons were treated with
TEA to block most of the remaining K conductances (Fig. 1C),
and the recording mode was changed from current clamp to discontinuous
voltage clamp. Figure 3A illustrates the
appearance of voltage-activated Ca currents in these neurons and the
degree of voltage control at different holding potentials. The larger,
more rapidly inactivating current on the left was evoked by
depolarization from 70 mV. Under these conditions, the peak of this
current was difficult to clamp completely with the SEVC, as shown by
the error in the clamp voltage (Fig. 3A, arrow,
bottom left) (see also Johnston et al., 1980 ; Finkel and
Redman, 1985 ). However, much of this initial large peak current could
be inactivated at a holding potential of 40 mV (right)
allowing a substantially more effective clamp (Fig. 3A,
bottom right) (see also Gähwiler and Brown, 1987 ;
Nistri and Cherubini, 1990 ). Therefore, the more slowly inactivating Ca
currents, which include the L-type and some N- and P/Q-type currents
(Fox et al., 1987 ; Llinas et al., 1989 ; Plummer et al., 1989 ; Swartz
and Bean, 1992 ; Eliot and Johnston, 1994 ; Randall and Tsien, 1995 ),
appear to be studied more accurately by holding at 40 mV. In
addition, because of inactivation during the pulse, measurement
accuracy was enhanced further by measuring current at the end of the
depolarizing command step (late current) rather than at the peak.
Consequently, many of the aging comparisons were performed from a
holding potential of 40 mV, and late current generally was measured
along with peak current.
Fig. 3.
Voltage-clamp efficacy and voltage dependence of
Ca currents. A, Traces acquired during a similar voltage
step amplitude (40 mV) from different holding potentials. The
upper left trace reflects a large rapidly inactivating
current elicited from 70 mV, whereas the actual voltage trace
obtained during that depolarization (bottom left) shows
a sharp deviation from the imposed voltage at the peak of the current
(arrow). The efficacy of the voltage clamp can be
improved by holding the cell at 40 mV, which inactivates much of the
current (upper right). The voltage control during the
pulse (bottom right) is improved substantially. A
prominent long tail current followed the depolarization induced current
(see text) but was not assessed in these studies. B,
Mean ± SEM for peak currents of a subset of neurons in each age
group (adult, n = 6 neurons; aged,
n = 5 neurons). Cells were held at 80 mV and
stepped to +15 mV in increments of 5 mV. All points are not
plotted.
[View Larger Version of this Image (12K GIF file)]
Because of this difficulty in accurately clamping the large, rapidly
inactivating peak currents, a current-voltage
(I-V) analysis of activation patterns was
not performed for each neuron in this study. However,
I-V relations were studied in subsets of adult
and aged neurons in which the clamp appeared to be most effective (as
determined by a gradual activation curve and minimal loss of control in
the voltage trace). In these subsets (n = 6 adult and 5 aged neurons), the voltage dependence of the Ca currents appeared
similar in adult and aged neurons with maximum current elicited during
steps to the 20 to 10 mV range (Fig. 3B). Consequently,
activation protocols for aging comparisons in the present studies
ensured full activation by employing voltage command steps to 0 mV,
well above maximum. A prominent long-lasting tail current generally
follows each depolarization pulse (Fig. 3A). As shown in
Figure 3A (right), the long tail often exhibits a
delayed activation at lower holding potentials. These long tail
currents are observed consistently in adult slice hippocampal neurons
(Pitler and Landfield, 1987 ; Nistri and Cherubini, 1990 ; Kerr et al.,
1992 ) and resemble a space-clamp artifact that could arise from
unclamped distal dendrites. However, single Ca channel openings during
the repolarization period that follows a depolarization pulse also are
observed on the somata of hippocampal neurons (Fisher et al., 1990 ;
Thibault et al., 1993 , Kavalali and Plummer, 1996 ). In addition,
several lines of evidence indicate that the long tail current is a Ca
current and that it does not arise in the large apical dendrite
(Thibault et al., 1995 ). On the other hand, the single-channel openings
on the soma during the repolarization phase do not seem sufficient to
account for these large tails under relatively physiological
conditions. Therefore, the tail currents may arise from a combination
of repolarization openings of Ca channels and unclamped small
dendrites. However, this is a complex and unresolved issue, and the
tail current was not investigated systematically in the present study.
