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Volume 17, Number 16,
Issue of August 15, 1997
pp. 6179-6188
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Global Ischemia Induces Downregulation of Glur2 mRNA and
Increases AMPA Receptor-Mediated Ca2+ Influx in Hippocampal
CA1 Neurons of Gerbil
Jan A. Gorter1,
Jeffrey
J. Petrozzino2,
Eleonora M. Aronica1,
Daniel M. Rosenbaum1,
Thoralf Opitz1,
Michael V. L. Bennett1,
John A. Connor2, and
R. Suzanne Zukin1
1 Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College
of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461, and 2 Roche Institute
of Molecular Biology, Roche Research Center, Nutley, New Jersey 07110
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Transient, severe forebrain or global ischemia leads to delayed
cell death of pyramidal neurons in the hippocampal CA1. The precise
molecular mechanisms underlying neuronal cell death after global
ischemia are as yet unknown. Glutamate receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx is thought to play a critical role in
this cell death. In situ hybridization revealed that the
expression of mRNA encoding GluR2 (the subunit that limits
Ca2+ permeability of AMPA-type glutamate receptors)
was markedly and specifically reduced in gerbil CA1 pyramidal neurons
after global ischemia but before the onset of neurodegeneration. To
determine whether the change in GluR2 expression is functionally
significant, we examined the AMPA receptor-mediated rise in cytoplasmic
free Ca2+ level
([Ca2+]i) in individual CA1
pyramidal neurons by optical imaging with the Ca2+
indicator dye fura-2 and by intracellular recording. Seventy-two hours
after ischemia, CA1 neurons that retained the ability to fire action
potentials exhibited a greatly enhanced AMPA-elicited rise in
[Ca2+]i. Basal
[Ca2+]i in these neurons was
unchanged. These findings provide evidence for Ca2+
entry directly through AMPA receptors in pyramidal neurons destined to
die. Downregulation of GluR2 gene expression and an increase in
Ca2+ influx through AMPA receptors in response to
endogenous glutamate are likely to contribute to the delayed neuronal
death after global ischemia.
Key words:
global ischemia;
glutamate receptor regulation;
AMPA
receptor;
GluR2;
GluRB;
hippocampus;
CA1;
intracellular calcium;
intracellular recording;
neurodegeneration;
delayed neurodegeneration;
optical imaging;
gerbil
INTRODUCTION
Transient, severe global ischemia,
occurring during cardiorespiratory arrest in patients or experimentally
in animals, induces selective and delayed neuronal cell death (for
review, see Schmidt-Kastner and Freund, 1991 ). Pyramidal neurons in the
CA1 region of the hippocampus and some types of hilar neurons are
particularly vulnerable and die after global ischemia (Kirino, 1982 ;
Pulsinelli et al., 1982 ; Hsu and Buzsaki, 1993 ). In rats, cell loss is
not prominent until 2-3 d after induction of ischemia (Pulsinelli et
al., 1982 ). A rise in [Ca2+]i is
thought to initiate a cascade of events leading to cell death,
including activation of proteases and endonucleases, generation of free
radicals that destroy cell membranes by lipid peroxidation, and
induction of apoptosis (for review, see Rothman and Olney, 1986 ; Choi,
1990 , 1995 ; Puttfarcken et al., 1993 ; Bredesen, 1995 ; Meldrum,
1995 ).
Although AMPA receptors were initially thought to be relatively
impermeable to Ca2+, it is now clear that there are
also AMPA receptors exhibiting considerable Ca2+
permeability. AMPA receptors containing the GluR2 subunit exhibit low
Ca2+ permeability, whereas AMPA receptors lacking
GluR2 are much more Ca2+ permeable (Hollmann et al.,
1991 ; Hume et al., 1991 ; Burnashev, 1996 ). AMPA receptors in most
principal neurons of adult hippocampus are heteromeric, contain GluR2,
and have a low permeability to Ca2+ (Bochet et al.,
1994 ; Jonas et al., 1994 ; Geiger et al., 1995 ). GluR2-lacking,
relatively Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors have
recently been implicated in the pathogenesis of neuronal degeneration
after global ischemia. In rats, global ischemia leads to reduced
expression of GluR2 mRNA in vulnerable pyramidal neurons of the
hippocampal CA1 before the delayed cell death (Pellegrini-Giampietro et
al., 1992a ; Pollard et al., 1993 ); this reduction would lead to
increased formation of Ca2+-permeable AMPA
receptors. After ischemia, AMPA receptor-mediated EPSCs at the
CA1-Schaffer collateral synapse are enhanced and increased in
sensitivity to Joro spider toxin and 1-acetyl naphthyl spermine
(Tsubokawa et al., 1995 ), channel blockers selective for GluR2-lacking,
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors (Blaschke et al.,
1993 ; Herlitze et al., 1993 ). Administration of the AMPA and kainate
receptor antagonist 2,3-dihydroxy-6-nitro-7-sulfamoylbenzo(f)quinoxaline
(NBQX) protects CA1 neurons in animal models of global ischemia
(Sheardown et al., 1990 ; Buchan et al., 1991 ); protection is observed
even when NBQX is administered 16-24 hr after ischemia (Sheardown et
al., 1993 ). Neuroprotection by NBQX implicates AMPA and/or kainate receptors in delayed neuronal death but does not distinguish between more and less of the Ca2+-permeable receptors.
Taken together, the data suggest that the "switching off" of GluR2
expression in CA1 after an ischemic insult is translated into the
formation of new AMPA receptors lacking the GluR2 subunit. This change
in receptor composition increases AMPA receptor-mediated Ca2+ entry in response to endogenous glutamate and
enhances glutamate pathogenicity in this region (the GluR2
hypothesis; Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997 ).
