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Volume 17, Number 6,
Issue of March 15, 1997
pp. 2006-2017
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Differential Subcellular Regulation of NMDAR1 Protein and mRNA in
Dendrites of Dentate Gyrus Granule Cells after Perforant Path
Transection
Adam H. Gazzaley1, 2,
Deanna L. Benson1,
George
W. Huntley1, and
John H. Morrison1, 2, 3
1 Fishberg Research Center for Neurobiology,
2 Laboratories for Neurobiology of Aging, and
3 Department of Geriatrics and Adult Development, Mount
Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Unilateral transection of the excitatory perforant path results in
the acute deafferentation of a segregated zone on the distal dendrites
of hippocampal dentate gyrus granule cells (i.e., outer molecular
layer), followed by sprouting, reactive synaptogenesis, and a return of
physiological and behavioral function. To investigate cellular
mechanisms underlying NMDA receptor plasticity in response to such
extensive synaptic reorganization, we quantitatively evaluated changes
in intensity levels of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence and NMDAR1 mRNA
hybridization within subcellular compartments of dentate gyrus granule
cells 2, 5, and 9 d after perforant path lesions. There were no
significant changes in either measure at 2 d postlesion. However,
at 5 and 9 d postlesion, during the period of axonal sprouting and
synaptogenesis, there was an increase in NMDAR1 immunolabeling that was
restricted to the dendritic segments of the denervated outer molecular
layer and the granule cell somata. In contrast, NMDAR1 mRNA levels at 5 and 9 d postlesion increased throughout the full extent of the
molecular layer, including both denervated and nondenervated segments
of granule cell dendrites. These findings reveal that NMDAR1 mRNA is
one of a limited population of mRNAs that is transported into dendrites
and further suggest that in response to terminal proliferation and
sprouting, increased mRNA transport occurs throughout the full
dendritic extent, whereas increased local protein synthesis is
restricted to denervated regions of the dendrites whose afferent
activity is perturbed. These results begin to elucidate the dynamic
postsynaptic subcellular regulation of receptor subunits associated
with synaptic plasticity after denervation.
Key words:
excitatory amino acid receptors;
immunocytochemistry;
hippocampus;
entorhinal cortex;
plasticity;
confocal microscopy
INTRODUCTION
Plasticity of neurotransmitter receptor number or
distribution is a key component of the compensatory neuronal response
to denervation and changes in afferent activity (Klein et al., 1989 ). Although classically associated with the peripheral nervous system (Lømo and Rosenthal, 1972 ; Frank et al., 1975 ), receptor plasticity of
this kind has also been demonstrated in the CNS. For example, in
several regions, including neocortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum, the
number of GluR binding sites and/or levels of GluR subunit mRNAs are
influenced by exposure to pharmacological agents (Williams et al.,
1992 ; Bessho et al., 1994 ), the induction of long-term potentiation
(LTP) (Maren et al., 1993 ; Thomas et al., 1994a ), the induction of
seizure activity (Friedman et al., 1994 ; Kamphuis et al., 1994 ; Gold et
al., 1996 ), and deafferentation (Geddes et al., 1985 ; Ulas et al.,
1990 ). One subtype of ionotropic GluR, the NMDA receptor (NMDAR), is
thought to play a key role in synaptic plasticity, particularly that
associated with development of connectivity (Shatz, 1990 ) and induction
of LTP, a cellular model of learning and memory (Bliss and Lømo, 1973 ;
Bliss and Collingridge, 1993 ). Additionally, alterations in the number
of NMDAR binding sites occur during aging (Tamura et al., 1991 ; Wenk
and Walker, 1991 ), which may reflect changes in subunit distribution.
We have recently shown in aged monkeys that the immunofluorescence
intensity of the obligatory subunit NMDAR1 is decreased within the
segments of granule cell dendrites that receive the perforant path
input from the entorhinal cortex (EC), in comparison with more proximal dendritic segments that do not receive this input (Gazzaley et al.,
1996a ). Based on this finding, we hypothesized that intradendritic levels of NMDAR1 are dynamic and modifiable by alterations in the
afferent activity of the perforant path.
To explore this hypothesis, we focus in the present study on the
dynamic regulation of NMDAR1 in rat dentate gyrus after synaptic reorganization induced by unilateral transection of the perforant path
input from the EC. This produces a well-characterized pattern of
synaptic reorganization confined to the distal two-thirds of the
molecular layer, which corresponds to the outer molecular layer (OML),
where EC inputs terminate (Steward, 1976 ). The pattern of synaptic
reorganization includes a period of massive (~90%) synapse loss
(Matthews et al., 1976 ; Steward and Vinsant, 1983 ), followed by a
period of terminal proliferation (sprouting) of excitatory afferents
from commissural/associational pathways (Zimmer, 1973 ) and the
contralateral EC (Steward et al., 1974 ), and reactive synaptogenesis
(Steward and Vinsant, 1983 ) culminating in a degree of physiological
and behavioral recovery (Loesche and Steward, 1977 ; Reeves and Smith,
1987 ; Reeves and Steward, 1988 ). Thus, this paradigm allows
investigation of receptor changes during terminal degeneration and
subsequent sprouting within spatially restricted segments of
dendrites.