Steady-state inactivation
Patterns of the voltage dependence of inactivation of the Ca
currents were studied using a steady-state inactivation (or
h-infinity) protocol in which the holding
potential was maintained for prolonged periods at different voltages.
Ca currents during 200 msec depolarizing steps to 0 mV were measured in
each neuron from increasingly positive holding potentials, which were
incremented in shifts of 5 mV, beginning at 60 mV. Cells were held
for 5 sec at each of the nine increasingly positive holding potentials,
before the 200 msec depolarizing step. Figure
4A shows averaged traces for adult
(n = 13) and aged (n = 9) rat neurons
studied in this paradigm. Figure 4, B and C,
shows the statistical data (mean ± SEM) for peak current
(B) and late current at the end of the command step
(C) for the averaged currents shown in A.
Currents at both the peak and the end (late current) of the step were
larger in aged rat neurons when assessed by t test at only
the holding potential of 60 mV (p < 0.01).
However, ANOVA across all holding potentials examined in the
steady-state inactivation protocols showed that the main effect of age
was not significantly different for peak currents over the full range
of holding potentials. This was because the current amplitudes for the
two age groups became less different at higher holding potentials (Fig.
4B). Nevertheless, a significant main effect of age
(by ANOVA) was present for the late current (Fig. 4C) across
all holding potentials (F(1,20) = 7.52;
p < 0.02). Thus, high-threshold Ca currents were
larger in aged rat neurons, particularly for the slowly inactivating
late current measured at the end of the step.
Fig. 4.
Averaged traces of Ca currents activated by 200 msec depolarizing voltage steps to 0 mV from increasingly positive
holding potentials (steady-state inactivation protocol).
A, Traces shown are averages of the current responses of
CA1 neurons from young-adult (n = 13) and aged
(n = 9) animals. The voltage protocols
(bottom) are schematic representations.
B, Mean ± SEM for the peak currents for the cells
averaged in A. C, Mean ± SEM for
late current measures for the cells shown in A. At
increasingly positive voltages, the rapidly inactivating component
decreased relatively more than the late current measured at the end of
the pulse. Currents from aged neurons were larger than currents from
young-adult neurons, although the differences decreased with increasing
inactivation at higher voltages. Both a significant main effect of age
and a significant interaction between age and holding potential
(reflecting the disappearance of the aging effect at more positive,
inactivating voltages) were found.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
As noted, the age difference in current amplitude was diminished
at more positive holding potentials, particularly above 40 mV,
resulting in a highly significant interaction term in the two-way ANOVA
between age and holding potentials (F(8,160) = 3.33; p < 0.002 for late current) (Fig.
4C). This appears to reflect greater steady-state
inactivation of high-threshold Ca currents in the aged group,
particularly at the higher holding potentials. However, given that Ca
current influx occurs at potentials above approximately 40 mV (Fig.
3B), this protocol does not clearly separate contributions
from voltage- and Ca-dependent forms of inactivation.
The degree of inactivation during a pulse to 0 mV from a holding
potential of 60 mV also was evaluated for these neurons. No aging
difference was found in the inactivation during the pulse, either as
determined by the percent decrease in current from beginning to end of
the pulse or by the time constant of the decay. In young-adult rat
neurons, the percent decrease during the pulse was 42.8 ± 3.0%,
whereas in aged rat neurons, the decrease was 46.2 ± 1.9%. The
average time constant of decay over the 200 msec pulse was 51.3 msec
for the adult rat neurons and 60.1 msec for the aged rat neurons.