The present study was performed in gerbils to test whether the change
in AMPA receptor expression enhances AMPA receptor-gated Ca2+ entry into CA1 pyramidal neurons. We first show
by in situ hybridization that global ischemia in gerbils, as
in rats, leads to a reduction in GluR2 mRNA in these neurons. We then
show by intracellular recording and optical imaging of fura-2-injected
CA1 neurons that Ca2+ influx through AMPA receptors
is increased after global ischemia. The changes in GluR2 mRNA
expression and AMPA receptor function precede neuronal death. These
findings indicate that Ca2+ influx through AMPA
receptors lacking the GluR2 subunit may be an important factor
contributing to delayed neurodegeneration after global ischemia.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Global ischemia in the gerbil
Global ischemia in the gerbil was produced by temporary
bilateral occlusion of the carotid arteries. Adult male Mongolian gerbils (Tumblebrook Farms), weighing between 60 and 80 gm, were fasted
overnight and anesthetized with intraperitoneal ketamine (100 mg/kg)
and xylazine (6 mg/kg). The carotid arteries were occluded with
nontraumatic aneurism clips and released after 5 min to allow cerebral
reperfusion. Body temperature was maintained close to 37.5°C with a
rectal thermistor and heat lamp until thermoregulation recovered.
Control gerbils were sham-operated and sacrificed 48 or 72 hr
later.
Histological analysis
Neuronal damage was monitored in the hippocampus by histological
examination at various time points after ischemia. Animals were
anesthetized and decapitated. The brains were then rapidly removed and
placed into ice-cold PBS. Both hippocampi were dissected out and cut
into 1-mm-thick transverse slices with a McIlwain tissue chopper. These
slices were placed immediately into ice-cold fixative (2.5%
glutaraldehyde and 4% formaldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4). After fixation at 4°C overnight, the tissue was osmicated (2% OsO4 in 0.1 M sodium
cacodylate buffer, pH 7.4, for 2 hr), dehydrated, and embedded in
Eponate 12 resin (Ted Pella Inc., Redding, CA). Two micrometer sections
were cut and stained with toluidine blue. In addition, emulsion-dipped sections after hybridization were counterstained with hematoxylin and
eosin, dehydrated in graded ethanols, cleared, and coverslipped.
In situ hybridization
Preparation of probes. 35S-Uridine
triphosphate (UTP)-labeled RNA probes were transcribed from GluR1,
GluR2 (AMPA receptor), and NR1 (NMDA receptor) subunit cDNAs with a
Stratagene (La Jolla, CA) transcription kit. cDNA templates were
incubated (1 hr, 37°C) with the appropriate polymerase (T7 for GluR1
and GluR2, T3 for NR1) and with labeled and unlabeled nucleotides. RNA
probes were purified by phenol and chloroform extraction.
Hybridization. Glutamate receptor mRNA expression was
measured by in situ hybridization on brain sections of
control and ischemic gerbils by a modification of the method of
Pellegrini-Giampietro et al. (1991) . In brief, coronal sections (20 µm) of brains from control (n = 6) and from 24 hr
(n = 4), 48 hr (n = 8), and 72 hr
(n = 4) ischemic gerbils were hybridized with
35S-UTP-labeled RNA probes directed against the GluR1,
GluR2, and NR1 subunit cDNAs. Before application of an RNA probe,
sections were subjected to acetylation and were incubated (2 hr at
50°C) with 100 µl of prehybridization solution. For hybridization,
slides were incubated overnight at 50°C with the
35S-labeled RNA probe (106 cpm/section,
1 ng/µl). Sections were treated with RNase A (20 µg/ml) and
dehydrated in ethanol. Slides were apposed to Kodak XAR-5 film (24-72
hr) or, for higher resolution studies, dipped in photographic emulsion
(Kodak NTB-2) and exposed for 1-4 weeks. The anatomy of brain images
from autoradiographs and from hematoxylin and eosin sections was
assessed using the atlas of Paxinos and Watson (1991) . Photomicrographs
were obtained using a Nikon microscope and bright-field optics.
Signal specificity. Signal specificity was assessed by
competition experiments in which radiolabeled probes were hybridized to
sections in the presence of excess (100-fold) levels of the same
unlabeled probe. This procedure resulted in virtually blank autoradiograms. In separate control studies, labeling by sense RNA
probes or by antisense probes to sections pretreated with RNase A (100 µg/ml) showed no detectable labeling. Conditions were of sufficiently
high stringency as to rule out cross-hybridization among GluR1, GluR2,
and GluR3 (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1991 ), and more distantly
related glutamate receptor subunits (GluR5-GluR7, KA1, KA2). The GluR1
and GluR2 probes are "pan" probes (Sommer et al., 1990 ) in that
they label both "flip" and "flop" splice variants. The NR1
probe is a pan probe in that it labels all eight splice variants; NR1
shares <20% sequence identity with NR2A-NR2C (Kutsuwada et al.,
1992 ; Monyer et al., 1992 ) and is therefore unlikely to cross-react
with mRNAs encoding NR2 subunits.
Quantitation and statistical analysis. For quantification of
mRNA expression levels, autoradiograms were analyzed with a Molecular Dynamics (Sunnyvale, CA) 300A Computing Densitometer equipped with the
National Institutes of Health IMAGE program. Film images were scanned
at 2000 dpi resolution, and images of each section (~1 × 106 pixels) were created. Mean optical densities in
regions of maximal labeling of individual hippocampal subfields were
averaged from a minimum of two sections from each animal for each
probe, and film background was subtracted. Optical density values were
expressed as grand means (±SEM) of individual means from three to
eight gerbils per postischemic group. To enable comparisons between groups for any given probe, brain sections were cut from control and
postischemic gerbils in the same experimental session, incubated the
sections with the same solutions of RNA probes on the same day, and
apposed the sections to the same sheet of film.
