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Volume 16, Number 22,
Issue of November 15, 1996
pp. 7151-7160
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Physiological Mapping of Local Inhibitory Inputs to the
Hypothalamic Paraventricular Nucleus
Cherif Boudaba,
Kriszta Szabó, and
Jeffrey G. Tasker
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Tulane University, New
Orleans, Louisiana 70118-5698
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Local inhibitory synaptic inputs to neurons of the rat hypothalamic
paraventricular nucleus (PVN) were studied by using glutamate
microstimulation and conventional intracellular and whole-cell
patch-clamp recordings in coronal, horizontal, and parasagittal slices
of rat hypothalamus. PVN cells were classified as magnocellular or
parvocellular neurons on the basis of electrophysiological and
post hoc immunohistochemical analyses; GABA-producing
neurons were localized with in situ hybridization.
Glutamate microstimulation of different sites around the PVN evoked
volleys of postsynaptic potentials in 43% of the PVN neurons tested.
Some responses to stimulation at each site were blocked by bicuculline,
suggesting that they were mediated by the activation of presynaptic
GABA neurons. In the coronal plane, presynaptic inhibitory sites were
located lateral to the PVN and ventral to the fornix, corresponding to
the lateral hypothalamic area and the posterior bed nucleus of the
stria terminalis (BNST). In the horizontal plane, presynaptic
inhibitory sites were found rostral, lateral, and caudal to the
nucleus, corresponding to parts of the anterior hypothalamic area, the
posterior BNST, the medial preoptic area, and the dorsomedial
hypothalamus. In the parasagittal plane, presynaptic inhibitory neurons
were revealed at sites rostral and caudal to the nucleus, corresponding
to the medial preoptic area and the dorsomedial hypothalamus, and in a
site dorsal to the optic chiasm that included the suprachiasmatic
nucleus. These presynaptic sites each contained GABA-producing neurons
based on in situ hybridization with a glutamic acid
decarboxylase riboprobe and together formed a three-dimensional ring
around the PVN. Unexpectedly, both magnocellular and parvocellular
neurons received inhibitory synaptic inputs from common sites.
Key words:
brain slice;
hypothalamus;
inhibitory postsynaptic
potential;
paraventricular nucleus;
magnocellular neuron;
parvocellular
neuron;
hypophysiotropic;
GABA;
glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD);
in situ hybridization
INTRODUCTION
Pulsatile hormone secretion, a common
characteristic of neurosecretory systems of the hypothalamus, often is
caused by synchronous burst generation among neurosecretory neurons.
Several intrinsic and synaptic mechanisms can contribute to burst
generation in hypothalamic neurons (Bourque and Renaud, 1990 ). However,
the synchronization of bursting activity among individual
neurosecretory cells (e.g., in oxytocin neurons or
gonadotropin-releasing hormone cells) requires coordinated synaptic
inputs to the individual cells, either through common synaptic inputs
or through synaptic interconnectivity via local synaptic circuits.
Several anatomical and electrophysiological studies suggest that
hypothalamic neuroendocrine cells are regulated by local synaptic
circuits and that local circuits may contribute to patterned hormone
secretion. A majority of the synaptic inputs to the paraventricular
nucleus (PVN) seem to originate from local sources (Tribollet and
Dreifuss, 1981 ; Kiss et al., 1983 ; Larsen et al., 1994 ). GABAergic
inputs make up ~50% of the synaptic innervation of PVN neurons
(Decavel and van den Pol, 1990 ), and a significant proportion of this
GABAergic innervation derives from regions intrinsic to the
hypothalamus (Roland and Sawchenko, 1993 ). A recent
electrophysiological study showed that the vast majority of the local
synaptic inputs to PVN neurons are GABAergic (Tasker and Dudek,
1993 ).
The PVN is composed of two general populations of neurons, the
magnocellular neurons, which project to the posterior pituitary, and
the parvocellular neurons, which project to the anterior pituitary and
to other areas of the brain and spinal cord (Swanson and Sawchenko,
1983 ). The physiological study of synaptic inputs to the PVN is
complicated by the heterogeneity of cell types in the nucleus. However,
magnocellular and parvocellular neurons of the PVN can be distinguished
according to certain electrophysiological criteria, allowing for a
reliable preliminary assessment of cellular identity during recordings
(Hoffman et al., 1991 ; Tasker and Dudek, 1991 ). The most salient
characteristic of magnocellular neurons is their expression of a robust
transient K+ current (Bourque, 1988 ; Tasker and Dudek,
1991 ). In contrast, parvocellular neurons usually do not show a
detectable transient K+ current, but most generate a
Ca2+-dependent, low threshold potential (Tasker and Dudek,
1991 ). Among magnocellular neurons, vasopressinergic cells sometimes
can be distinguished from oxytocinergic cells by their phasic bursting
activity (Poulain and Wakerley, 1982 ). This preliminary
electrophysiological classification, combined with subsequent
immunohistochemical labeling of recorded and dye-injected cells,
provides a reliable means of identifying magnocellular and
parvocellular neurons of the PVN (Hoffman et al., 1991 ).
The purposes of the present study were (1) to determine whether local
inhibitory neurons projecting to the PVN are organized topographically
in distinct regions in the hypothalamus and (2) to test the hypothesis
that local inhibitory inputs to magnocellular and parvocellular neurons
of the PVN originate from different presynaptic sites. Using glutamate
microstimulation and conventional intracellular and whole-cell
patch-clamp recordings from PVN neurons in three slice planes (i.e.,
coronal, horizontal, and parasagittal), we found presynaptic inhibitory
sites distributed in two relatively discrete zones, one extending
around the PVN laterally and the other ventral to the PVN at the base
of the hypothalamus. Both magnocellular and parvocellular neurons
received inhibitory synaptic inputs from each presynaptic zone.
