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Volume 17, Number 14,
Issue of July 15, 1997
pp. 5271-5280
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
A Postsynaptic Interaction between Dopamine D1 and
NMDA Receptors Promotes Presynaptic Inhibition in the Rat Nucleus
Accumbens via Adenosine Release
Jenni Harvey and
Michael G. Lacey
Department of Pharmacology, The Medical School, University of
Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
The mechanism underlying dopamine D1
receptor-mediated attenuation of glutamatergic synaptic input to
nucleus accumbens (NAcc) neurons was investigated in slices of rat
forebrain, using whole-cell patch-clamp recording. The depression by
dopamine of EPSCs evoked by single-shock cortical stimulation was
stimulus-dependent. Synaptic activation of NMDA-type glutamate
receptors was critical for this effect, because dopamine-induced EPSC
depressions were blocked by the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist
D/L-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoate (AP5).
Application of NMDA also depressed the EPSC, and both this effect and
the dopamine depressions were blocked by the A1 receptor antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX), implicating adenosine release in the EPSC depression. A1 receptor
agonists also depressed EPSCs by a presynaptic action, causing
increased paired-pulse facilitation, but this was insensitive to AP5.
Activation of D1 receptors enhanced both postsynaptic
inward currents evoked by NMDA application and the isolated NMDA
receptor-mediated component of synaptic transmission. The biochemical
processes underlying the dopamine-induced EPSC depression did not
involve either protein kinase A or the production of cAMP and its
metabolites, because this effect was resistant to the protein kinase
inhibitors H89 and H7 and the cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase inhibitor
rolipram. We conclude that activation of postsynaptic D1
receptors enhances the synaptic activation of NMDA receptors in nucleus
accumbens neurons, thereby promoting a transsynaptic feedback
inhibition of glutamatergic synaptic transmission via release of
adenosine. Unusually for D1 receptors, this phenomenon
occurs independently of adenylyl cyclase stimulation. This process may
contribute to the locomotor stimulant action of dopaminergic agents in
the NAcc.
Key words:
Key words nucleus accumbens;
whole-cell patch-clamp recording;
rat;
brain slices;
glutamatergic synaptic transmission;
presynaptic
inhibition;
retrograde messenger;
dopamine;
adenosine;
glutamate;
dopamine D1 receptors;
NMDA receptors;
adenosine
A1 receptors;
adenylyl cyclase;
cyclic AMP;
protein kinase
A
INTRODUCTION
The ventral extension of the striatum, the nucleus
accumbens (NAcc), is a major projection field of the mesolimbic
dopamine system (Deutch and Cameron, 1992 ). NAcc neurons also receive
excitatory glutamatergic inputs primarily from cortical regions and
also from the thalamus, hippocampus, and amygdala (see Pennartz et al.,
1994 ). Because the predominant cell type, the GABA-containing medium
spiny projection neurons, are generally quiescent in nature, this
excitatory drive is extremely important for generation of outputs from
the NAcc (Pennartz et al., 1994 ; Wilson and Kawaguchi, 1996 ).
Dopamine within the NAcc has been implicated critically in promoting
locomotion (Pijnenberg and Van Rossum, 1973 ) (see also Pennartz et al.,
1994 ; Iversen, 1995 ), in motivation, behavioral drive, and reward
(Fibiger and Phillips, 1986 ; Robbins and Everitt, 1996 ), including the
behaviors associated with addictive drugs of abuse (Koob, 1992 ; Kalivas
et al., 1993 ; Wise, 1996 ), and also in the cognitive dysfunction of
schizophrenia (Iversen, 1995 ; Wan et al., 1995 ). Interactions
between dopaminergic and glutamatergic processes in the NAcc often have
been proposed to contribute to these behaviors (Kalivas et al., 1993 ;
Iversen, 1995 ; Hyman, 1996 ; Robbins and Everitt, 1996 ; Wise, 1996 ). Two
functional cellular models for such processes have emerged recently.
First, induction of gene expression in striatal neurons by the
psychomotor stimulant drug amphetamine depends on activation of both
postsynaptic dopamine D1 and NMDA-type glutamate receptors
(Konradi et al., 1996 ). Second, D1 receptor activation
enhances depolarization of striatal neurons resulting from NMDA
application (Levine et al., 1996 ). D1 receptor-stimulated adenylyl cyclase (Stoof and Kebabian, 1981 ) has been implicated in both
of these phenomena (Colwell and Levine, 1995 ; Konradi et al.,
1996 ).
Electrophysiological studies have demonstrated that activation of
D1-like receptors depresses glutamatergic synaptic input to
the NAcc (Higashi et al., 1989 ; Pennartz et al., 1992 ; Harvey and
Lacey, 1996c ; Nicola et al., 1996 ). This is thought to involve a
presynaptic mechanism, because dopamine-induced depressions are
accompanied by an increase in the degree of paired-pulse facilitation (Pennartz et al., 1992 ; Nicola et al., 1996 ) and occur in the absence
of any change in the postsynaptic cell membrane potential or
conductance (Pennartz et al., 1992 ; Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ; Nicola et
al., 1996 ) (but see Higashi et al., 1989 ). Furthermore, dopamine also
reduces the frequency, but not the amplitude, of miniature EPSCs
(Nicola et al., 1996 ). However, this dopamine-induced depression of
EPSCs does not seem to involve adenylyl cyclase stimulation (Harvey and
Lacey, 1996c ).