Mean optical density readings were statistically analyzed by Student's
unpaired t test. The percent change in optical density for
postischemic gerbils was expressed relative to optical density values
for the corresponding regions of the control gerbil hippocampus on the
same film. The rationale of the quantitative analysis was based on the
following considerations: (1) optical density readings taken from each
region of interest varied little in different sections from the same
animals; (2) the concentration of RNA probe used
(106 cpm/section) produced saturating levels of
hybridization and the maximal signal-to-noise ratio for the probes used
(Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1991 ); and (3) use of
35S-UTP-labeled brain paste standards indicated that
exposure times were in the linear response range of the film
(Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1991 ).
Ca2+ imaging and intracellular recording
Electrophysiology. For electrophysiological and
Ca2+-imaging experiments, gerbils were decapitated
48 hr (n = 6) or 72 hr (n = 7) after
ischemia. Control gerbils were sham-operated and decapitated 48 or 72 hr later (n = 6). Three unoperated animals did not
differ from sham-operated animals, and data from these animals were
pooled. Experiments were performed on transverse vibratome slices of
gerbil dorsal hippocampus (300 µm). After preparation, slices were
placed in a slice chamber and allowed to recover for at least 1 hr in an extracellular solution containing 124 mM NaCl, 2.0 mM KCl, 3 mM MgSO4, 3 mM CaCl2, 18 mM
NaHCO3, 1.24 mM
KH2PO4, 10 mM
D-glucose, and 50 µM picrotoxin. Recordings
were performed at room temperature in an interface recording
configuration with a humidified atmosphere consisting of 95%
O2/5% CO2. CA1 pyramidal neurons were
impaled with sharp microelectrodes containing a solution of 10 mM fura-2 (potassium salt; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) in
1.5 M CsCl in the tip and a backfill solution of 3 M CsCl. Electrode resistance was ~200 M initially and
dropped to 60-80 M over ~20 min as the electrode solutions
equilibrated. CA1 neurons were loaded with fura-2 by passing steady
hyperpolarizing current (0.5-1.0 nA) and loaded with
Cs+ by passing depolarizing pulses (100-200 msec,
0.2-0.7 nA, every 10 sec for 10 min). Final intracellular
concentrations of fura-2 were 0.2-0.3 mM (Petrozzino et
al., 1995 ). Cells were voltage-clamped in the discontinuous single
electrode mode of an Axoclamp-2A (Axon Instruments, Burlingame, CA)
with a switching frequency of 2-5 kHz. Details of the procedure are
given in Results.
Imaging. Cells were imaged from the top surface of the slice
by means of an upright microscope (Zeiss Axioskop) and a 20× dry
objective (Zeiss). A charge-coupled device camera system (series 200;
Photometrics Ltd., Tucson, AZ) was used to acquire digitized images of
fura-2 fluorescence as described previously (Muller and Connor, 1991 ).
The camera was operated in frame transfer mode. Image pairs were
acquired using 350 and 380 nm excitation wavelengths. Exposure times
for single frames were 100-200 msec. Image pairs were acquired every
30 sec. [Ca2+]i was calculated from
image pairs by the ratio method (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985 ).
Fluorescence data were background corrected before construction of
ratio images. [Ca2+]i before, during,
and after AMPA receptor stimulation compared using the Student's
unpaired t test.
RESULTS
Global ischemia induces selective, delayed neurodegeneration
To assess neuronal loss after induction of global ischemia in
gerbils, we subjected brain sections of experimental and control animals to histological analysis. Toluidine blue-stained sections at
the level of the hippocampus revealed no detectable cell loss 24 hr
(data not shown) or 72 hr after induction of global ischemia (Fig.
1A-D). In
contrast, analysis of brain sections taken from animals 1 week after
ischemia revealed virtually complete loss of neurons in the pyramidal
cell layer of the hippocampal CA1 (Fig.
1E,F). Only a few surviving
neurons remained, and these may also have been deteriorating. The
hippocampal CA3 and dentate gyrus exhibited no detectable cell loss
(data not shown). These data confirm those of Kirino (1982) and Kirino
and Sano (1984) .
Fig. 1.
Global ischemia induces selective, delayed
neuronal cell loss in the hippocampal CA1. Toluidine blue labeling of
coronal brain sections at the level of the dorsal hippocampus from
control (A, B) and experimental
(C, D) gerbils revealed no detectable
neuronal damage 72 hr after transient global ischemia. Global ischemia was induced by two-vessel occlusion as described in Materials and
Methods. One week after ischemia, the pyramidal cell layer of the
hippocampal CA1 exhibited virtually complete loss of neurons with only
a few apparent survivors that may also have been deteriorating (E, F). A,
C, E, lower magnification than in
B, D, F. Scale bars: E, 100 µm; F, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (109K GIF file)]
GluR2 mRNA is decreased in CA1 after transient global ischemia
To examine patterns of glutamate receptor mRNA expression in
adult gerbil brain, we performed in situ hybridization with
riboprobes specific for GluR1, GluR2, and NR1 mRNAs. Autoradiograms of
coronal sections of control gerbil brain at the level of the dorsal
hippocampus showed that all three transcripts were expressed at high
levels in the pyramidal cell layer of CA1 and CA3 and in the granule cell layer of the dentate gyrus (Fig. 2,
left panel).
Fig. 2.