Given the functional importance of the perforant path input to the
dentate gyrus for memory processing (Skelton and McNamara, 1992 ; Vnek
et al., 1995 ), and the high vulnerability of this input to pathological
changes during aging and in Alzheimer's disease (Hyman et al., 1984 ;
Lippa et al., 1992 ; review, Hof and Morrison, 1994 ), understanding
compensatory changes in NMDAR1 levels or distribution after
perturbations of the perforant path may be crucial for understanding
mechanisms of memory loss associated with aging and disease. Although
previous studies evaluating GluR plasticity after unilateral EC
lesioning have used autoradiographic techniques to assess alterations
in various GluR ligand binding sites (Geddes et al., 1985 ; Ulas et al.,
1990 ), such studies do not reveal details of the cellular and molecular
mechanisms that may be the basis of physiological and behavioral
recovery. The specific goals of this study, therefore, are to
characterize temporal and spatial aspects of the regulation and
localization of NMDAR1 protein and mRNA in the dentate gyrus after
unilateral transection of the perforant path.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animals, surgery, and tissue processing. A total of
38 male Sprague Dawley rats weighing ~500 gm were used in this study. Of these, 24 animals received a unilateral transection of the angular
bundle; 5 were sham-lesioned and 9 control animals were not operated
on. All animals were cared for and treated in strict accordance with
institutional and National Institutes of Health guidelines. Animals
were anesthetized with 30% chloral hydrate and placed into a Kopf
stereotaxic frame. Stereotaxic transections of the perforant path
(angular bundle) were made with an extendable Scouten wire knife (Kopf,
Tujunga, CA) as described previously (Laping et al., 1994 ; Schauwecker
et al., 1996 ). The retracted knife was inserted into the brain 1 mm
anterior and 6.3 mm lateral to lambda, to a level 5 mm ventral from the
surface. The knife was extended 2.5 mm medially, raised 4 mm, and then
retracted. This procedure was repeated at a position 1 mm anterior and
5.3 mm lateral to lambda. Five rats received sham lesions at identical coordinates. In these animals, the wire shank was lowered to the same
depth as above, but the retracted blade was not extended. For all
operated animals, the craniotomy was covered with Gel-foam and the skin
and fascia sutured. The lesioned rats were perfused transcardially at 2 (n = 9), 5 (n = 9), and 9 (n = 6) d after surgery, and the shams
(n = 5) were perfused 5 d after surgery. All
animals were deeply anesthetized with 30% chloral hydrate and perfused
transcardially first with ice-cold 1% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M PBS for 1 min, followed by 10 min of cold 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS. The brains were immediately removed, blocked,
and post-fixed in cold 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 6 hr. Sections
from the rostral hippocampus were then cut in a coronal plane on a
vibratome at a setting of 50 µm for immunocytochemistry. The rest of
the block was cryoprotected in 20% sucrose solution and frozen.
Sections (40 µm thick) were cut from the remaining rostral
hippocampus on a sliding microtome and stored in 4% paraformaldehyde
in PBS at 4°C for in situ hybridization. A caudal block
from each animal containing the EC was sectioned in a horizontal plane
for cresyl violet staining of the lesion site.
Hippocampal cultures. Hippocampi were dissected from
18-d-old fetal Sprague Dawley rats, and cell cultures were prepared as described previously (Goslin and Banker, 1991 ). Cells were plated at a
density of 50,000 cells per 60 mm plastic Petri dish on
poly-L-lysine-coated glass coverslips and co-cultured with
a monolayer of cortical astroglia in a sandwich-type configuration, in
which neurons and glia are separated by small paraffin dots. Cytosine
arabinoside (5 µM) was added to inhibit proliferation of
glial cells. Cultures were maintained for up to 4 weeks in modified
Eagle's medium containing N2 supplements, 1 mM
sodium pyruvate, and 0.1% ovalbumin.