Repetitive-pulse inactivation
Measurements of Ca-dependent inactivation of Ca currents
were obtained more directly in experiments using a 3 Hz
repetitive-activation train of five depolarizing pulses (to 0 mV, 200 msec each, from a holding potential of 40 mV) (Fig.
5A). Previous studies have shown that current
decline in the later pulses of the train in this protocol directly
reflects Ca-dependent inactivation in these neurons, because the degree
of inactivation is reduced when Ba is the charge carrier and because no
detectable outward currents are present between pulses (Pitler and
Landfield, 1987 ). In 25 adult and 22 aged neurons, a significant main
effect of age was found on peak current (Fig. 5B,
a) across the 3 Hz train (F(1,45) = 6.07; p < 0.02). In addition, the main effect of
repetitive stimulation was highly significant (p < 0.001). The interaction between age and repeated pulses also was
significant (F(4,180) = 2.96; p < 0.03), again reflecting a difference in the inactivation pattern
between the young and aged groups. As with the Ca spike data (Fig.
2B), this interaction appeared to result primarily
from relatively steeper inactivation between the first and the second
pulses in the aged group. However, it is difficult to conclude that
inactivation generally was greater in the aged group, because when
currents were normalized to the first pulse in each neuron, no
significant age differences were observed in the decline of fractional
current across pulses (data not shown). Late current (Fig.
5B, b) also showed a significant main effect of
age (F(1,45) = 7.21; p < 0.01),
although a significant interaction with repetitive pulses was not seen.
As with peak current, analyses of normalized fractional late current
did not show an age difference (data not shown).
Fig. 5.
A, Representative examples of Ca
currents elicited by repetitive 3 Hz depolarizing voltage steps to 0 mV
from a holding potential of 40 mV from a CA1 neuron of a young-adult
animal (top) and an aged animal (bottom).
Voltage steps (actual) shown in the lowest trace of
A are from the aged cell shown above. Currents were
obtained for five 200 msec pulses given at 3 Hz. Holding potentials of
40 mV reduced the rapidly inactivating component and allowed more
accurate measures of the slowly inactivating Ca current.
B, Mean ± SEM of peak (a) and late
(b) current measured in the protocol shown in
A. The charge carrier was 2 mM Ca. Both peak
and late Ca currents were significantly larger in neurons from aged
(n = 22) than from young adult
(n = 25) animals, but a significant interaction was
found between age and repetitive pulses only for peak current
(a). C, Mean ± SEM of peak
(a) and late (b) current in neurons
(n = 12 adult and 11 aged neurons) with Ba (2 mM) substituted for Ca as the charge carrier. The aging
difference still is apparent, but the overall rate of inactivation is
slowed. However, a significant interaction between age and repetitive
pulses was present for both peak and late currents, possibly reflecting
greater inactivation in the aged group.
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
A similar experiment was performed on a different set of cells (adult,
n = 12; aged, n = 11) in which Ba (2 mM) was substituted for Ca as the primary external divalent
cation charge carrier (Fig. 5C, a,b).
In Ba, overall currents were larger, and the general degree of
inactivation was reduced compared with Ca-bathed cells, as would be
anticipated from the relatively greater permeability of Ba through Ca
channels (Tsien et al., 1988 ) and its relatively weaker effect in
inducing current-dependent inactivation of Ca channels (Eckert and
Chad, 1984 ; Pitler and Landfield, 1987 ; Kay, 1991 ; Obejero-Paz et al.,
1991 ). Nevertheless, aging effects were analogous to those in Ca in
that the main effect of aging was significant across the five-pulse
train for the late current (F(1,21) = 4.8, p < 0.04). Some differences from Ca were noted,
however, in that main effects of age on peak current were not
significant (apparently reflecting greater variability attributable to
larger peak amplitudes in Ba), but a highly significant interaction was
found between age and repeated stimulation
(F(4,84) = 14, p < 0.001) for
late current, again possibly reflecting greater inactivation during the
train in the aged rat neurons (Fig. 5C). This latter
conclusion was supported by the observation that, unlike the results in
Ca medium, ANOVAs of normalized currents revealed significant main
effects of aging resulting from a greater decline of fractional current
for aged neurons on both peak (p = 0.05) and
late (p < 0.002) currents (data not shown).