Expression of GluR2 mRNA is reduced specifically
in CA1 after ischemia. Photomicrographs of autoradiograms of GluR1,
GluR2, and NR1 mRNA in situ hybridization in coronal
sections of gerbil brain at the level of the dorsal hippocampus from
control animals (A, C, E)
and from experimental animals 72 hr after ischemia (B, D, F) are shown. GluR2 mRNA was
dramatically reduced in the pyramidal cell layer of the vulnerable CA1
but not in the pyramidal cell layer of CA3 or in the granule cell layer
of the dentate gyrus, areas that do not undergo neurodegeneration.
GluR1 and NR1 mRNAs were somewhat reduced in CA1 72 hr after
ischemia.
[View Larger Version of this Image (96K GIF file)]
Twenty-four hours after a 5 min period of global ischemia, GluR2
mRNA expression was significantly reduced in the CA1 pyramidal layer,
to 85 ± 2% of control GluR2 expression. Forty-eight and 72 hr
after ischemia, GluR2 mRNA expression was markedly reduced in CA1, to
48 ± 6 and 17 ± 10% of the control value, respectively (Figs. 3,
4A). Expression of
GluR1 and NR1 mRNAs was unchanged at 24 hr and exhibited only modest
decreases, to 87 ± 5 and 93 ± 5% of the control value,
respectively, at 48 hr in CA1 (Fig. 4A). Seventy-two
hours after ischemia, the reduction in GluR1 and NR1 was to
approximately half of the control value, to 45 ± 4 and 54 ± 3%, respectively (p < 0.01; Fig.
4A). The ratio of GluR2 to GluR1 mRNA expression in a
given region may be a predictor of the fraction of receptors that are
Ca2+ permeable (for review, see
Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992b ; Burnashev, 1996 ). This ratio
declined steadily to approximately one-third of the control value by 72 hr in CA1 (Fig. 4B). In other subfields of the
hippocampus that do not undergo neurodegeneration, CA3 pyramidal cells
and dentate gyrus granule cells, glutamate receptor mRNA expression
showed little change. Seventy-two hours after ischemia, GluR1 and GluR2
mRNAs were both decreased by ~15% in CA3 (p < 0.01) and were not significantly changed in dentate gyrus (decreased
by ~1.5%; p > 0.05). In the two regions, the ratio
of GluR2 to GluR1 mRNAs was unchanged relative to control values (Fig.
4B). No changes in expression of glutamate receptor mRNAs were noted in other areas of the brain.
Fig. 3.
Progressive decrease of GluR2 mRNA expression in
the hippocampal CA1 after global ischemia. A-D,
Expression of GluR2 mRNA in the pyramidal cell layer of the hippocampal
CA1 decreased with time after ischemia. Expression of GluR2 mRNA was
little changed in CA3 and dentate gyrus. Autoradiograms are described
in Figure 2.
[View Larger Version of this Image (27K GIF file)]
Fig. 4.
Time course of reduction in GluR2 mRNA expression
in the CA1 pyramidal cell layer after ischemia. Glutamate receptor mRNA expression at the level of the hippocampus was measured as mean optical
density within regions of interest in film autoradiograms from
experimental and control animals. A, Values for GluR1,
GluR2, and NR1 mRNA expression in CA1 of animals 24, 48, and 72 hr
after ischemia are plotted as percent ± SEMs of the corresponding
values for control animals. Twenty-four hours after ischemia, GluR2
mRNA expression was decreased relative to the corresponding control value; the reduction in GluR2 was significantly greater than the reduction in GluR1 (p < 0.01) and NR1
(p < 0.01) mRNA expression. At 48 hr GluR2
had decreased to 48 ± 6% of the corresponding control value;
GluR1 and NR1 were only slightly decreased. Seventy-two hours after
ischemia, GluR1 and NR1 were decreased to 45 ± 4 and 54 ± 3%, respectively, of control values; GluR2 was decreased to 17 ± 10% of control values (*p < 0.01 for each mRNA).
Numbers of animals in each group are indicated in
parentheses. B, Ratios of GluR2 to GluR1
mRNA expression in the hippocampal CA1, CA3, and dentate gyrus
(DG) 24, 48, and 72 hr after ischemia are normalized to
the control values. In CA1, the normalized ratio decreased progressively to 0.38 at 72 hr (asterisks indicate
significance). In CA3 and dentate gyrus, the ratio remained
constant.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
Ischemia-induced changes in GluR2 mRNA expression are specific to
CA1 pyramidal neurons
To examine AMPA receptor mRNA expression in individual
pyramidal neurons, we performed microscopic examination of
emulsion-dipped sections of postischemic and control gerbil brain. In
control sections, labeling with an RNA probe directed to GluR2 mRNA
revealed dense clusters of hybridization grains overlying individual
neurons in CA1 (Fig. 5A), CA3,
and dentate gyrus (data not shown). Seventy-two hours after ischemia,
sections labeled with the GluR2 RNA probe revealed a reduced density of
hybridization grains overlying individual CA1 pyramidal cells,
indicative of decreased RNA expression per neuron (Fig.
5B).
Fig. 5.
Changes in GluR2 mRNA expression are
cell-specific. Emulsion-dipped coronal sections of the hippocampus from
control and experimental animals 72 hr after ischemia show silver
grains densely clustered over CA1 pyramidal neurons. A,
Sections of control brain revealed dense clusters of silver grains
overlying individual pyramidal neurons in the CA1; virtually all
neurons in the field exhibited intense labeling. B,
Seventy-two hours after ischemia, GluR2 labeling was dramatically
reduced for all CA1 neurons. Sections were counterstained with
hematoxylin and eosin. Arrows indicate representative
pyramidal neurons. At this time, histological analysis showed no cell
loss (see Fig. 1).