Immunocytochemistry and histochemistry. One series of
sections through the rostral hippocampus of each rat was incubated for 48 hr with a monoclonal antibody (mAB) to NMDAR1 (54.1; 1:250) (Siegel
et al., 1994 ). A second series was incubated for 48 hr with an mAB to
synaptophysin (1:10) (Wiedenmann and Franke, 1985 ). All sections were
then washed three times in PBS, transferred to a solution containing
biotinylated anti-mouse IgG heavy and light chain (1:200; Vector
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) for 2 hr, washed again in PBS, and
transferred to a solution of FITC-conjugated avidin (1:200; Vector
Laboratories) for 1 hr. Double-label immunocytochemistry was performed
by incubating sections in a solution containing a cocktail of mAB 54.1 (1:250) and a polyclonal antibody to glial fibrillary acidic protein
(GFAP) (1:25; Promeda, Foster City, CA) for 48 hr. After three washes,
the sections were incubated with biotinylated anti-mouse IgG H&L and
Texas red conjugated anti-rabbit IgG H&L for 2 hr and then washed and
incubated with FITC-conjugated avidin for 1 hr. Sections were mounted
and coverslipped with Vectashield (Vector Laboratories) to reduce
fluorescence quenching. Histochemical staining for cytochrome oxidase
(CO) activity was performed on a third series of sections according to
a protocol described previously (Wong-Riley, 1979 ). A fourth series of
sections through the lesion site were stained with cresyl violet.
In situ hybridization and quantitative analysis. Sections
were hybridized with [35S]-labeled sense and antisense
cRNA probes that were transcribed from PBS (KS+) containing a cDNA
corresponding to the second cytoplasmic loop of the cloned rat NMDAR1
cDNA sequence (Moriyoshi et al., 1991 ) (gift of Dr. S. Sealfon), using
T3 and T7 RNA polymerase. In RNase protection assays, antisense NMDAR1
recognizes a single mRNA of the predicted size (Gore et al., 1996 ).
In situ hybridization was performed as described previously
(Benson et al., 1992 ). Briefly, sections were pretreated with 1 µg/ml proteinase K in 0.1 M Tris and 0.25% acetic
anhydride in 0.1 M triethanolamine and washed in saline
sodium citrate 2 × (SSC). Sections were preincubated in
hybridization buffer (10% dextran sulfate, 50% deionized formamide, 50 × Denhardt's solution, 0.3 mg/ml herring sperm DNA, 0.15 mg/ml wheat germ tRNA, and 20 mM DTT) for 1 hr at
50°C, then transferred to hybridization solution containing an
additional 20 mM DTT and 10,000 cpm/µl
[35S]-labeled antisense or sense riboprobes for 24 hr at
50°C. Sections were washed in 4 × SSC with 5 mM
DTT, treated in 20 µg/ml ribonuclease A for 30 min at
45°C, and then washed in decreasing concentrations of SSC solutions
(2 ×, 0.5 ×, and 0.1 ×) with 5 mM DTT for 30 min each at
60°C. Sections were mounted and exposed to max hyperfilm (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) for 3-7 d. Slides were then dipped
in Kodak NTB-2 emulsion (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY), diluted 1:1,
exposed at 4°C, and developed using Kodak D19. The sections were
counterstained with cresyl violet.
In situ hybridization of neuronal cultures was performed as
described previously (Kleiman et al., 1990 ) with
[35S]-labeled sense and antisense cRNA probes
corresponding to the NMDAR1 cDNA sequence, as described above, as well
as with sense and antisense rat -actin riboprobes that were
transcribed from pGEM3Z containing a Sau3A/EcoRI fragment
complementary to 387 bp of the 5 end of rat -actin cDNA (gift of
Dr. J. L. Roberts). Cells were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde/4%
sucrose in PBS and stored in 70% EtOH. Cells were washed briefly in
PBS containing 5 mM MgCl2, followed by 0.2 M Tris/0.1 M glycine, pH 7.4, then preincubated
for 1 hr at 42°C in hybridization buffer consisting of 50% deionized
formamide, 0.3 M NaCl, 20 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 5 mM EDTA, 1 × Denhardt's solution, 10% dextran
sulfate, and 10 mM DTT. Each coverslip was incubated
overnight at 55°C in 100 µl of hybridization buffer containing 10 mg/ml tRNA and 4 × 106 cpm of probe. After
hybridization, coverslips were rinsed in 2 × SSC/10
mM -mercaptoethanol (BME)/1 mM EDTA, treated
with RNase A (2 µg/ml in 500 mM NaCl/10
mM Tris, pH 8) for 30 min at room temperature, washed in
2 × SSC/10 mM BME/1 mM EDTA, and then washed for 2 hr at 55°C in 0.1 × SSC/10 mM BME/1
mM EDTA. Coverslips were rinsed in 0.5 × SSC,
dehydrated through graded alcohols, and allowed to dry. For
autoradiography, coverslips were mounted on slides and dipped in Kodak
NTB-2 emulsion and allowed to expose for 2-4 weeks at 4°C, whereupon
they were developed in Kodak D19 developer.