Although not as effective as Ca, Ba can induce current-dependent
inactivation in the hippocampus (Kay, 1991 ) as well as other cell types
(Fedulova et al., 1985 ; Kasai and Aosaki, 1988 ; Mazzanti et al.,
1991a ). Thus, although some differences are seen between Ba and Ca
currents, possibly related to different current amplitudes or
inactivation efficacies, overall, the repetitive-activation studies
indicate that the degree of inactivation of Ca channel currents was not
reduced with aging and, instead, may have been slightly greater in some
experiments.
Contribution of L-type channels
L-type channels appear to contribute to the Ca-mediated potentials
that are increased with aging (see below), and therefore the effects of
nimodipine, a DHP L-type channel antagonist, were investigated in a
subset (adult, n = 4; aged, n = 4)
taken from the same cells shown in Figure 5B. Each of those
cells was exposed to saturating concentrations of nimodipine (10 mM) ~15 min after the initial protocols (Fig. 5). At 10 min after initial nimodipine exposure, peak Ca currents again were
measured. Nimodipine reduced peak Ca currents significantly in both the
young-adult (paired t test, p < 0.03) and
aged neurons (p < 0.02) to a degree consistent
with several other whole-cell studies in hippocampal neurons using SEVC
(Gähwiler and Brown, 1987 ) and patch-clamp (Regan et al., 1991 ;
Swartz and Bean, 1992 ; Eliot and Johnston, 1994 ) methods. In addition,
the amount of current reduction was greater in the aged (1.13 ± 0.23 nA) than in the adult (0.32 ± 0.1 nA) neurons
(p < 0.05 for difference currents) (data not
shown). However, although the absolute current reduced by nimodipine
was greater in aged neurons, studies with larger groups will be
required to determine whether there is an age-related increase in the
percentage of nimodipine-sensitive current relative to other
Ca currents.
DISCUSSION
The present study provides direct evidence from whole-cell
voltage-clamp measures, under conditions in which repolarizing K
currents were well-blocked, that voltage-gated Ca currents in CA1
hippocampal neurons are increased significantly with aging. Although
quantitative group comparisons are difficult to perform under
voltage-clamp conditions, given the large variability in cell size and
clamp efficacy, the use of holding potentials of 40 mV and
measurements obtained at the end of a 200 msec depolarizing pulse
appeared to substantially improve reliability of the measurements. In
addition, setting strict criteria for cell health and restricting the
IR range ensured that poorly sealed, unhealthy, or very large or very
small cells were excluded from the analysis. Although TEA and Cs do not
block all K currents, they block most of the hyperpolarizing K currents
on the time scale that might be expected to affect Ca current measures
in this study (Storm, 1990 ), and each neuron used in the analyses was
confirmed for K current blockade according to the protocol in Figure 1.
Therefore, K currents do not appear to influence the Ca current data
significantly. Thus, these results indicate that earlier findings on
Ca-mediated potentials in CA1 neurons may be accounted for, at least in
part, by an increase in overall Ca current influx at the whole-cell
level.
Several other voltage-clamp studies have found results on Ca current
influx that are somewhat contradictory to ours (Reynolds and Carlen,
1989 ; Kostyuk et al., 1993 ), and some have found similar results but
for a different type (T) of Ca current (Murchison and Griffith, 1995 ).