[View Larger Version of this Image (71K GIF file)]
Global ischemia increases the AMPA receptor-mediated rise in
[Ca2+]i in CA1 pyramidal neurons
To test whether transient global ischemia alters basal
[Ca2+]i and AMPA-elicited
Ca2+ influx, we performed intracellular recording
and optical ratio imaging of individual fura-2-injected CA1 neurons in
slices from control and postischemic gerbils. Neurons were selected for
these measurements by three criteria: (1) having a resting membrane potential more negative than 60 mV at the time of penetration, (2)
generating action potentials >65 mV in amplitude, and (3) requiring a
hyperpolarizing current of <0.2 nA to maintain the membrane potential
at 80 mV after Cs+ injection had blocked K
conductances. Cells that failed these criteria increased in
conductance, had their [Ca2+]i rise
beyond where it was measurable with fura-2 (see below), and could not
be studied further. The fraction of pyramidal cells that met these
criteria was ~80% in slices from control animals and animals 48 hr
after ischemia and was ~50% in slices from animals 72 hr after
ischemia.
CA1 neurons selected by the above criteria were voltage clamped at 80
mV, dye-loaded by passing hyperpolarizing current for 10-20 min, and
injected with Cs+ by application of suprathreshold
depolarizing current pulses. Then the slices were perfused for at least
15 min with a solution containing
D,L-2-aminophosphonovaleric acid (APV, 100 µM) and MK-801 (20 µM) to block
Ca2+ influx through NMDA receptors, nimodipine (10 µM) and Cd2+ (100 µM) to
block, at least partially, voltage-dependent Ca2+
channels, and tetrodotoxin (3 µM) to block action
potentials and synaptic release of glutamate by other neurons. The
[Ca2+]i was determined ratiometrically
from paired digitally acquired fluorescence images using excitation at
350 and 380 nm wavelengths. CA1 neurons, held at 80 mV, exhibited a
low resting [Ca2+]i (between 50 and
100 nM) that did not differ significantly in control and in
48 and 72 hr postischemic slices (Figs.
6B,
7A). For this comparison, a
basal [Ca2+]i was determined just
before AMPA application, but the level generally had not changed from
the time of fura-2 injection.
Fig. 6.
AMPA-elicited inward current and rise in
[Ca2+]i in a CA1 pyramidal neuron
after ischemia. A, Inward current elicited by AMPA [30
µM with 10 µM cyclothiazide (CTZ)] in a
CA1 pyramidal neuron in a hippocampal slice from an animal 72 hr after
ischemia. AMPA and CTZ were bath-applied for 30 sec (red
bar). Then the AMPA was washed out with saline containing the
NMDA receptor and the Ca2+ and
Na+ channel blockers. After ~5 min, CNQX (20 µM) was added to the other blockers to cause more rapid
recovery. In the control neuron illustrated in B, the
AMPA-elicited inward current in the presence of 30 µM CTZ
was of somewhat lower amplitude but was similar in time course.
B, Optical imaging (350 nm excitation images) of individual CA1 pyramidal neurons injected with fura-2 in hippocampal slices from a control animal (upper row) and an
experimental animal 72 hr after ischemia (lower row,
same cell as in A). a-b, Time of imaging
indicated in current trace above. a,
Image taken before bath application of agonist. b, Image
taken at peak inward current after application of AMPA (100 µM with 10 µM CTZ). c, Image
taken after recovery to near baseline current. Color
represents [Ca2+]i determined from the
ratio of fluorescence obtained at two excitation wavelengths (350 and
380 nm); calibration is at right. AMPA elicited little
change in [Ca2+]i in the control
neuron. In contrast, AMPA elicited a rise in [Ca2+]i in the soma of the
postischemic neuron and a smaller increase in its proximal dendrites.
Red circles in the 350 nm excitation images indicate
representative sites of Ca2+ measurement in cell
somata and dendrites for data presented in Figures 7 and 8.
[View Larger Version of this Image (73K GIF file)]
Fig. 7.
AMPA-elicited rises in
[Ca2+]i in CA1 neurons are increased
72 hr after global ischemia. A, Basal and AMPA-elicited
rise in [Ca2+]i in the somatic region
of individual CA1 pyramidal neurons in hippocampal slices of control
animals and ischemic animals 48 and 72 hr after reperfusion. Basal
[Ca2+]i did not significantly differ
in control and postischemic neurons (open bars). AMPA
(30 µM with 10 µM CTZ to reduce
desensitization) induced a slight rise in
[Ca2+]i in control neurons and neurons
from animals 48 hr after ischemia (filled bars).
AMPA elicited a large rise in [Ca2+]i
in neurons 72 hr after ischemia relative to that elicited in control
neurons (p < 0.005) or to that in neurons
48 hr after ischemia (p < 0.025).
B, The peak AMPA-induced current did not differ
significantly in control versus postischemic neurons at 48 hr or at
72 hr.
[View Larger Version of this Image (15K GIF file)]
After determination of basal
[Ca2+]i, AMPA (100 µM) and cyclothiazide [CTZ, 10 µM; to
reduce desensitization of AMPA receptors (Partin et al., 1994 )] were
applied for 30 sec in the bathing solution containing blockers of NMDA,
Ca2+ and Na+ channels. In all CA1
neurons examined in both postischemic and control slices, AMPA elicited
a slowly rising inward current (Fig. 6). After washout of AMPA for ~5
min with the blocker solution and then with the blocker solution plus
20 µM 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) to
speed recovery, the AMPA-elicited current returned to near the baseline
value (Fig. 6). Finally, the slices were perfused with normal saline
for at least 15 min, and the somata were voltage-clamped to a potential
positive to 0 mV. Only cells that gave a Ca2+ signal
well above background in response to this depolarization were included
in the study. Only one neuron was examined per brain slice, and a
neuron was subjected to only a single sequence of solutions.