In contrast to these latter electrophysiological findings, anatomical
studies of the striatum provide little support for presynaptic D1 receptors but demonstrate the existence of both
postsynaptic D1 receptors (Hersch et al., 1995 ) and the
messenger RNA encoding their synthesis (Gerfen et al., 1990 ; Le Moine
and Bloch, 1995 ). We sought to resolve this discrepancy, and here we
demonstrate electrophysiologically that a postsynaptic interaction
between D1 and NMDA receptors results in liberation of a
retrograde messenger, which itself inhibits presynaptically the release
of glutamate.
Some of these results have been reported previously in abstract form
(Harvey and Lacey, 1996a ,b ).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Brain slice preparation and recording techniques.
Experiments were performed on horizontal slices of ventral
forebrain prepared from male Wistar rats 4-5 weeks of age, as
described previously (Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ). In brief, after
inhalational anesthesia (3% Fluothane) animals were decapitated and
their brains removed. Horizontal forebrain slices (350 µm thick) were
prepared at 4-10°C using a Vibroslice (Campden Instruments,
Loughborough, UK). All slices that were used contained or were within
350 µm of the dorsal or ventral extent of the anterior commissure.
Slices were maintained in the recording chamber at 32-33°C and
superfused continuously at 2-3 ml/min with artificial cerebrospinal
fluid comprising (in mM): NaCl 126, KCl 2.5, NaHCO3 26, NaHPO4 1.2, CaCl2 2.4, MgCl2 1.3, and D-glucose 10, saturated with
95% O2/5% CO2 at pH 7.4.
Recordings were obtained using the "blind" whole-cell
patch-clamp recording technique (Blanton et al., 1989 ). Recording
pipettes were positioned in the ventral portion of the nucleus
accumbens and had resistances of 5-7 M when filled with electrolyte
solution comprising (in mM): potassium gluconate 125, MgCl2 2, NaCl 10, CaCl2 1, HEPES 10, 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N ,N -tetraacetic acid
(BAPTA) 10, adenosine trisphosphate (ATP) 2, and guanosine trisphosphate (GTP) 0.3, buffered to pH 7.2-7.3 with KOH. Membrane potential and current were measured by an Axopatch-1D patch-clamp amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). Series resistance was
measured in current clamp, and after electrical compensation (by
70-85%) this ranged from 10 to 22 M . Throughout voltage-clamp recordings input resistance and whole-cell access were monitored via
voltage steps (+10 mV, 50 msec) delivered every 20 sec. Neurons that
displayed >20% change in the shape or size of capacitance transients
or input resistance (in the absence of drugs) were excluded from
analysis.
Synaptic currents were evoked by delivering single shocks (0.1 msec,
1-5 mV) every 20 sec, using a bipolar stimulating electrode positioned
300-900 µm rostral to the recording pipette, adjacent to the
cerebral cortex. To study solely the glutamate receptor-mediated excitatory postsynaptic currents (Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ), we performed all experiments in the presence of picrotoxin (50 µM) to block GABAA receptor-mediated synaptic
currents. Picrotoxin was applied within 5-10 min of obtaining the
whole-cell configuration. In all experiments cells were voltage-clamped
at between 80 and 90 mV (close to the resting membrane potential),
unless otherwise stated (i.e., when NMDA receptor-mediated excitatory
synaptic currents were studied).
Data acquisition and analysis, together with generation of voltage and
current pulses and timing of electrical stimulation, were performed by
pCLAMP software (Axon Instruments). Synaptic currents were stored as
the average of five consecutive records, and the peak amplitude of the
averaged EPSCs was measured. The percentage of depression/facilitation
induced by an agent was expressed relative to the control EPSC
amplitude averaged over the 5 min period immediately before drug
additions. Numerical data are expressed as mean ± SEM.
Statistical analyses were performed by Student's paired t
test, and all data were significantly different at p < 0.05 unless otherwise stated.
Drugs were applied directly to the superfusate in known concentrations,
reaching the recording chamber within 15 sec of switching a tap in the
perfusion line. Drugs used were 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) and D/L-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic
acid (AP5) (both from Tocris Cookson, Bristol, UK); picrotoxin,
adenosine, dopamine, NMDA, tetrodotoxin (TTX), 2-chloropentyl adenosine
(CPA), [R]-N6-(2-phenylisopropyl) adenosine
(R-PIA), and L-nitroarginine
(L-NARG) (all from Sigma, Aldrich, UK). Rolipram and
8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX) were obtained from Research
Biochemicals (Natick, MA).
RESULTS
Properties of nucleus accumbens neurons
Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were obtained from a total of
127 neurons in the ventrolateral nucleus accumbens. After the
whole-cell configuration was obtained, the membrane potential was
voltage-clamped at 90 mV to enable cell stabilization. Five minutes
later the pipette access resistance was measured and optimally compensated in current-clamp mode. Under these conditions the resting
membrane potential and input resistance of these neurons were 83 ± 1.6 mV and 108 ± 2.4 M , respectively. These characteristics correspond to those of the medium spiny projection neurons of the NAcc
(Pennartz et al., 1992 ; O'Donnell and Grace, 1993 ).