However, in those studies, cell types other than CA1 pyramidal neurons
were investigated and/or different cell preparation and recording
methods were used, some of which can be relatively traumatic. That
other cell types exhibit patterns of aging changes different from those
in CA1 neurons perhaps is not surprising, because many brain or
peripheral regions (including dentate gyrus and dorsal root ganglion)
(Reynolds and Carlen, 1989 ; Kostyuk et al., 1993 ) do not show major
indications of neuropathology in aging or Alzheimer's disease (Coleman
and Flood, 1987 ). In addition, although some studies have not
replicated all statistically significant effects of aging on the AHP
and Ca spike in CA1 neurons, in those studies, very similar
nonsignificant or barely significant trends were observed (Potier et
al., 1993 ). The slightly discrepant results appeared to be attributable
to differences in rat strains and/or extracellular Ca concentrations
(Potier et al., 1993 ).
Among the key questions on the aging-related increase in Ca currents is
its underlying mechanistic basis. The results here clearly indicated
that the increase in Ca current was not attributable to reduced
inactivation processes, as determined either in repetitive-activation
or steady-state inactivation protocols. Earlier current-clamp studies
also had found no aging-dependent reduction in the Ca-dependent
inactivation of Ca spikes (Pitler and Landfield, 1990 ). In some of the
present analyses, moreover, there was a significant interaction term
resulting from steeper initial inactivation (Figs.
2B, 4C, 5B) in aged cells or a
greater fractional decline of current in aged neurons (Fig.
5C). These results appear to reflect a slightly enhanced
degree of inactivation in aged neurons, although this effect did not
appear to be substantial and likely was simply attributable to the
greater current influx (see also Reynolds and Carlen, 1989 ). The
steady-state inactivation protocol does not clearly separate
voltage-dependent and Ca-dependent forms of inactivation, but the
apparently greater inactivation in aged neurons appears confined to
potentials above 40 mV (Fig. 4C). Because this is the
approximate threshold for voltage-gated Ca influx (Fig. 3B),
the greater inactivation in aged neurons in this protocol again simply
could result from enhanced Ca influx.
Thus, the main result on inactivation relevant to the processes
underlying increased Ca currents with aging was that a
reduction of inactivation processes is not a likely
candidate for the mechanism of aging-dependent enhancement of Ca
current. Consequently, current-dependent inactivation processes appear
to be at least as sensitive in aged as in adult CA1 neurons.
The present studies also indicated that the increase in Ca current
influx does not appear to be attributable to altered threshold or
voltage dependence, because no age differences were observed in the
I-V studies in subsets of cells (Fig.
3B) and voltage test pulses were stepped to potentials well
above threshold in all cells used in comparisons of adult and aged
neurons. However, this conclusion must be considered preliminary,
because not every cell could be analyzed in a full
I-V protocol.
If reduced inactivation processes or a shift in voltage dependence do
not account for the greater whole-cell Ca current, then it appears
likely that Ca channel flux generally is elevated. This could occur
through higher open probability, larger single-channel conductance, or
increased density of available channels. Recent single-channel studies
show that an increased density of available L-type Ca channels is a
concomitant of aging in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells (Thibault and
Landfield, 1996 ). In addition, L-type Ca currents appear to contribute
importantly to generation of the AHP and the Ca spike (Mazzanti et al.,
1991b ; Moyer et al., 1992 ; Moyer and Disterhoft, 1994 ), and L-channel
blockers block the AHP more effectively in aged neurons (Moyer et al.,
1992 ). Here, nimodipine also blocked more Ca current in aged neurons.
Thus, an increased density of functionally available (L-type) Ca
channels appears to be a strong candidate for the basis of at least
some of the aging-related increase in Ca influx. However, it is well
established that there are several functional types of high-threshold
voltage-activated Ca channels (Tsien et al., 1988 , 1991 ; Bean, 1989 ;
Llinas et al., 1989 ; Miller, 1992 ; Catterall et al., 1993 ; Randall and
Tsien, 1995 ), and multiple channel types also are present in
hippocampal neurons (Fisher et al., 1990 ; Mogul and Fox, 1991 ; Regan et
al., 1991 ; Eliot and Johnston, 1994 ). Therefore, it remains to be
determined whether the nimodipine-sensitive current component accounts
for all of the aging-related increase.