In control slices, AMPA elicited a small rise in
[Ca2+]i in 11 of 17 neurons (mean rise
in [Ca2+]i for the 17 control neurons,
12.9 ± 3.5 nM). In slices from animals 48 hr after
ischemia, AMPA elicited a small rise in
[Ca2+]i in 8 of 12 CA1 neurons (mean
rise in [Ca2+]i for the 12 neurons,
20.6 ± 8.1 nM, not significantly different from
control). In slices from animals 72 hr after ischemia, the inward
current was associated with a rise in
[Ca2+]i that paralleled the slow rise
in current in 8 of 9 CA1 neurons (mean rise in
[Ca2+]i for the 9 neurons, 185 ± 72 nM) (Figs. 7, 8). The
AMPA-elicited rise in [Ca2+]i was
significantly greater in neurons 72 hr after ischemia than in control
neurons (p < 0.005) or in neurons 48 hr after
ischemia (p < 0.025). After washout of AMPA
(with 20 µM CNQX in addition to the other blockers),
[Ca2+]i, as well as the
current, slowly returned toward initial values (Fig. 6).
Fig. 8.
AMPA-elicited rises in
[Ca2+]i in individual CA1 pyramidal
neurons are increased 72 hr after ischemia. Peak inward currents and
rises in [Ca2+]i elicited by AMPA (30 µM with 10 µM CTZ) are indicated for
individual pyramidal neurons in slices from control animals and
experimental animals 48 and 72 hr after ischemia. [In the two control
neurons exhibiting the largest AMPA-elicited currents (open
circles), the CTZ concentration was increased to 30 µM to elicit a current comparable with the large currents
observed in three neurons 72 hr after ischemia.] AMPA-elicited rises
in [Ca2+]i were greater in neurons
from animals at 72 hr than in neurons from animals at 48 hr after
ischemia or from control animals. A, Data from somata.
B, Data from proximal dendrites.
[View Larger Version of this Image (28K GIF file)]
In slices from animals 72 hr after ischemia, AMPA-induced currents
tended to be greater than currents in control neurons, although the
difference did not reach significance (0.05 < p < 0.1; Fig. 7B). Larger currents tended to be associated
with larger changes in [Ca2+]i. To
examine changes in [Ca2+]i in control
neurons in which AMPA-induced currents were of the same magnitude as in
the 72 hr postischemic neurons, we increased the concentration of CTZ
from 10 µM to 30 µM for two additional neurons from control slices. Under these conditions, AMPA-elicited currents in the two neurons were in the range of the largest currents observed in cells 72 hr after ischemia (Fig. 8A);
however, the change in [Ca2+]i was
small in each cell (2 nM and 19 nM) and
comparable with that measured in other control neurons at the lower
concentration of CTZ. We also compared the AMPA receptor-mediated rise
in [Ca2+]i in control neurons with
that in 72 hr postischemic neurons after excluding the three
postischemic cells with the largest AMPA currents; in this sample the
AMPA-elicited rise in [Ca2+]i was
still significantly larger in neurons 72 hr after ischemia than in
control neurons (p < 0.005). Thus, the increase
in the AMPA-elicited rise in [Ca2+]i
in CA1 neurons 72 hr after ischemia is not simply caused by a bigger
AMPA-elicited current.
A crucial aspect of these observations is the use of blockers of routes
of Ca2+ entry into the cells other than
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors. Inadequate voltage
clamp, which might have permitted Ca2+ entry through
voltage sensitive mechanisms, should have been the same in control and
postischemic neurons. We conclude that the greater AMPA-induced rise in
[Ca2+]i in CA1 neurons 72 hr after
ischemia is caused by increased Ca2+ permeability of
their AMPA receptors.
In addition to having greater AMPA-induced Ca2+
signals, the postischemic neurons differed somewhat from control
neurons in action potential generation. Recordings with
K-acetate-filled electrodes showed that adaptation and broadening of
spikes during a prolonged depolarization were reduced in postischemic
neurons (J. A. Connor and J. J. Petrozzino, unpublished
observations). These properties could not be well evaluated with
Cs+-filled electrodes, which rapidly caused spike
broadening and reduction of the afterhyperpolarization in control
cells.
In slices from animals 72 hr after ischemia, the AMPA-elicited rise in
[Ca2+]i was maximal in the cell somata
and proximal dendrites (Fig. 8A,B)
and decreased gradually with distance from the soma. AMPA-elicited rise
in [Ca2+]i was undetectable in the
distal dendrites (Fig. 6). In two of seven cells 72 hours after
ischemia in which measurements were made in both soma and proximal
dendrite, the rise in [Ca2+]i was
somewhat greater in the dendrite. That the AMPA-elicited rise in
[Ca2+]i was greater in pyramidal cell
somata and proximal dendrites than in distal dendrites was somewhat
unexpected in that the density of AMPA receptors and excitatory
synapses is greater along dendritic processes (Eshhar et al., 1993 ;
Baude et al., 1995 ; Siegel et al., 1995 ). This apparent discrepancy may
be because of earlier insertion of newly synthesized AMPA receptors
lacking GluR2 in the cell somata and proximal dendrites than in the
distal dendrites. In addition, the Ca2+ handling
capacity may be greater in the distal dendrites.
The slow application of AMPA in these experiments precluded measurement
of a lag in the rise in [Ca2+]i that
would be associated with accumulation of Ca2+ in the
cell.
DISCUSSION
The present study examined AMPA receptor gene expression and AMPA
receptor-mediated changes in [Ca2+]i
in hippocampal CA1 neurons after transient global ischemia in gerbils.