Preliminary reports of these data have been presented previously
(Tasker, 1993 ; Boudaba et al., 1995 ).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Slice preparation. Male Sprague Dawley rats (Charles
River, Wilmington, MA) were anesthetized deeply with Nembutal (0.1 ml/100 gm body weight) and decapitated. The brain was removed quickly
and gently from the cranial cavity and immersed in cooled (1-2°C),
aerated (95% O2/5% CO2) artificial
cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF). The composition of the aCSF was (in
mM): 124 NaCl, 3 KCl, 1.3 MgSO4, 1.4 NaH2PO4, 11 Glucose, 5 HEPES, and 2.4 CaCl2. The pH of the aCSF was adjusted to 7.2-7.4 with
NaOH. In some experiments the concentrations of MgSO4 and
CaCl2 were increased to 4 mM to reduce the
spontaneous synaptic activity of the recorded cells. The hypothalamus
was blocked with a razor, and hypothalamic slices (400-500 µm) were
sectioned in the coronal, horizontal, and parasagittal planes with a
vibrating microtome (WPI, Sarasota, FL). One or two slices containing
the PVN were identified in the different planes, according to Paxinos
and Watson (1986) . The slices were transferred immediately to a
ramp-style interface recording chamber in which they were perfused with
aCSF maintained at 32-34°C and aerated with humidified
95%O2/5%CO2. In some cases, a second slice
was stored submerged in an aerated holding chamber at room temperature
until experiments in the first slice were completed. All slices were
allowed to equilibrate in the recording chamber for 1 hr before
recordings were started.
Electrophysiological methods. Conventional
intracellular microelectrodes were made from microfilament glass
capillaries [0.6 mm inner diameter (i.d.), 1.0 mm outer diameter
(o.d.); WPI, Sarasota, FL], and patch pipettes were pulled from
borosilicate glass (1.65 mm o.d., 1.2 mm i.d.; Garner Glass, Claremont,
CA) with a Flaming/Brown micropipette puller (Sutter Instruments,
Novato, CA). Microelectrodes were filled with 2 M KCl or 2 M potassium acetate. Potassium chloride was used in most
conventional intracellular recordings to shift
ECl positive to increase the Cl
driving force, resulting in reversed IPSPs that were larger and easier
to detect; the percentage of cells that responded synaptically to
glutamate microstimulation increased by 20-30% when KCl was used as
the microelectrode electrolyte instead of potassium acetate (our
unpublished observation). Patch pipettes were filled with a solution
containing (in mM): 120 potassium gluconate, 10 HEPES, 1 NaCl, 1 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 2 Mg-ATP, 0.3 Na-GTP,
and 10 EGTA; pH was adjusted to 7.2-7.4 with KOH.
The slice was transilluminated, and the electrode was positioned in the
PVN under visual guidance with a dissecting microscope. The electrode
was lowered through the slice by 2-4 µm steps with a piezoelectric
microdrive (Nanostepper, Adams & List, Westbury, NY). Current-clamp
recordings were performed with an Axoclamp 2A amplifier (Axon
Instruments, Foster city, CA). Data were digitized on-line with a
Digidata 1200 interface and pClamp 6.1 software (Axon) and stored on
videotape for off-line analysis. Voltage and current traces were
monitored continuously on a digital storage oscilloscope (Hitachi,
Tokyo, Japan).
Biocytin was added to microelectrodes (1%) and to patch pipettes
(0.3-0.5%) as an intracellular marker. The biocytin leaked into the
recorded cells during the recordings and was iontophoresed
intracellularly at the end of experiments by passing negative current
pulses ( 250 pA, 250 msec, 2 Hz) for 5-10 min.
Drug application. Using a patch pipette with a tip inner
diameter of 5-10 µm, glutamate microdrops (10-20 mM)
were applied on the surface of slices by pressure with a picospritzer
(General Valve, Fairfield, NJ). The glutamate pipette was positioned
with a hydraulic micromanipulator for fine control, and glutamate
microdrops were applied under visual control at two or more sites on
the slice whenever possible. Janus green (0.1%) was added to the
glutamate solution to map the location and to monitor the spread of the
glutamate microdrops. Glutamate drops measured ~200-250 µm in
diameter after radiating on the surface of the slice. The approximate
positions of glutamate microapplication sites were mapped by eye, on
the basis of visual landmarks, onto schematic diagrams of the
hypothalamus in the coronal, horizontal, and parasagittal planes,
according to Paxinos and Watson (1986) and Swanson (1992) .
Bicuculline methiodide was added to the bath medium (10-50
µM) to block GABAA receptor-mediated IPSPs.
Bicuculline methiodide application was used to differentiate EPSPs from
reversed IPSPs in some recordings performed with KCl-filled
microelectrodes.
Biocytin histology and peptide immunohistochemistry. After
experiments, slices were removed from the recording chamber and fixed
overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M PBS. Then they
were sectioned on a freezing microtome (15-20 µm), and the
biocytin-injected cells were labeled by incubating the slices for 4 hr
in streptavidin-conjugated 7-amino-4-methylcoumarin-3-acetic acid
(AMCA, Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR). The AMCA was diluted (1:300) in
0.1 M PBS containing 1% Triton X-100. Sections were
examined under a microscope equipped with epifluorescence by using a
UV/420K filter combination to detect the presence of biocytin-filled,
AMCA-labeled neurons.
Sections containing the AMCA-labeled cells were placed in 2% normal
sheep serum in 0.1 M PBS for 15 min. To determine whether
the stained cells were magnocellular or parvocellular neurons, we used
a primary polyclonal antibody generated in rabbit against both oxytocin
and vasopressin-associated neurophysins of the rat (RN-4, 9/10/73),
which was obtained from Dr. A.G. Robinson, University of Pittsburgh
(Seif et al., 1977 ). This general neurophysin antibody labels mainly
magnocellular neurons under normal conditions (i.e., in rats that have
not been subjected to adrenalectomy) and was selected to distinguish
between PVN magnocellular and parvocellular neurons (Hoffman et al.,
1991 ). Slices were incubated in the general neurophysin antiserum at a
concentration of 1:10,000 in 0.1 M PBS plus 1% normal
sheep serum and 0.2% Na azide for 36 hr at 4°C. In some cases in
which the recorded cells were classified electrophysiologically as
magnocellular neurons and recovered in two serial sections after
biocytin labeling, polyclonal antibodies selective for oxytocin (VA-10)
and vasopressin (VA-4), provided by Dr. H. Gainer (National Institutes
of Health, Bethesda, MD) (Altstein et al., 1988 ), were used on separate
sections. The oxytocin and vasopressin antisera were applied at
concentrations of 1:800 and 1:1000, respectively, in 0.1 M
PBS plus 1% normal sheep serum and 0.2% Na azide for 36 hr at 4°C.