The ability of dopamine to depress EPSCs is stimulus-dependent
To test the possibility that the depressant effect of
D1 receptor activation on the EPSC was attributable to an
indirect mechanism, we first examined whether the depression of the
EPSC by dopamine required glutamatergic synaptic transmission for its
expression. Stimulation was ceased during the first 8 min of dopamine
application, which was sufficient time to observe a maximal depression
by dopamine under normal conditions of stimulation (Harvey and Lacey,
1996c ) (see also Fig. 1B). When stimulation was
resumed with dopamine still present, the EPSC amplitude was initially
the same as before the addition of dopamine but declined only on
subsequent stimulation, recovering to control levels on washout
(n = 3; Fig. 1A). Thus these data indicate that ongoing glutamatergic synaptic transmission is
required for dopamine to depress EPSCs.
Fig. 1.
The dopamine-induced depression of the EPSC is
dependent on synaptic activation of NMDA receptors. A,
Single-shock electrical stimulation (to evoke EPSCs) was stopped during
the period shown by the hatched bar, during which time
dopamine (30 µM, filled bar) was applied.
Only once stimulation was resumed did depression of EPSCs commence.
Data were pooled from three separate experiments. Each point on the
graph is the average of five consecutive records, such as those shown
below the graph (taken from a single experiment), and is
normalized with respect to the 5 min period immediately before the
addition of dopamine. B, Depression of EPSCs by dopamine was reversibly blocked by the NMDA receptor antagonist AP5 (100 µM). The plot (top panel)
illustrates data pooled from four individual neurons, and the
x-axis break, variable between experiments, represents 10-20 min. Bottom panel, Sample records from one
experiment, taken at the times indicated.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
Depression of the EPSC by dopamine is dependent on the synaptic
activation of NMDA receptors
Previous reports of a facilitatory influence of D1
receptors on NMDA responses in the dorsal striatum (Cepeda et al.,
1993 ; Colwell and Levine, 1995 ; Levine et al., 1996 ) prompted us to examine whether glutamate acting on NMDA receptors was involved in the
depressant action of dopamine. In nine cells the competitive NMDA
receptor antagonist AP5 (100 µM) reduced the depression
induced by dopamine (30 µM) from 47 ± 3.0 to
4.1 ± 1.4% in a reversible manner (Fig. 1B).
Thus the EPSC depression induced by dopamine seems to be dependent on
the synaptic activation of NMDA receptors.
Adenosine is released after activation of NMDA receptors
In support of this indication that synaptic NMDA receptors might
be involved in the depression of the EPSC, application of NMDA (20 µM) itself also reversibly depressed EPSC amplitude by 49 ± 1.9% (n = 8; Fig. 2A,B).
One possible consequence of NMDA receptor activation is the formation
of nitric oxide (NO; Schuman and Madison, 1994 ; Garthwaite and Boulton,
1995 ), which itself can promote release of a variety of neuroactive
substances in the striatum (Guevara-Guzman et al., 1994 ) and modulate
synaptic transmission in other parts of the brain by a trans-synaptic
action (see Schuman and Madison, 1994 ; Garthwaite and Boulton, 1995 ). A
role for NO was explored by examining the effect of a specific inhibitor of NO synthase, L-NARG, on the EPSC depressions
caused by NMDA application. Application of NMDA caused a depression of 49 ± 2.7% (n = 3), which was readily reversible
on washout (Fig. 2A). However, 15-20 min after the
addition of L-NARG (100 µM), the ability of
NMDA (20 µM) to depress EPSCs was unaffected (mean depression of 48 ± 3.2%; p > 0.05; Fig.
2A), which suggests that NO is not involved in this
process.
Fig. 2.
Adenosine A1 receptor activation is
required for EPSC depression by both NMDA and dopamine, indicating that
adenosine release results from NMDA receptor activation.
A, Application of NMDA caused a reversible depression of
EPSCs, but this was unaffected by the nitric oxide synthase (NOS)
inhibitor L-nitroarginine. The plot shows that NMDA (20 µM) depressed EPSCs in a reversible manner. After
perfusion of the NOS inhibitor L-nitroarginine (100 µM) for 15-20 min, reapplication of NMDA caused a
similar depression. Data were pooled from three separate experiments,
and sample records of EPSCs from one experiment are displayed
below the plot. B, The reversible
depression of EPSCs induced by NMDA (20 µM) was reduced
considerably by the A1 receptor antagonist DPCPX (200 nM), which itself increased EPSC amplitude. The plot shows
data pooled from five neurons, and the x-axis break
corresponds to 3-5 min before the addition of DPCPX. C,
DPCPX also blocks depression of EPSCs by dopamine. Dopamine (30 µM) reduced the amplitude of EPSCs, and this effect was
blocked in the presence of DPCPX (200 nM). DPCPX itself
caused a clear facilitation of EPSC amplitude. Data were pooled from
five individual neurons; the x-axis break corresponds to
3-8 min. D, The EPSC depression caused by the
A1 receptor agonist CPA (200 nM) is unaffected
by the NMDA receptor antagonist AP5 (100 µM). Data were
obtained from five experiments; the x-axis break
corresponds to 10-20 min.