As in the rat, GluR2 mRNA expression was reduced in vulnerable CA1
neurons at times preceding ischemia-induced neurodegeneration. The
reduction in GluR2 expression was specific to vulnerable CA1 pyramidal
neurons; neurons in CA3 and dentate gyrus, which do not undergo
neurodegeneration, exhibited little or no decrease in GluR2 mRNA
expression. Expression of the other glutamate receptor mRNAs examined,
GluR1 and NR1, was reduced in CA1 only modestly 48 hr after ischemia;
the change observed in these mRNAs could reflect onset of neuronal
damage, although neither morphological nor physiological deterioration
was apparent at this time.
The novel observation of this study is that, 72 hr after induction of
global ischemia but before cell death, AMPA elicited a pronounced rise
in [Ca2+]i in CA1 pyramidal cells. The
rise in [Ca2+]i was markedly greater
than the rise seen in neurons from control animals or animals 48 hr
after ischemia. Basal [Ca2+]i was
unchanged in postischemic neurons, although our criteria for selecting
cells in this study may have excluded cells in which [Ca2+]i was increased because of the
onset of cell damage. Because Ca2+ entry through
other Ca2+-permeable channels was blocked, these
data indicate that the increased rise in
[Ca2+]i was caused by
Ca2+ influx through AMPA receptors, which provides
functional evidence for the reduction in GluR2 protein synthesis
predicted by the reduction in GluR2 mRNA. Moreover, the reduction in
receptor mRNA preceded the increase in Ca2+ influx
by at least 24 hr. In support of this mechanism, GluR2 protein
expression in rats, detected by immunocytochemistry with a
subunit-specific monoclonal antibody, is markedly reduced in CA1 (but
not CA3) neurons by 36 hr after ischemia (Pulsinelli et al., 1995 ). Our
findings do not rule out that sequestration and extrusion mechanisms
had reduced capacity or that Ca2+-evoked
Ca2+ release from cytoplasmic stores was increased
after ischemia. However, if Ca2+ influx were the
same in control and in postischemic neurons, the minimal levels of
AMPA-induced rises in [Ca2+]i in
control neurons would require very effective Ca2+
regulation in control neurons or a dramatic increase in
Ca2+-evoked Ca2+ release in
postischemic neurons. We conclude that the observed elevations in
[Ca2+]i were, in fact, predominantly
if not exclusively caused by Ca2+ influx through
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors.
A problem inherent in the study of postischemic neurons is that they
are likely to die rapidly after expression of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors. Because neurons with
resting and action potentials that failed to meet our criteria were
eliminated from the present study, our sample is likely to be biased
toward neurons relatively delayed in degeneration, although nonetheless
fated to die (Fig. 1).
From studies of neuronal properties after global ischemia, we can
summarize that neuroprotection is provided by non-NMDA glutamate antagonists (Sheardown et al., 1990 , 1993 ; Buchan et al., 1991 ); that
expression of GluR2 receptor mRNA and protein are reduced (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992b , 1994 ; Pulsinelli et al., 1995 )
(present study); and that AMPA receptor permeability to Ca2+ is increased, assessed pharmacologically and by
Ca2+ imaging (Tsubokawa et al., 1995 ) (present
study). The reduction in GluR2 expression, which the physiological data
indicate is translated into new AMPA receptors lacking the GluR2
subunit, could allow AMPA receptor-mediated entry of
Ca2+ into CA1 neurons to reach toxic levels.
Neuroprotection by NBQX suggests that this Ca2+
influx is necessary, if not sufficient, for the delayed cell death.
This mechanism is supported by studies of glutamate-induced cell death
in cultured neurons after oxygen and glucose deprivation (Ying et al.,
1996 ). Insulted cultures exhibit increased AMPA- or kainate-induced
Ca2+ accumulation sensitive to Joro spider toxin and
increased vulnerability to AMPA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity,
suggesting increased formation of GluR2-lacking,
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors.
GluR2 expression, Ca2+ permeability, and
cell death
Studies involving patch-clamp recording and reverse
transcriptase-PCR demonstrate that abundance of GluR2 mRNA is inversely related to AMPA receptor Ca2+ permeability in a wide
range of cell types (for review, see Burnashev, 1996 ). Excitatory
principal neurons of the hippocampus (Bochet et al., 1994 ; Geiger et
al., 1995 ) and neocortex (Jonas et al., 1994 ) exhibit low
Ca2+ permeability and abundant GluR2 mRNA. AMPA
receptors in these cells are primarily GluR1/GluR2 and GluR2/GluR3
assemblies, with homomeric GluR1 accounting for only ~8% of AMPA
receptor complexes (Wenthold et al., 1996 ). In contrast, GABAergic
interneurons and dentate gyrus basket cells (Bochet et al., 1994 ; Jonas
et al., 1994 ; Geiger et al., 1995 ; Racca et al., 1996 ) display higher Ca2+ permeability and less abundant GluR2 mRNA.