After treatment with the primary antibody, sections were rinsed with
0.1 M PBS, incubated for 1 hr in a goat anti-rabbit
secondary antibody conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC,
1:100; Vector Labs, Burlingame, CA), and rinsed again in 0.1 M PBS. Then they were mounted and coverslipped with
Vectashield antifading mounting medium (Vector Labs) and examined under
epifluorescence for neurophysin, oxytocin, or vasopressin
immunoreactivity by using a B/515W filter combination for FITC. Double
labeling with AMCA and FITC was detected by switching from one
fluorescence filter combination to the other.
The oxytocin and vasopressin antibodies were tested for
cross-reactivity by using preadsorption controls. No immunostaining was
observed when the oxytocin antibody was preadsorbed overnight at 4°C
with oxytocin (10 6-10 4 M) and
when the vasopressin antibody was preadsorbed with vasopressin
(10 6-10 4 M). No decrement in
the immunolabeling was apparent when the oxytocin antibody was
preincubated with vasopressin (10 6-10 4
M) or when the vasopressin antibody was preincubated with
oxytocin (10 6-10 4 M). The
oxytocin antibody did not label neurons in the suprachiasmatic nucleus,
which contains only vasopressin-expressing cells, and the vasopressin
antibody did not label cells in the anterior commissural nucleus, which
contains exclusively oxytocin neurons, thus providing further empirical
evidence for the specificity of the two antibodies.
In situ hybridization histology. Putative GABA-producing
neurons in the hypothalamus were labeled by in situ
hybridization with a nonradioactive riboprobe for glutamic acid
decarboxylase (GAD) mRNA, according to a slight modification of the
technique described by Esclapez et al. (1993) . Briefly, nonradioactive
sense and antisense RNA probes were transcribed from rat glutamic acid
decarboxylase 65 (GAD65) cDNA generously provided by Dr. A. J. Tobin
(UCLA, Los Angeles, CA). The GAD65 cDNA was inserted into the
pBluescript transcription vector (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) for
production of sense and antisense probes. The plasmids containing the
GAD65 inserts were linearized with HindIII and transcribed
with the T3 RNA polymerase in the presence of digoxygenin-11-UTP for
antisense probe production or were linearized with XbaI and
transcribed with T7 for sense probe production, according to the
prescribed methods of a nonradioactive RNA labeling kit (Boehringer
Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN). The GAD65 cDNA has been found to hybridize
selectively to a cellular mRNA of 5.7 kb (Erlander et al., 1991 ).
Slices were prepared as for electrophysiological experiments but were
fixed in MEMFA [0.1% 4-morpholinepropanesulfonic acid (MOPS), 2 mM EGTA, 1 mM MgSO4, and 3.7%
formaldehyde] at 4°C overnight. Then they were sectioned at 50 µm
on a freezing microtome and collected as free-floating sections.
Sections were rinsed three times in 0.1 M PBS with 0.1%
Tween 20 for 5 min each and pretreated with the following solutions:
once in PBS with 1 µg/ml proteinase K for 10 min, twice in 0.1 M triethanolamine for 5 min each, and once in 0.1 M triethanolamine with 5 µl of acetic acid for 10 min,
followed by two washes in PBS for 5 min each. The sections were refixed
in 4% paraformaldehyde for 20 min, rinsed four times in 0.1 M PBS for 5 min each and a fifth time with the addition of
0.5 ml of prehybridization solution, and incubated in prehybridization
solution containing 50% formamide, 5× sodium citrate solution (SSC:
150 mM NaCl and 15 mM Na citrate, pH 7.4), 5 mM EDTA, 1× Denhardt's solution, 100 µg/ml heparin,
0.1% Tween 20, 1% CHAPS, and 1 mg/ml yeast RNA. Then the sections
were incubated overnight at 60°C in the hybridization buffer,
consisting of the prehybridization solution with 1 µg/ml
digoxygenin-labeled antisense probe; digoxygenin-labeled sense probe
was used as a control. After hybridization, the sections were washed in
the prehybridization buffer for 10 min at 60°C, followed by washes in
1:1 concentrations of prehybridization buffer and 2× SSC for 10 min at
60°C, and 1:3 concentrations of prehybridization buffer and 2× SSC
for 10 min at 37°C. They were washed twice in 2× SSC for 20 min each
at 37°C and twice in 0.2× SSC for 30 min each at 60°C. Before
immunodetection of the riboprobe, the sections were washed in 3:1, 2:2,
1:3, and 0:1 concentrations of 0.2× SSC and TNT (150 mM
NaCl, 100 mM Tris HCl, and 0.1% Tween 20, pH 7.5) for 10 min each at room temperature. The RNA hybrids were labeled by a nucleic
acid detection kit (Boehringer Mannheim), consisting of a 2 hr wash in
TNT containing 0.02% blocking reagent and 20% normal sheep serum,
followed by overnight incubation in the same TNT solution containing
alkaline phosphatase-conjugated antibodies to digoxigenin at a 1:5000
dilution. After washes in TNT, the sections were treated with the
chromogen solution containing 45 µl of nitro blue tetrazolium (75 mg/ml in 70% dimethylformamide), 35 µl of 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl
phosphate (50 mg/ml in 100% dimethylformamide), and 2.4 mg of
levamisole in 10 ml of buffer (100 mM NaCl, 50 mM MgCl2, and 100 mM Tris HCl). The
sections were mounted on gelatin-coated slides, air dried, and
coverslipped in Vectashield mounting medium (Vector Labs). Labeled mRNA
was found after in situ hybridization with the antisense
probe but not after hybridization with the digoxygenin-labeled sense
riboprobe. No labeling was found when the digoxygenin-labeled probes
were omitted from the hybridization solution as a control.