[View Larger Version of this Image (26K GIF file)]
Another possible consequence of NMDA receptor activation that might
depress the EPSC is the release of adenosine. Adenosine depresses
glutamatergic synaptic transmission in many regions of the CNS (for
review, see Fredholm, 1995 ), including the NAcc (Uchimura and North,
1991 ), and it is released after NMDA receptor activation in cortical
tissue (Craig and White, 1993 ) and also in the hippocampus (Manzoni et
al., 1994 ). The effects of the selective adenosine A1
receptor antagonist DPCPX (Fredholm, 1995 ) on NMDA-induced depressions,
therefore, were examined. Application of NMDA (20 µM)
reduced the amplitude of EPSCs by 34 ± 5.7% (n = 5), which was reduced to a depression of only 4.4 ± 2.5%
(n = 5) in the presence of the DPCPX (200 nM; Fig. 2B). This suggests that NMDA
receptor activation promotes release of adenosine, which inhibits
glutamate release at this synapse via an action on A1 adenosine receptors.
Depression of the EPSC by dopamine requires activation of adenosine
A1 receptors
Because NMDA receptor activation leads to the release of
adenosine and NMDA receptor activation is critical for dopamine-induced depressions of the EPSC, we explored the possible involvement of
adenosine in this effect of dopamine, using the selective adenosine A1 receptor antagonist DPCPX. The ability of dopamine (30 µM) to depress EPSCs was reduced by DPCPX (200 nM) from a depression of 51 ± 3.5 to 2.0 ± 0.8% (n = 7; Fig. 2C). In a
further three cells, depressions induced by the selective
D1 receptor agonist SKF 38393 (10 µM) also
were reduced significantly from 47 ± 3.9 to 4.5 ± 1.3% by
DPCPX (200 nM). However, in contrast to the actions of
dopamine, the ability of the A1 receptor-selective agonist CPA (200 nM; Fredholm, 1995 ) to depress EPSCs was
unaffected by AP5 (100 µM) in all five cells tested (Fig.
2D). Therefore depression of the EPSC by
A1 receptors is itself independent from NMDA receptor activation. Taken together, these findings indicate that the ability of
dopamine to depress glutamate receptor-mediated synaptic currents in
the nucleus accumbens requires the activation of adenosine A1 as well as D1 receptors, and that activation
of NMDA receptors is a critical intermediate step for the production of
adenosine.
In all cells examined, DPCPX (200 nM) itself caused a
rapid and pronounced increase in EPSC amplitude (by 74 ± 14%,
n = 28; Figs. 2B,C, 3A,B),
which was not accompanied by any discernible change in the holding
current or membrane conductance. This effect did not reverse readily on
washout of the drug (for up to 30 min). This suggests that glutamate
receptor-mediated synaptic transmission is also subject to tonic
inhibition by endogenous adenosine, which is relieved by DPCPX.
Fig. 3.
Both endogenous and exogenous adenosine depressed
EPSCs via activation of presynaptic adenosine A1 receptors.
A, The ability of adenosine to depress EPSCs is blocked
by DPCPX (200 nM). The upper graphs are
plots of EPSC amplitude (squares, top
graph), input conductance (circles,
middle graph), and holding current (diamonds, bottom graph) during an
experiment on a single neuron, voltage-clamped at 90 mV. The
lower panel shows synaptic currents evoked at specific
points (1-5) during the same experiment. Neither the
reduction in synaptic transmission induced by adenosine nor the
enhancement by DPCPX was accompanied by any change in the holding
current or input conductance of the neuron. B,
Similarly, the selective A1 receptor agonist CPA depressed
EPSCs in a DPCPX-sensitive manner. CPA (200 nM) depressed
EPSCs (squares, top graph) in the absence
of any effect on the input conductance (circle,
middle graph) or the holding current
(diamond, bottom graph). Data were obtained from a single neuron voltage-clamped at 90 mV.
C, Paired-pulse facilitation is increased when EPSCs are
depressed by the A1 receptor agonist CPA. CPA (200 nM) produced a reversible enhancement in the paired-pulse
ratio evoked with a 50 msec interstimulus interval. The pairs of EPSCs
in the lower panel were obtained in control conditions
(1) and in the presence of 200 nM CPA
(2). In the right trace the first EPSC in
2 has been scaled to match the size of the first EPSC in
1. D, Paired-pulse facilitation is
decreased when EPSCs are facilitated by the A1 receptor
antagonist DPCPX (200 nM). Thus the depressant actions of
both endogenous and applied adenosine are attributable to a presynaptic
mechanism.
[View Larger Version of this Image (23K GIF file)]
Adenosine depresses EPSCs by activation of presynaptic adenosine
A1 receptors
The next series of experiments was aimed at establishing the site
of action of adenosine at this synapse, because adenosine seems to be
critical for dopamine- and NMDA-induced depression of the EPSC. In all
13 cells tested, application of adenosine (30-100 µM)
concentration dependently and reversibly depressed the peak amplitude
of EPSCs. At a concentration of 60 µM, adenosine depressed the EPSCs by 46 ± 4.4% (n = 7; Fig.
3A). Depressions were evident 1-2 min after
adenosine additions, were sustained for the duration of its
application, and reversed within 8-12 min of drug washout. In all 13 cells examined, adenosine caused no significant change in either the
holding current or input conductance (measured during the +10 mV
voltage step; Fig. 3A). Thus, in agreement with Uchimura and
North (1991) , adenosine (60 µM) depressed glutamatergic synaptic transmission in the nucleus accumbens in the absence of any
detectable change in the postsynaptic membrane properties of the cell
under study. Similarly, the selective adenosine A1 receptor
agonists (Fredholm, 1995 ) CPA (200 nM; Figs.