Available data indicate that the decrease in GluR2 expression in
neurons in which GluR2 is normally abundant, rather than the absence of
GluR2, is predictive of neuronal vulnerability. In normal hippocampus,
GABAergic interneurons lacking GluR2 are viable and relatively
resistant to ischemia-induced damage (Johansen et al., 1984 ). Moreover,
transgenic mice with targeted disruption of the GluR2 gene survive, and
their principal neurons, which express GluR2 in wild-type animals, are
functional (Jia et al., 1996 ). Possible explanations for survival of
neurons lacking GluR2 are (1) the presence of compensatory mechanisms
for Ca2+ buffering and extrusion (for example,
enhanced expression of Ca2+-binding proteins (Ribak
et al., 1990 ; Kondo et al., 1997 ) and (2) a reduction in AMPA receptor
currents, caused by reduced expression of GluR1 and GluR3 and/or
expression of receptors with altered properties, such as enhanced
desensitization (Geiger et al., 1995 ; Lambolez et al., 1996 ). Hence,
the GluR2 hypothesis would apply primarily to neurons that normally
express AMPA receptors with low Ca2+ permeability
and that do not cope with significant Ca2+ influx
via this class of receptor. In these cells, acute increases in
Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors could account
for cell death. Transgenic mice heterozygous for a Q/R
editing-deficient GluR2 allele expressed AMPA receptors with increased
Ca2+ permeability, particularly in hippocampal and
neocortical principal neurons (Brusa et al., 1995 ). The mice developed
recurrent seizures and died within the first 3 weeks of life, with cell
loss in the hippocampus. Unedited GluR2 may have contributed to the
formation in these animals of a greater number of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors than in the GluR2
knock-out mice.
Mechanisms of altered gene expression
The molecular mechanisms by which global ischemia alters
GluR2 expression have not been determined. After ischemia, expression of transcription factors, including products of immediate early genes,
stress proteins, and neurotrophic factors are also altered in CA1 (Aoki
et al., 1993 ; Nowak et al., 1993 ; Takeda et al., 1993 ; Kindy et al.,
1994 ; Kokaia et al., 1994 ; Kamme et al., 1995 ). These proteins are
plausible candidates for the downregulation of GluR2 expression by
reducing mRNA transcription and/or stability. Because some mRNAs and
proteins are upregulated in CA1, the decreases in GluR2 mRNA and
protein are not simply a result of a loss of transcriptional or
translational capability but seem to result from a regulatory, although
maladaptive, change. It is likely that the regulatory mechanism
responsible for reduced expression of GluR2 is active in other
physiological processes, such as development (Pellegrini-Giampietro et
al., 1991 ).
A number of neuroprotective treatments in animal models of global
ischemia prevent downregulation of GluR2 in CA1. Agonists of adenosine
A1 receptors and activators of KATP channels are neuroprotective when given just before ischemia and block
downregulation of GluR2 (Heurteaux et al., 1995 ). Aurintricarboxylic
acid, a nonspecific endonuclease inhibitor that can prevent apoptosis, is neuroprotective when given intraventricularly at the time of ischemia and blocks downregulation of GluR2 (E. M. Aronica,
J. A. Gorter, J. A. Kessler, M. V. L. Bennett,
R. S. Zukin, and D. M. Rosenbaum, unpublished observations).
Ischemic preconditioning, in which a period of ischemia sublethal for
CA1 neurons is given several days before a period of ischemia that
would otherwise be lethal to these neurons, also blocks downregulation
of GluR2 (Heurteaux et al., 1995 ). In contrast to the foregoing
examples, the AMPA/kainate antagonist NBQX is neuroprotective
(Sheardown et al., 1990 , 1993 ; Buchan et al., 1991 ) but does not block
downregulation of GluR2 (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1994 ),
suggesting that NBQX affords neuroprotection by a direct block of
GluR2-lacking, Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors.
Another candidate mechanism for GluR2 regulation that could modify
Ca2+ influx is RNA editing. The RNA encoding the
GluR2 isoform that limits Ca2+ permeability is
edited to result in a Q to R substitution in a channel-lining residue;
the unedited subunit forms Ca2+-permeable channels
in heteromeric or homomeric configurations (Sommer et al., 1991 ;
Seeburg, 1996 ). However, editing of GluR2 mRNA at the Q/R site is
virtually complete and invariant in hippocampus and neocortex under
physiological conditions and unaltered after global ischemia
(Kamphuis et al., 1995 , Paschen et al., 1996 ).
Regulation of GluR2 expression in neurodegeneration
In adult rats, kainate-induced status epilepticus causes delayed
and specific neuronal cell death; pyramidal neurons of the hippocampal
CA3 and hilar interneurons are particularly vulnerable. GluR2 mRNA
expression is dramatically reduced in the vulnerable CA3 after status
epilepticus (Pollard et al., 1993 ; Friedman et al., 1994 ), and the
reduction in GluR2 mRNA precedes the onset of neuronal cell death.
GluR2 expression is unchanged in other regions resistant to
seizure-induced damage, in particular CA1 and dentate gyrus. In pup
rats, kainate induces status epilepticus but without the subsequent
hippocampal cell death; GluR2 mRNA and protein expression are
maintained in pup CA3 (L. F. Friedman, E. F. Sperber, S. L. Moshé, M. V. L. Bennett, and R. S. Zukin, unpublished observations). These and other findings (for review, see
Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997 ) suggest that downregulation of
GluR2 expression and entry of Ca2+ through AMPA
receptors in response to endogenous glutamate may be involved in the
pathogenesis of a number of neurodegenerative disorders in addition to
delayed neuronal death after ischemia.
FOOTNOTES
Received March 19, 1997; revised April 30, 1997; accepted May 28, 1997.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS
20752 and NS 31282 (R.S.Z.) and NS 07512 (M.V.L.B.), an Aaron Diamond
postdoctoral fellowship award (E.M.A.), and a Human Frontiers Science
Program award (J.A.G). M.V.L.B. is the Sylvia and Robert S. Olnick
Professor of Neuroscience. We thank S. Rybak for technical assistance
and C. Roy for excellent histological preparations.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. R. Suzanne Zukin, Department
of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park
Avenue, Bronx, NY 10461.
Dr. Gorter's present address: University of Amsterdam, Department of
Experimentele Dierkunde, Kruislaan 320, 1098 SM Amsterdam, The
Netherlands.
Dr. Connor's present address: The Lovelace Institute, 2425 Ridgecrest
Drive, Albuquerque, NM 87108.
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