Sections labeled with immunohistochemical and hybridization
histochemical methods were photographed with a 35 mm camera with 200 ASA color film or on a video camera. Images were digitized at 72-320
dpi and processed by graphics software (Adobe Photoshop, Aldus
Photostyler, and Coreldraw).
RESULTS
In total, 139 neurons were recorded in coronal (n = 36), horizontal (n = 65), and parasagittal
(n = 38) slices of the rat hypothalamic PVN. The mean
input resistance of cells recorded with patch electrodes was 662 ± 52 M (n = 20, SEM) and that of neurons recorded
with conventional microelectrodes was 279 ± 13 M
(n = 101). The mean membrane potential (uncorrected for
junction potential) was 55 ± 1 mV (n = 113),
and the mean spike amplitude (threshold to the peak) was 66 ± 1 mV (n = 107).
Electrophysiological classification
All recorded cells were classified on the basis of their intrinsic
electrical properties as putative magnocellular or putative
parvocellular neurons (Hoffman et al., 1991 ; Tasker and Dudek, 1991 ).
Thus, 48 cells were classified as putative magnocellular neurons,
because they showed evidence of a prominent transient K+
current; five of these cells were identified as putative
vasopressinergic magnocellular neurons, because they showed a phasic
bursting activity (Poulain and Wakerley, 1982 ). Ninety-one cells were
classified as putative parvocellular neurons on the basis of the
absence of a detectable transient K+ current and/or the
presence of a low threshold potential (Tasker and Dudek, 1991 ).
Anatomical identification
Of the 139 cells recorded and injected with biocytin, 53 neurons
were recovered after biocytin histochemistry and immunohistochemical
treatment with antibodies to oxytocin, vasopressin, or general
neurophysin. Among the 48 cells classified as putative magnocellular
neurons from their electrophysiology, 20 were located within the PVN
and immunohistochemically labeled for neurophysin (n = 14), oxytocin (n = 4), or vasopressin
(n = 2; Fig. 1). Of the 91 cells
classified electrophysiologically as parvocellular neurons, 25 were
located within the PVN and were neurophysin negative (Fig. 1). Three
cells classified electrophysiologically as magnocellular neurons were
neurophysin negative or negative for both oxytocin and vasopressin, and
three cells classified as parvocellular were neurophysin positive.
Although it is not possible to assign an exact success rate because of
false positive and negative immunohistochemical labeling, these data
suggest that there was a maximum margin of error of 11-13% in our
electrophysiological classification. Two putative parvocellular neurons
were neurophysin negative and located outside the PVN.
Fig. 1.
Immunohistochemical identification of neurons
recorded in the PVN. Biocytin-labeled cells were visualized under the
blue AMCA filter combination (A1, B1),
and cells stained immunohistochemically were examined under fluorescein
filters (A2, B2). The FITC fluorescence can be detected
with the blue filter combination, but the AMCA is not detectable under
the fluorescein filters. A, A PVN cell classified as a
putative parvocellular neuron on the basis of its electrical properties
was labeled with the intracellular biocytin/AMCA marker
(A1); this cell was negative for the FITC neurophysin
immunolabel (A2), confirming that it was a parvocellular
neuron. B, A PVN cell classified electrophysiologically
as a magnocellular neuron was double-labeled with the intracellular
biocytin/AMCA label (B1) and with the FITC immunolabel
for oxytocin (B2), indicating that it was an
oxytocinergic magnocellular neuron. Sections in A and
B were taken from horizontal slices.
Insets show the areas containing the biocytin-labeled
cells (arrows) enlarged twofold. 3V,
Third ventricle.
[View Larger Version of this Image (103K GIF file)]
Direct activation by glutamate
In all, 98 of 139 neurons tested with glutamate drops showed a
sustained membrane depolarization, which often generated a train of
inactivating action potentials (Tasker and Dudek, 1993 ) at one or more
application sites. Sustained depolarizations usually were observed when
the glutamate microdrops were applied in close proximity to the
recorded neurons. These depolarizations were seen in putative
magnocellular and parvocellular neurons (Tasker and Dudek, 1991 ) and
probably were attributable to the direct activation by glutamate of the
dendrites or the soma of the recorded cells.
Glutamate-evoked synaptic activation
To test the hypothesis that PVN-projecting GABA neurons are
topographically organized in perinuclear zones and that these
presynaptic zones differ for magnocellular and parvocellular neurons,
we applied glutamate microdrops (10-20 mM) around the PVN
in coronal, horizontal, and parasagittal slices. Whenever possible,
glutamate was dropped at more than one position and usually at several
positions in the slice. The spread of the glutamate microdrops on the
surface of the slice was monitored with Janus green and measured
between 200 and 250 µm in diameter. Glutamate microdrops applied at
some sites in the slice never evoked PSPs, whereas glutamate
microstimulation at other sites elicited synaptic responses in 10-60%
of the cells tested. The synaptic responses consisted of volleys of
PSPs that occurred after a latency ranging from 0.2 to 9 sec and that
lasted from 3 to 100 sec (Fig. 2).
Fig. 2.
Glutamate-evoked IPSPs. Left,
Glutamate microstimulation (GLU) at a position
ventral to the fornix elicited reversed IPSPs in a PVN parvocellular
neuron recorded with a KCl-filled microelectrode.
Middle, Bath application of the
GABAA-receptor antagonist bicuculline methiodide
(BIC) for 15 min completely blocked the effect of
glutamate microapplication at the same site and with the same
application parameters. Right, Partial recovery of the
glutamate-evoked IPSPs was seen after 25 min of washout of the
bicuculline. The membrane potential was held at 105 mV with negative
current injection.