2D, 3B) and R-PIA (200 nM; data not shown) both reversibly depressed the peak
amplitude of EPSCs by 55 ± 9.4% (n = 9) and
47 ± 6.5% (n = 8), respectively, also without
any detectable change in postsynaptic membrane conductance. This effect
was evident 1-2 min after agonist application and completely reversed
10-12 min after washout. Depressions of EPSCs induced by adenosine (60 µM; n = 3), CPA (200 nM;
n = 5), and R-PIA (200 nM;
n = 3) all were blocked completely by the selective
adenosine A1 receptor antagonist DPCPX (200 nM;
Fig. 3A,B). Taken together, these data indicate that
adenosine depresses EPSCs via an action at A1
receptors.
To investigate further the locus of action of both applied and
endogenous adenosine, we used a paired-pulse stimulation protocol (50 msec interpulse interval). While reducing the amplitude of both EPSCs,
adenosine (60 µM) reversibly enhanced the ratio of the
second EPSC to the first by 32 ± 3.2% in five cells. In a further five cells CPA (200 nM) also increased the
paired-pulse ratio by 98 ± 3.2% (Fig. 3C). These
findings are consistent with a presynaptic locus for the adenosine
A1 receptors involved in depressing synaptic transmission.
Furthermore, the EPSC facilitation induced by DPCPX (200 nM) was accompanied by a decrease of 25 ± 5.1%
(n = 6) in the corresponding paired-pulse ratio (Fig.
3D), indicating that the EPSC depression attributed to
endogenous adenosine also is mediated by presynaptic A1
receptors.
Postsynaptic potentiation of NMDA currents by D1
receptor activation
Having established that synaptically activated NMDA receptors are
a critical link between the activation of D1 receptors and the release of adenosine that results in presynaptic inhibition, we
then sought to determine more directly whether dopamine could modulate
postsynaptic NMDA receptors in the NAcc. This was explored initially by
applying dopamine in conjunction with a submaximal dose of NMDA. In
three cells voltage-clamped between 80 and 90 mV, inward currents
evoked in response to application of NMDA (20 µM) were
enhanced by 60 ± 4.7% by coapplication with dopamine (30 µM). In the presence of TTX (200 nM), which
completely blocked synaptic transmission (data not shown), the
selective D1 receptor agonist SKF 38393 (10 µM) also caused an enhancement (by 71 ± 7.9%,
n = 5; Fig. 4) of NMDA receptor-mediated
inward currents that was readily reversible on washout in the three
cells examined. Thus these data indicate that dopamine acting on
D1 receptors facilitates postsynaptic NMDA
receptor-mediated currents, as shown previously in the dorsal striatum
(Cepeda et al., 1993 ; Levine et al., 1996 ).
Fig. 4.
Dopamine D1 receptor activation
enhances postsynaptic NMDA receptor-mediated inward currents
independently of synaptic transmission. A, Data pooled
from five cells showing that bath application of NMDA (20 µM) induced an inward current. When NMDA was reapplied in
the same five cells 5-10 min after application of the D1
receptor agonist SKF 38393 (10 µM), NMDA-induced currents
were enhanced. Cells were voltage-clamped at 80 to 90 mV with
tetrodotoxin (200 nM) present throughout. B,
Continuous record of membrane current from an individual neuron (1 of
the 5 in A; voltage-clamped at 90 mV) showing the
reversible enhancement of the NMDA-mediated current by SKF 38393 (10 µM).
[View Larger Version of this Image (23K GIF file)]
Dopamine enhances the NMDA receptor-mediated component of
the EPSC
To see whether dopamine could modulate NMDA-induced currents
evoked by synaptic activation, as well as those caused by NMDA application, we examined the effect of dopamine on the
pharmacologically isolated NMDA receptor-mediated component of synaptic
transmission (EPSCN). When cells were
voltage-clamped at 50 mV in the presence of CNQX (10 µM), the antagonist of AMPA-type glutamate receptors, single-shock electrical stimulation resulted in a slower synaptic current that was blocked completely by AP5 (100 µM) in
all four cells tested (Fig. 5A). In a manner
similar to its action on fast AMPA receptor-mediated synaptic currents,
dopamine (30 µM) reversibly depressed the peak amplitude
of the EPSCN by 51 ± 3.1% (n = 8; Fig. 5B). However, in the presence of DPCPX (200 nM), dopamine (30 µM) caused a clear and
readily reversible enhancement of EPSCN amplitude (by
28 ± 4.5%) in all nine cells examined (Fig. 5B). The
adenosine A1 receptor antagonist DPCPX itself caused a
rapid facilitation of the EPSCN amplitude (by 74 ± 12%, n = 9; Fig. 5B), similar to that
observed with the EPSC (e.g., Fig. 2B). These data
suggest that, in the absence of the inhibitory action of endogenous
adenosine, dopamine facilitates, rather than depresses, the isolated
NMDA receptor-mediated component of synaptic transmission. This is
likely to be attributable to a postsynaptic interaction between
D1 and NMDA receptors.