Independent of the mechanism, an increase in voltage-gated Ca current
influx seems likely to have a wide range of functional consequences.
One Ca-dependent process (the K-mediated AHP) appears to play a key
role in regulating neuronal excitability (Madison and Nicoll, 1984 ;
Storm, 1990 ; Lancaster and Zucker, 1994 ) and may modulate learning and
memory processes (Disterhoft et al., 1988 ). Thus, an increased AHP
could reduce neuronal firing rate significantly and affect cognitive
functions (Moyer et al., 1992 ; Disterhoft et al., 1993 ). Consistent
with this possibility is evidence that L-channel antagonists can
enhance learning in aged animals (Deyo et al., 1989 ; Scriabine et al.,
1989 ; McMonagle-Strucko and Fanelli, 1993 ). Further, the increase in
L-type channel density may be correlated with impaired maze performance
(Thibault and Landfield, 1996 ).
In addition to the possible consequences of elevated Ca influx in the
soma, it appears that synaptic function also might be affected by
excess Ca influx (Landfield et al., 1986 ). Several functional synaptic
alterations are seen during neuronal aging (Barnes and McNaughton,
1980 ; Smith and Rosenheimer, 1984 ; Bickford et al., 1986 ; Landfield et
al., 1986 ; Rose et al., 1986 ; Bickford-Winer et al., 1988 ; Deupree et
al., 1993 ) (for review, see Landfield, 1988 ; Barnes, 1994 ; Geinisman et
al., 1995 ), and synaptic transmission of course requires Ca influx
presynaptically and is associated with Ca influx postsynaptically
through NMDA receptors (Mayer and Westbrook, 1987 ). Furthermore, recent
studies have shown that synaptic input also activates voltage-gated Ca
channels and Ca influx in dendrites, which, in turn, may influence
conduction of EPSPs to the soma through amplification or shunting
(Regehr et al., 1989 ; Miyakawa et al., 1992 ; Brown and Jaffe, 1994 ;
Elliott et al., 1995 ; Magee and Johnston, 1995 ). Thus, altered Ca
influx could affect a number of aspects of neuronal function in
multiple compartments of the neuron.
Persistent elevation of [Ca] also can gradually induce structural
degeneration or at least make neurons more vulnerable to other
neurotoxic influences (Choi, 1995 ). Hippocampal neurons in
vivo often fire Na action potentials in the 3-20 spikes/sec range
(Barnes et al., 1983 ), with each spike generating Ca elevation of
sufficient duration to sustain an AHP for 150-500 msec (Madison and
Nicoll, 1984 ; Lancaster and Zucker, 1994 ). Therefore, an enhanced Ca
influx with each action potential in aged neurons, which the present
results indicate occurs, might result in an essentially continuous
elevation of [Ca] above levels found in adult rat neurons. A
persistent elevation of Ca influx, even of moderate proportions, could
enhance the susceptibility of aging hippocampal neurons to a variety of
neurotoxic and neurodegenerative processes and, in part, could account
for why aging is the greatest risk factor for Alzheimer's disease
(Katzman and Saitoh, 1991 ).
FOOTNOTES
Received May 15, 1996; revised July 10, 1996; accepted July 15, 1996.
This work was supported in part by grants from the National Institute
on Aging (AG04542 and AG10836) and Bayer, Inc. We thank Lisa Lowery for
excellent assistance with this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Philip W. Landfield,
Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky
Medical Center, MS-305, Lexington, KY 40536-0084.
Dr. Campbell's present address: The Salk Institute, La Jolla, CA
92037.
Dr Hao's present address: Department of Microbiology and Molecular
Genetics, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS
66160.
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