[View Larger Version of this Image (16K GIF file)]
A total of 60 of 139 neurons tested (43%) 20 magnocellular neurons
and 40 parvocellular neurons generated PSPs at resting membrane
potential in response to glutamate microdrops applied at different
sites around the PVN. Approximately 42% of the putative magnocellular
neurons (20/48) and 44% of the putative parvocellular neurons (40/91)
tested responded synaptically to glutamate microdrops applied in one or
more positions in the slice. The synaptic responses in a total of 19 of
the 60 responsive neurons, including 8 magnocellular and 11 parvocellular, were identified positively as inhibitory by their
hyperpolarizing orientation or their sensitivity to bicuculline. The
glutamate-evoked PSPs were suppressed or blocked by bicuculline (10-50
µM) in 10 of 11 cells tested, confirming that they were
GABA-mediated IPSPs (Fig. 2).
Topographic mapping of local presynaptic neurons
A total of 12 of 36 neurons tested, 2 putative magnocellular and
10 putative parvocellular neurons, responded synaptically to glutamate
microdrops in coronal slices. Three of the responsive neurons were
verified immunohistochemically as PVN parvocellular neurons. The
glutamate-evoked PSPs were confirmed as IPSPs in six cells (Table
1). In the coronal plane, positions in which glutamate
microapplication elicited PSPs in PVN neurons were concentrated in a
region lateral to the nucleus and ventral to the fornix (Fig.
3), corresponding to the anterior hypothalamic nucleus
of Swanson (1992) .
Table 1.
Distribution of synaptic responses according to PVN cell
type, slice plane, and stimulation
site
| Plane |
Coronal
|
Horizontal
|
Parasagittal
|
| Cell
type |
Ventrolateral |
Rostral |
Lateral |
Caudal |
Rostral |
Ventral |
Caudal |
|
| Magnocellular |
2/12 |
7/21 |
2/14 |
0/9 |
3/10 |
2/7 |
8/12 |
|
|
(3) |
(1) |
|
(3) |
(1) |
(4) |
| Parvocellular |
10/24 |
17/42 |
5/28 |
3/22 |
4/14 |
4/11 |
7/13 |
|
(6) |
(3) |
(1) |
|
|
|
(1) |
| Total |
12/36 |
24/63 |
7/42 |
3/31 |
7/24 |
6/18 |
15/25 |
|
(6) |
(6) |
(2) |
|
(3) |
(1) |
(5) |
|
|
Proportions of putative magnocellular and parvocellular neurons
in the PVN that responded synaptically to glutamate microstimulation
are provided for each of the presynaptic sites of the three slice
planes. Numbers of cells responding with PSPs are greater than the
total numbers of responsive cells in the horizontal and parasagittal
planes (see text), because some cells responded to glutamate
microstimulation at more than one site. Numbers of cells in which
confirmed IPSPs were recorded are given in parentheses.
|
|
Fig. 3.
Topographic distribution of presynaptic active
zones in the coronal slice. Glutamate microstimulation at positions
lateral to the PVN and ventral to the fornix elicited an increase in
PSPs recorded in PVN neurons, shown with light and
dark gray circles. Each gray circle
represents the site at which glutamate microstimulation elicited a
synaptic response in a PVN cell. The dark gray circles
represent the sites at which the glutamate-evoked synaptic responses
were verified as inhibitory (see text). The microstimulation sites at
which no synaptic response was recorded in PVN neurons are shown with
black circles. The schematic diagram of the hypothalamus
was modified from the atlas of Swanson (1992) . AHA,
Anterior hypothalamic area; Fx, fornix;
OT, optic tract; 3V, third
ventricle.
[View Larger Version of this Image (16K GIF file)]
Neurons that expressed GAD65 mRNA were found throughout the coronal
plane of the basal forebrain that included the PVN but were
concentrated most heavily in the zona incerta and the anterior
hypothalamic area (Fig. 4A). The PVN
contained scattered GAD65 mRNA-containing neurons. A moderate density
of GAD65 mRNA-containing neurons was found in the area ventrolateral to
the PVN (Fig. 4B), corresponding to the presynaptic
inhibitory site revealed by glutamate microstimulation.
Fig. 4.
Distribution of GAD65 mRNA-containing neurons in
the coronal plane of the hypothalamus. A,
Low-magnification photomontage of a coronal section labeled with the
GAD65 riboprobe. GAD65 mRNA was expressed in neurons concentrated in
regions dorsal to the fornix (Fx), corresponding to the
zona incerta, and ventrolateral to the PVN in the anterior hypothalamic
area. Some weakly labeled neurons can be seen within the PVN, although
a greater density of labeled cells was found around the ventrolateral
edge of the nucleus. The hypothalamic region delineated by the
box represents part of the area ventrolateral to the PVN
in which glutamate microstimulation was effective at eliciting IPSPs in
PVN neurons; it is shown at higher magnification in B.
OT, Optic tract; 3V, third
ventricle.
[View Larger Version of this Image (109K GIF file)]
In horizontal slices, glutamate microdrops elicited synaptic responses
in 26 of 65 recorded neurons, of which 7 were putative magnocellular
and 19 were putative parvocellular neurons (Table 1). Synaptic
responses were elicited with glutamate microstimulation applied at
sites rostral and lateral to the PVN, flanking the fornix, as well as
at a third site caudal to the nucleus (Fig. 5). With
glutamate microapplication rostral to the PVN, 24 of 63 neurons (38%)
showed an increase in PSPs. The synaptic responses were identified as
inhibitory in six of these cells. Glutamate microapplication lateral to
the nucleus (caudal to the fornix) elicited an increase in PSPs in 7 of
42 PVN neurons (17%), six of which also were activated by glutamate
microdrops in the rostral position. Two of these responses were
confirmed as inhibitory. Glutamate microdrops applied caudal to the PVN
elicited synaptic responses in 3 of 31 neurons (10%), two of which
also responded to glutamate microapplication in the other two
positions. A total of six neurons recorded in horizontal slices
responded synaptically to glutamate microstimulation in two or more
positions. Seven responsive cells (2 magnocellular and 5 parvocellular
neurons) were identified immunohistochemically in horizontal
slices.
Fig. 5.