Fig. 5.
Adenosine A1 receptor blockade
prevents dopamine-mediated depression of NMDA receptor-mediated EPSCs
(EPSCN) and reveals that dopamine enhances the
EPSCN. A, The EPSCN was isolated
by application of CNQX (10 µM) to block AMPA receptors
and by voltage-clamping at 50 mV. Under these conditions the residual
component of the EPSC was blocked completely by the NMDA receptor
antagonist AP5 (100 µM). B, Top
panel, Dopamine (30 µM) reversibly reduced the EPSCN amplitude. In the presence of the A1
receptor antagonist DPCPX (200 nM), which itself increased
EPSCN amplitude, dopamine caused a clear and reversible
facilitation of the EPSCN. The plot shows data pooled from
nine cells, and the x-axis break corresponds to 3-8 min
before the addition of DPCPX. Bottom panel, Sample records from one experiment, taken at the times indicated on the plot.
[View Larger Version of this Image (19K GIF file)]
Biochemical mechanism of the depression of the EPSC
by dopamine
It is well established that striatal D1 receptors
couple to adenylyl cyclase, and their activation results in the
stimulation of cAMP formation and subsequent activation of protein
kinase A (PKA; Stoof and Kebabian, 1981 ). However, stimulation of
adenylyl cyclase with forskolin and elevation of intracellular cAMP
levels with either dibutyryl cAMP or inhibitors of cAMP-specific
phosphodiesterases such as IBMX or rolipram caused facilitation, rather
than depression, of the EPSC (Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ). Therefore we
have proposed that D1 receptor-mediated inhibition of
glutamatergic synaptic transmission in the nucleus accumbens does not
involve a cAMP-dependent process (Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ).
Furthermore, in the presence of the PKA inhibitor H-89 (1 µM), dopamine (30 µM) depressed the EPSC by
49 ± 3.3%, which was not significantly different from the
depression (48 ± 3.9%) evoked in control conditions
(n = 4; p > 0.05; Fig.
6A). H-89 (1 µM) was
clearly active in this system, however, because it prevented the
increase in EPSC amplitude by forskolin (10 µM;
n = 3; Fig. 6A). This particular
effect of forskolin has been described previously (Colwell and Levine,
1995 ; Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ) and attributed to PKA-dependent
phosphorylation of postsynaptic neostriatal AMPA receptors (Colwell and
Levine, 1995 ). Similarly, dopamine (30 µM) depressed
synaptic currents by 42 ± 3.0 and 43 ± 2.6%
(n = 3, p > 0.05) in the presence and absence of the nonselective protein kinase inhibitor H-7 (10 µM), respectively. Thus these data provide further
evidence that a PKA-independent process underlies the EPSC depression
induced by dopamine.
Fig. 6.
Dopamine depresses EPSCs independently of protein
kinase A or metabolism of cAMP. A, Dopamine-induced
depressions were unaffected by the protein kinase A inhibitor
H-89 (1 µM). However, the ability of forskolin
(10 µM) to enhance EPSCs was blocked by H-89.
The plot consists of data pooled from three cells, and the
x-axis break corresponds to 3-5 min. B,
Rolipram (10 µM), a cAMP-dependent phosphodiesterase inhibitor, failed to affect dopamine-induced depressions. The data in the plot are pooled from three cells, and the
x-axis break corresponds to 3-6 min.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
In other brain regions presynaptic inhibition of synaptic transmission
after metabotropic receptor activation has been attributed to adenosine
produced by the metabolism of cAMP by cAMP-specific phosphodiesterases
(Gereau and Conn, 1994 ; Bonci and Williams, 1996 ). If the formation of
cAMP and its subsequent metabolism was the principal biochemical
process underlying dopamine-induced depressions of the EPSC, then
rolipram, a specific inhibitor of cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase
(Beavo and Reifsnyder, 1990 ), might be expected to alter the ability of
dopamine to reduce synaptic currents. However, although rolipram (10 µM) caused a rapid enhancement in EPSC amplitude (by
26 ± 4.3%), as reported previously (Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ), it
did not alter the ability of dopamine to depress synaptic transmission
(n = 3; Fig. 6B). Moreover, when the
facilitatory action of forskolin on the EPSC was abolished completely
by H-89 (1 µM; n = 3), no other effects
of forskolin were observed (Fig. 6A), although
production of cAMP would be unimpaired under these conditions. Together
these findings do not support a role for cAMP, PKA, or a metabolite of
cAMP in the dopamine-induced depression of the EPSC.
DISCUSSION
We have shown that the depression of glutamatergic synaptic
transmission in the NAcc by dopamine involves a novel indirect process,
central to which is an interaction between D1 and NMDA receptors and subsequent adenosine release. Adenosine in turn acts as a
retrograde messenger and inhibits glutamate release via activation of
presynaptic adenosine A1 receptors (Fig. 7). This mechanism argues against the presynaptic localization of D1 receptors proposed in previous electrophysiological
studies (Pennartz et al., 1992 ; Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ; Nicola et al., 1996 ), but not the anatomical evidence for postsynaptic D1
receptors in the striatum (Hersch et al., 1995 ).
Fig. 7.