Topographic distribution of presynaptic active
zones in the horizontal slice. Glutamate microstimulation elicited PSPs
in PVN neurons when applied in three positions in the horizontal plane:
rostral to the PVN and to the fornix, lateral to the PVN and caudal to
the fornix, and caudal to the PVN, as shown with light
and dark gray circles. Each gray circle
represents the site at which glutamate microstimulation elicited a
synaptic response in a PVN neuron. Sites at which glutamate
microstimulation evoked synaptic responses that were confirmed as
inhibitory are shown with dark gray circles. No synaptic
responses were recorded with glutamate microstimulation in the
locations shown with black circles. Rostral is
up in this diagram. BNST, Bed nucleus of
the stria terminalis; Fx, fornix; DA,
dorsal hypothalamic area; LPO, lateral preoptic area;
MnPO, median preoptic nucleus; MPA,
medial preoptic area; Mt, mamillothalamic tract;
PH, posterior hypothalamic area; 3V,
third ventricle; VDB, vertical limb of the diagonal band
of Broca; ZI, zona incerta.
[View Larger Version of this Image (19K GIF file)]
The regions concentrating presynaptic inhibitory neurons in the
horizontal plane included the medial part of the posterior bed nucleus
of the stria terminalis, the medial preoptic area, the
striohypothalamic nucleus, and the dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus,
according to the coordinates of Paxinos and Watson (1986) . At more
ventral levels of the plane of the horizontal slice, the anterior
hypothalamic area was also part of the presynaptic inhibitory zone
(Fig. 5).
GAD65 mRNA-containing neurons were found scattered throughout the
hypothalamus, surrounding the PVN in the horizontal plane (Fig.
6). They were most concentrated in areas caudal to the
PVN, corresponding to the dorsal hypothalamic area, and rostral to the
fornix, in the medial part of the posterior bed nucleus of the stria
terminalis, the striohypothalamic nucleus, and the medial preoptic area
(Paxinos and Watson, 1986 ). These regions included the sites at which
glutamate microstimulation elicited IPSPs in PVN neurons. Very few GAD
mRNA-containing neurons were found within the PVN.
Fig. 6.
Distribution of GAD65 mRNA-containing neurons in
the horizontal plane of the hypothalamus. Low-magnification
photomontage of a horizontal section labeled with the GAD65 riboprobe
(left). GAD65 mRNA is expressed in neurons scattered
throughout the hypothalamus, including cells surrounding the PVN, which
itself is relatively devoid of GAD65 mRNA-containing cells. The sites
rostral and caudal to the fornix that were stimulated by glutamate
microdrops to elicit IPSPs in PVN neurons are represented by
boxes a and b, respectively, which are
shown at higher magnification to the right. The midline
is to the right, and rostral is up in
each photomicrograph. The calibration in b pertains to
both a and b. Fx, Fornix;
3V, third ventricle.
[View Larger Version of this Image (157K GIF file)]
In the parasagittal plane, glutamate microstimulation elicited an
increase in PSPs in 22 of 38 PVN neurons tested, of which 11 were
putative magnocellular and 11 putative parvocellular neurons (Table 1).
Glutamate microdrops evoked synaptic responses in PVN neurons when
applied in three positions caudal to the PVN, rostral to the PVN, and
at the base of the hypothalamus just dorsal to the optic chiasm (Fig.
7). Glutamate drops applied in the first position,
caudal to the PVN, generated synaptic responses in the highest
proportion of recorded neurons, 15 of 25 cells (60%). Responses in
five of these cells were identified positively as inhibitory. Glutamate
microapplication in the second position, rostral to the PVN, elicited
PSPs in 7 of 24 neurons tested (29%), four of which also were
activated by glutamate drops at the first site. The PSPs in three of
these cells were identified as IPSPs. Glutamate microapplication in the
third position, dorsal to the optic chiasm, elicited an increase in
synaptic activity in 6 of 18 cells (33%). The response in one of these
cells was confirmed as inhibitory. Glutamate elicited a synaptic
response when dropped in more than one position in a total of six
neurons. Five responsive neurons (1 magnocellular and 4 parvocellular
neurons) were identified immunohistochemically.
Fig. 7.
Topographic distribution of presynaptic active
zones in the parasagittal slice. PSPs were evoked in PVN neurons with
glutamate microstimulation in three positions in the parasagittal
plane: caudal to the PVN, rostral to the PVN, and at the base of the
hypothalamus dorsal to the optic chiasm, as shown by the
light and dark gray circles. Each
gray circle marks the spot at which glutamate
microstimulation evoked a synaptic response in a PVN neuron. The sites
at which the glutamate microdrops elicited synaptic responses
identified as IPSPs are shown by the dark gray circles.
The positions in which glutamate microdrops never elicited a synaptic
response are designated with black circles. Rostral is
to the right. AC, Anterior commissure;
DA, dorsal hypothalamic area; DMD,
dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus; Fx, fornix;
LA, lateral hypothalamus; MPA, medial
preoptic area; MS, medial septum; OX,
optic chiasm; PH, posterior hypothalamic area;
Rch, retrochiasmatic area; VMH,
ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
The caudal site, which provided the strongest projection to the PVN in
the parasagittal plane, was located in the dorsomedial hypothalamic
area. The rostral site included parts of the anterior hypothalamic
area, the striohypothalamic nucleus, and the medial part of the
posterior bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. The ventral site
included the suprachiasmatic nucleus and part of the medial preoptic
area (Fig. 7), according to the atlas of Paxinos and Watson (1986) .
In parasagittal sections of the hypothalamus, GAD65 mRNA was
expressed in cells clustered rostroventral and caudal to the PVN (Fig.
8), corresponding to the medial preoptic and the
anterior hypothalamic areas, the suprachiasmatic nucleus, and the
dorsohypothalamic area (Paxinos and Watson, 1986 ). These regions
contained the sites that responded to glutamate microdrops by
generating IPSPs in PVN neurons.
Fig. 8.
Distribution of GAD65 mRNA-containing cells in the
parasagittal plane of the hypothalamus. Shown is a photomontage at low
magnification of a parasagittal section labeled with the GAD65
riboprobe. GAD65 mRNA was expressed in cells concentrated most heavily
in areas rostral to the PVN, corresponding to the medial preoptic area
and dorsal to the optic chiasm (OX), including
the suprachiasmatic nucleus. Inset a, shown at higher
magnification to the left, represents the ventral site
at which glutamate microstimulation elicited IPSPs in PVN neurons
recorded in parasagittal slices. This site had a high density of
strongly labeled neurons. The other two sites responsive to glutamate
microstimulation caudal and ventrorostral to the PVN are designated by
boxes b and c, respectively; these sites
contained a qualitatively moderate density of GAD65 mRNA-expressing
neurons and are shown at higher magnification below
(b, c). The second site (box
b) is located in the dorsomedial hypothalamic area. The third
site (box c) includes the anterior hypothalamic and
medial preoptic areas, the striohypothalamic nucleus, and the medial
part of the posterior bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. Rostral is
to the right. AC, Anterior commissure;
OX, optic chiasm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (168K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
Glutamate microstimulation of local circuit neurons
Glutamate microapplication has been shown to stimulate local
presynaptic neurons selectively without activating axons of passage
(Goodchild et al., 1982 ; Christian and Dudek, 1988 ). Glutamate
microdrops applied directly to cells in and around the PVN cause
depolarization and repetitive action potentials (Tasker and Dudek,
1993 ). Synaptic responses in PVN neurons elicited by glutamate
microstimulation are mediated by actions at presynaptic
somatic/dendritic receptors, because they are abolished by blockade of
spike-mediated transmitter release with the voltage-gated
Na+ channel antagonist tetrodotoxin (Tasker and Dudek,
1993 ). It is unlikely that the synaptic responses to glutamate
microdrops in the present study were caused by actions at metabotropic
glutamate receptors on GABA terminals (Forsythe and Clements, 1990 ),
because activation of presynaptic metabotropic receptors in the
supraoptic nucleus (SON) results in a significant reduction
in GABA release onto magnocellular neurons (Schrader and Tasker, 1996 ).
Glutamate-evoked synaptic responses
We found that 42% of the magnocellular and 44% of the
parvocellular neurons tested in the PVN received synaptic inputs from
one or more presynaptic sites stimulated with glutamate microdrops.
This estimate of the density of local synaptic inputs to PVN neurons is
probably a conservative one, because many of the local synaptic
connections are severed by the slicing procedure and because the
glutamate microdrops were unlikely to contact all of the local
presynaptic neurons in each slice. Although not all of the synaptic
responses were identified positively as GABAergic, each of the
presynaptic sites in the three planes was found to send an inhibitory
projection to the PVN, except for the most caudal site in the
horizontal slice, which sent only a weak projection to the PVN (i.e.,
responses were detected in only 3 of 31 cells) and which probably
corresponds to the dorsal aspect of the caudal presynaptic site in the
parasagittal plane. Approximately one-third of the total synaptic
responses to glutamate microdrops were confirmed as inhibitory,
mediated by GABA release. This, too, is probably an underestimate of
the relative density of local GABAergic inputs to PVN neurons, because
many of the recordings were performed with KCl-filled microelectrodes
and synaptic responses were counted as inhibitory only if the PSPs were
blocked by bicuculline, in recordings with KCl microelectrodes, or if
they were hyperpolarizing, in patch recordings and recordings with
potassium acetate microelectrodes. The amplitudes of the PSPs in most
cells recorded with KCl-filled microelectrodes were large, suggesting
that they were reversed IPSPs (our unpublished observation). Thus the
majority of the depolarizing PSPs recorded with KCl microelectrodes
were likely to be reversed IPSPs.
Topographic mapping of local presynaptic neurons
Local synaptic inputs to PVN neurons were studied in three planes
of section coronal, horizontal and parasagittal in an attempt to
extrapolate a three-dimensional topography of the hypothalamic regions
that concentrate presynaptic inhibitory neurons. No differences were
found in the topography of presynaptic sites projecting to
magnocellular or parvocellular neurons. Based on the atlas of Paxinos
and Watson (1986) and that of Swanson (1992) , the presynaptic
inhibitory sites comprised two fairly discrete zones. The first zone
coursed laterally around the PVN from its caudal limit in the
dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus, rostrally through the anterior
hypothalamic area, the posterior bed nucleus of the stria terminalis,
and the striohypothalamic nucleus, to its rostral limit in the medial
preoptic area. A second presynaptic zone revealed by glutamate
microstimulation was located at the base of the hypothalamus just
dorsal to the optic chiasm and appeared to include the suprachiasmatic
nucleus. Figure 9 presents a theoretical diagram of
these two zones based on the rendering in three dimensions of the
topographic locations of the presynaptic sites seen in the three slice
planes. The diagram is shown to provide a qualitative rendering of the
extrapolated three-dimensional distribution of presynaptic GABA neurons
and does not take into account quantitative differences in the density
of inputs from specific sites.
Fig. 9.
Three-dimensional rendering of presynaptic active
zones. The topographic maps of presynaptic active sites in the coronal,
horizontal, and parasagittal planes were rendered to create a
qualitative schematic diagram depicting an approximated
three-dimensional topography of zones concentrating PVN-projecting GABA
neurons. The lateral sites together form a ring that courses ventrally
and laterally around the PVN, and the ventral zone is situated just
dorsal to the optic chiasm. The lateral spread of the ventral zone is
unknown, because only the parasagittal plane that included the PVN was
tested. Fx, Fornix; OT, optic tract;
OX, optic chiasm; 3V, third
ventricle.