Diagram of a glutamatergic synapse onto a
dendritic spine on a medium spiny NAcc output neuron, illustrating the
processes operating to permit presynaptic modulation of glutamate
release by postsynaptic dopamine D1 receptors. Glutamate
released from the cortical afferent (left) activates
postsynaptic glutamatergic AMPA and NMDA receptors, resulting in the
EPSC. Concurrent activation of D1 receptors amplifies the
current caused by the synaptic activation of NMDA receptors, thereby
promoting release of adenosine (or a precursor) into the extracellular
space. Adenosine in turn acts on presynaptic inhibitory A1
receptors to reduce glutamate release. This sequence of events occurs
independently of adenylyl cyclase stimulation and production of cyclic
AMP.
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
A pivotal role for adenosine A1 receptors in the
presynaptic inhibition of glutamatergic synaptic transmission
EPSC depressions induced by dopamine and the selective
D1 receptor agonist SKF 38393 and also by NMDA were
abolished by the A1 receptor antagonist DPCPX. In agreement
with a previous report (Uchimura and North, 1991 ), adenosine reversibly
depressed excitatory synaptic transmission in the NAcc in all cells
examined. This was attributable to activation of A1
receptors, because the selective adenosine A1 receptor
agonists CPA and R-PIA both mimicked the actions of
adenosine, and DPCPX, a specific adenosine A1 receptor antagonist, completely blocked depressions induced by all the A1 receptor agonists.
In agreement with Uchimura and North (1991) , A1 receptor
agonists at concentrations capable of depressing EPSCs had no
discernible effect on the postsynaptic membrane properties (holding
current or input conductance) of NAcc neurons. In addition, depressions induced by adenosine and CPA were accompanied by an increase in the
paired-pulse ratio, whereas a reduction in the degree of paired-pulse facilitation accompanied the EPSC augmentation induced by DPCPX. These
changes in paired-pulse ratio indicate a presynaptic locus for the
A1 receptors regulating glutamatergic synaptic transmission in the NAcc. Although A1 receptor mRNA has been located in
a minority of striatal neurons (Ferré et al., 1996 ), postsynaptic
A1 receptors play no obvious role in the effects of
adenosine, NMDA, and dopamine described here. Thus glutamate release is
likely to be inhibited presynaptically not by D1 receptors,
but by A1 receptors, which are activated indirectly by
dopamine.
NMDA receptor activation is critical for the effect
of dopamine
Synaptic activation of NMDA receptors is critical for
dopamine-induced EPSC depressions, because the ability of dopamine to depress glutamatergic EPSCs is both stimulus-dependent and blocked by
the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist AP5. Thus it follows that
there must be significant activation of NMDA receptors in the presence
of dopamine, although NMDA receptors apparently contribute little to
the EPSC (Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ) (see also Figs.
1B, 2D). However, glutamatergic
synaptic potentials (EPSPs) in NAcc neurons do exhibit an NMDA
component (Martin et al., 1997 ), particularly at membrane potentials
less negative to 80 mV. Therefore a significant activation of
synaptic NMDA receptors in neurons other than the (voltage-clamped)
cell under study probably occurs under our experimental conditions. The
postsynaptic facilitatory interaction between D1 and NMDA
receptors was demonstrated by the potentiation by dopamine and the
selective D1 receptor agonist SKF 38393 of inward currents
evoked by applied NMDA and also was demonstrable on the EPSCN. Similar findings have been reported in dorsal
striatal neurons (Cepeda et al., 1993 ; Colwell and Levine, 1995 ; Levine et al., 1996 ), and they also resemble in some respects the augmentation of the EPSPN in NAcc by µ-opioid receptor agonists
(Martin et al., 1997 ). This postsynaptic D1/NMDA
receptor interaction in medium spiny projection neurons constitutes an
attractive candidate mechanism for promoting the EPSC depression.
NMDA itself, as well as D1 receptor agonists, depressed
EPSCs in a DPCPX-sensitive manner, also supporting a role for NMDA receptors "downstream" of the D1 receptor. In the
absence of dopamine, NMDA receptor-dependent release of adenosine
during single-shock stimulation seems not to occur, because AP5 does
not alter the EPSC amplitude (Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ). However, higher
frequencies of stimulation, which probably lead to greater NMDA
receptor activation, do induce a short-term A1
receptor-dependent depression of glutamatergic synaptic transmission in
the dorsal striatum (Lovinger and Choi, 1995 ). A similar phenomenon,
attributable to NMDA receptor-dependent adenosine release, occurs in
the hippocampus (Manzoni et al., 1994 ). In the NAcc, dopamine seems to
enhance sufficiently the level of NMDA receptor activation during
single-shock stimulation to promote the release of adenosine.
Release of adenosine after NMDA receptor activation
The precise mechanism whereby extracellular adenosine levels
become raised by NMDA receptor activation is unclear. In slices of
cortical tissue NMDA causes Ca2+-dependent release
of a substrate for ecto-5 -nucleotidase, which then is converted to
adenosine (Craig and White, 1993 ). The inhibitory tone revealed by the
EPSC enhancement by DPCPX is unlikely to be NMDA receptor-dependent,
however, because AP5 was without effect on EPSC amplitude. Because
adenosine may be extruded actively from neurons (Brundege and
Dunwiddie, 1996 ) and formed from a variety of precursors, including
ATP, which may itself be released by electrical stimulation (Hamann and
Attwell, 1996 ), there are several possible sources for this endogenous
adenosine tone.