[View Larger Version of this Image (44K GIF file)]
These data provide an electrophysiological correlate to
anatomical reports that show GABAergic projections from hypothalamic
and proximal limbic areas to the PVN. The dorsomedial, anterior
hypothalamic, and preoptic areas contain GABA-producing neurons
(Okamura et al., 1990 ) (present study), and they send projections to
the PVN (Tribollet and Dreifuss, 1981 ; Ter Horst and Luiten, 1986 ;
Larsen et al., 1994 ), some of which are GABAergic (Roland and
Sawchenko, 1993 ). The bed nucleus of the stria terminalis also
concentrates GABA-producing neurons (Cullinan et al., 1993 ) (present
study) that project to the PVN (Roland and Sawchenko, 1993 ). The bed
nucleus, in turn, seems to be an important relay in descending and
ascending pathways, because it receives projections from more distal
limbic structures (Weller and Smith, 1982 ; Cullinan et al., 1993 ;
Arluison et al., 1994 ) as well as from brainstem A1 noradrenergic
neurons (McKellar and Loewy, 1982 ; Woulfe et al., 1988 ). Furthermore,
the bed nucleus may be part of a feedback circuit to the PVN, because
it also receives peptidergic afferents from the hypothalamus (Ingram
and Moos, 1992 ; Arluison et al., 1994 ). The second presynaptic zone
seen in our experiments encompassed a region at the base of the
hypothalamus that appeared to include the suprachiasmatic nucleus.
Several studies have shown that GABA neurons exist within the
suprachiasmatic nucleus (Decavel and van den Pol, 1990 ; Okamura et al.,
1990 ) (present study) and that efferents from the suprachiasmatic
nucleus project to the PVN (Watts et al., 1987 ; Hermes and Renaud,
1993 ; Vrang et al., 1995 ). This zone also may include a region dorsal
to the optic chiasm that has been found to project to both the PVN and
the SON (Thellier et al., 1994 ).
Functional significance of local inhibitory inputs to
PVN neurons
Projections from the subiculum, the septum, and the amygdala
terminate around the PVN and, in general, do not enter the nucleus
(Silverman and Oldfield, 1984 ; Oldfield and Silverman, 1985 ; Roland and
Sawchenko, 1993 ). The perinuclear presynaptic zone revealed by our
experiments, including the dorsomedial hypothalamic and anterior
hypothalamic areas as well as portions of the medial preoptic area and
the bed nucleus, shows substantial overlap with the terminal fields of
limbic afferents. The stimulation of limbic structures inhibits
magnocellular neurosecretory cells (Negoro et al., 1973 ; Poulain et
al., 1980 ; Pittman et al., 1981 ; Saphier and Feldman, 1987 ), and
lesions of limbic structures or pathways disinhibit
corticotropin-releasing hormone cells of the PVN (Herman et al., 1992 ,
1994 ). Because principal neurons of the subiculum and other limbic
neurons release glutamate (Wallas and Fonnum, 1980), which generally
acts as an excitatory neurotransmitter, and because limbic projections
stop short of entering the PVN (Oldfield and Silverman, 1985 ), it is
likely that these structures exert their inhibitory effects via
inhibitory relay neurons located in the perinuclear zone, which feed
forward to the PVN to inhibit the activity of the PVN neurosecretory
cells. Our findings are consistent with, and provide a physiological
substrate for, a perinuclear inhibitory zone that relays information
from the limbic system to the PVN, as put forth by Roland and Sawchenko
(1993) .
We found electrophysiological evidence for inhibitory projections to
PVN magnocellular and parvocellular neurons from an area dorsal to the
optic chiasm that appeared to include the suprachiasmatic nucleus
(SCN). The functional inhibitory projections from the SCN to PVN
magnocellular and parvocellular neurons revealed in our experiments may
mediate the diurnal rhythms of these cells and the cyclic release of
PVN hormones. Further studies focusing on this circuit are required to
characterize its role in neurosecretion.
How the local inhibitory projections to the PVN revealed by glutamate
microstimulation might contribute to the periodic activation of PVN
neurosecretory neurons is not clear. One possibility is that the local
inhibitory inputs to neuroendocrine cells are tonically active and that
synchronization of electrical activity arises from the lifting of this
inhibitory tone simultaneously in all the cells of a given population.
We have observed in the PVN, and others have reported in the SON, tonic
GABA-mediated inhibitory inputs to magnocellular and parvocellular
neurons (Randle et al., 1986 ; Wuarin and Dudek, 1993 ; Moos, 1995 ), but
the gating role of these inputs in neuroendocrine pulsatility remains
to be determined (Moos, 1995 ; Voisin et al., 1995 ). A more likely
functional role of local inhibitory inputs to PVN neurons, based on the
topographic correlation between local presynaptic GABA neurons and the
perinuclear terminal fields of limbic afferents, is that of a modulator
of cyclic electrical activity. These local inhibitory circuits might,
for example, mediate the inhibitory override of neuroendocrine activity
by the activation of higher brain centers such as the limbic system.
Consistent with this hypothesis are studies showing that stimulation of
the septum inhibits the activity of PVN and SON oxytocin neurons and
reflex milk ejection (Pittman et al., 1981 ; Boudaba and Poulain, 1991 ),
whereas lesion of the septum does not change the suckling-induced
pulsatile release of oxytocin (Boudaba and Poulain, 1991 ), suggesting
that the septal input to the oxytocin neuroendocrine system has a
modulatory, rather than a gating, role in the pulsatility of oxytocin
release. Thus, local inhibitory circuits might not be critical for the
patterning of electrical activity responsible for pulsatile hormone
release, but they may modulate these patterns on the basis of the
convergence of ascending and descending sensory, emotional, and
cognitive information.
FOOTNOTES
Received May 6, 1996; revised Aug. 22, 1996; accepted Aug. 27, 1996.
This research was supported by grants from the Louisiana Board of
Regents, the National Science Foundation (IBN-9315308), and the
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NS31187). We
thank Dr. A. G. Robinson for providing us with the neurophysin
antibody, Dr. H. Gainer for the antibodies to oxytocin and vasopressin,
and Dr. A. J. Tobin for his gift of GAD cDNAs. We are grateful to Drs.
W. Armstrong, D. Poulain, D. Theodosis, and K. Muneoka for their
critical evaluation of this manuscript and to Dr. A. Fáncsik and
R. Dotson for their help with computer graphics.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Jeffrey G. Tasker, Department
of Cell and Molecular Biology, 2000 Percival Stern Hall, Tulane
University, New Orleans, LA 70118-5698.
Cherif Boudaba's permanent address: Institut des Sciences de la
Nature, USTHB, BP 39 Dar El Beida, Algiers,
Algeria.
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