Biochemical mechanism coupling D1 receptors to
depression of the EPSC
We have found no evidence to suggest that the D1
receptor-mediated attenuation of EPSCs involves a cAMP- or
PKA-dependent process or requires metabolism of cAMP to adenosine
(Harvey and Lacey, 1996c ; present study). This perhaps is unexpected,
given the considerable evidence for D1 receptor-stimulated
adenylyl cyclase in striatum (Stoof and Kebabian, 1981 ). Indeed, the
observation that forskolin potentiates both NMDA and AMPA
receptor-mediated depolarizations and excitatory synaptic potentials in
the neostriatum (Colwell and Levine, 1995 ) certainly suggests a
possible role for D1-stimulated adenylyl cyclase in the
NAcc. Nonetheless, although we also observed a PKA-dependent
augmentation of the EPSC with forskolin, this was not observed with
dopamine, even when feedback inhibition was blocked by DPCPX.
Therefore, although regulation of postsynaptic striatal glutamate
receptors via PKA may indeed be possible, any stimulation of adenylyl
cyclase resulting from D1 receptor activation was without
effect in our experimental paradigm. The effects of dopamine we did
observe, which most likely stem from the enhancement of NMDA receptor
currents, must arise from a PKA-independent mechanism.
Several recent reports point to the possibility of NMDA current
enhancement by neurotransmitter receptors coupled to phospholipase C
(PLC; Ben-Ari et al., 1992 ; Markram and Segal, 1992 ; Harvey and
Collingridge, 1993 ; Rahman and Neuman, 1996 ; Pisani et al., 1997 ). PLC
activation by D1-like receptors has been reported in the
striatum (Mahan et al., 1990 ; Wang et al., 1995 ), renal tissue (Felder
et al., 1993 ; Yu et al., 1995 ), and retinal cells (Rodrigues and
Dowling, 1990 ), and this may underlie the dopamine-induced enhancement
of NMDA currents in dorsal and ventral striatum (Cepeda et al., 1993 ;
Levine et al., 1996 ; present study). Alternatively, production of
arachidonic acid, also associated with D1 receptor activation (Piomelli et al., 1991 ), may increase NMDA-induced currents
(Miller et al., 1992 ).
Physiological and behavioral significance
D1 receptor activation can induce expression of
immediate-early genes in the striatum and nucleus accumbens via NMDA
receptor-dependent means (Keefe and Gerfen, 1996 ; Konradi et al., 1996 ;
Wang and McGinty, 1996 ), and this may contribute to the long-term
plastic changes underlying the behavioral sensitization and dependence associated with addictive drugs (Hyman, 1996 ). However, because these
processes involve D1 receptor-stimulated adenylyl cyclase and cAMP-dependent phosphorylation, the effects observed in this study
may not be related to these behavioral changes.
Postsynaptic NMDA receptors contribute significantly to the regulation
of synaptic strength within the NAcc and also play a role in the direct
excitation of projection neurons. Although coincident activation of
D1 and NMDA receptors serves initially to enable this
process, it is limited subsequently by the reduction in glutamate
release resulting from the retrograde action of adenosine. However,
because inhibitory GABAergic synaptic transmission in NAcc, which is
driven at least partly by glutamatergic synaptic input onto intrinsic
GABAergic NAcc neurons, also is depressed by D1 receptor
activation (Pennartz et al., 1992 ), the net effect of dopamine on the
synaptic drive onto NAcc neurons is harder to evaluate. Perhaps because
of this, the present findings are not integrated easily with behavioral
studies of dopamine/glutamate interactions in NAcc.
Intra-accumbal NMDA receptor antagonists block the orofacial stereotypy
(Kelley and Delfs, 1994 ) and locomotor activity (Pulvirenti et al.,
1991 ; Burns et al., 1994 ) produced by dopa-minergic drugs, mirroring the D1/NMDA receptor interaction observed
in this study. In contrast, NMDA receptor antagonists in the NAcc mimic
dopaminergic function in reward (Carlezon and Wise, 1996 ). Moreover,
although dopamine receptor antagonists in the NAcc may be beneficial in schizophrenia (Wan et al., 1995 ), NMDA receptor antagonists tend to
promote psychosis (see Iversen, 1995 ). Indeed, glutamate receptor agonists, rather than antagonists, have been suggested as an
alternative therapy to dopamine receptor antagonists in the treatment
of schizophrenia (Carlsson and Carlsson, 1990 ). Clearly, our
understanding of how regulation of NAcc neurons might influence
behavior is incomplete (see Pennartz et al., 1994 ). However, the
present cellular and molecular model of an interaction between
dopaminergic and glutamatergic neurotransmission in the NAcc, which
contains both synergistic and antagonistic components, begins to
account for such interactions observed in behavioral studies.
FOOTNOTES
Received March 12, 1997; revised April 17, 1997; accepted April 24, 1997.
We are grateful to the Medical Research Council (Grant G9208513) and to
Glaxo-Wellcome Research and Development, Greenford, UK, for financial
support.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Michael G. Lacey, Department
of Pharmacology, The Medical School, University of Birmingham, Vincent
Drive, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK.
Dr. Harvey's present address: Department of Biomedical Sciences,
Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Foresterhill, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, Scotland, UK.
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