The autoradiographic films of the tissue sections were analyzed by
measuring the optical density of hybridization in the OML, the inner
molecular layer (IML), and the CA1 stratum radiatum (CA1-sr) field
using an automated paint function that covered the region of interest
(Imaging Research, Ontario, Canada). Measurements were taken from the
contralateral and ipsilateral sides from four sections per animal,
three to four animals per group. Optical density analysis of film
autoradiograms was identical to that described previously (Gazzaley et
al., 1996b ). For each animal, an intensity value for each of the three
regions (IML, OML, CA1-sr), from both the ipsilateral and contralateral
sides, was calculated as the mean of a single value obtained on each of
the four sections. A mean value for each of the five groups, from each
region, was obtained from the individual animal values. Within-group,
side-to-side comparisons were analyzed with paired Student's
t tests, at a significance level of <0.05, and across-group
comparisons were analyzed with a one-way ANOVA and a Scheffé's
post hoc test, at a significance level of <0.05.
Confocal microscopy and quantitative immunofluorescence analysis.
Quantification of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence intensity was performed according to a previously published method (Gazzaley et al.,
1996a ,b). Briefly, a Zeiss LSM 410 inverted confocal microscope was
used to obtain high-magnification fields of regions within the dentate
gyrus from five animals per group and three sections per animal, from
both the ipsilateral and contralateral sides. All confocal parameters,
including brightness and contrast, were kept constant throughout the
study. For each section, five fields within the granule cell layer
(GCL), the IML (dendritic field immediately distal to the GCL), and the
OML (midpoint between the GCL border and the hippocampal fissure) were
randomly chosen within a centrally located region of the suprapyramidal
blade of the dentate gyrus. Each field was scanned only once to reduce fluorescence quenching and at the same predetermined z-axis
distance from the surface of the section. An image analysis program
(Zeiss, Thornwood, NY) was used to determine the average pixel
intensity within the field, in which the contribution of unlabeled
portions of the field were removed by a visually established pixel
intensity threshold. Thus, the average pixel intensity of the portion
of the field above threshold represented the immunofluorescence
intensity within either the cellular processes of the molecular layer
or the granule cell bodies. For each animal, an intensity value was then computed from each of the three regions (GCL, IML, OML), from both
ipsilateral and contralateral sides, by determining the mean of the 15 individual field values (5 field values obtained from each of three
sections). A mean value in all five groups, from each region, was
obtained from the individual values determined for each animal.
Within-group, side-to-side comparisons were analyzed with paired
Student's t tests at a significance level of <0.05, and
across-group comparisons were analyzed with a one-way ANOVA and a
Scheffé's post hoc test, at a significance level of
<0.05.
RESULTS
Perforant path transections
To denervate the OML of the dentate gyrus, we performed knife cut
transections of the angular bundle. This transection effectively lesions the perforant path arising from both the lateral and the medial
EC (Fig. 1A). The extent of the lesion
in all animals was determined by evaluating horizontal sections of the
EC stained with cresyl violet (Fig. 1A) and coronal
sections of the dentate gyrus histochemically stained for cytochrome
oxidase (Fig. 1B,C) or processed
immunocytochemically for synaptophysin (Fig. 2). Previous studies have revealed that the intensity of CO staining decreased in the OML as early as 16 hr postlesion (Borowsky and Collins, 1989 ), and the density of terminals containing synaptophysin, an integral membrane glycoprotein of synaptic vesicles, decreases within the OML as early as 2 d postlesion (Masliah et al., 1991 ). A time course of the NMDAR changes was established by perfusing animals
at 2, 5, and 9 d postlesion. Two days corresponds to the time of
maximal deafferentation (Matthews et al., 1976 ), 5 d to the onset
of terminal proliferation (Steward and Vinsant, 1983 ), and 9 d to
onset of new synapse formation (Steward and Vinsant, 1983 ). In all
animals used in this study, the extent of the transection and the
effects on the dentate gyrus as determined by CO and synaptophysin staining were consistent. The ipsilateral (lesioned) dentate gyrus of
rats evaluated at 2, 5, and 9 d postlesion exhibited massive synapse loss in the OML, as revealed by a decrease in the number of
synaptophysin-positive puncta (Fig.
2G,K,O) and a prominent decrease in the intensity of CO staining in this lamina (Fig. 1B, asterisk). In contrast, the patterns
of synaptophysin and CO staining in the contralateral (unlesioned)
dentate gyrus of all animals were indistinguishable from those in the
dentate gyrus of unoperated and sham-lesioned control animals (Fig.
2A,E,I,M).
Fig. 1.
Photomicrographs of representative sections
through the entorhinal cortex (A) and dentate gyrus
(B, C) of a rat examined 5 d
postlesion. A, Horizontal Nissl-stained section showing
the extent of the lesion of the angular bundle (ab),
which transects the perforant path arising from both the medial
(mEC) and lateral (lEC)
entorhinal cortex. B, C, Coronal
CO-stained sections through the ipsilateral (B) and
contralateral (C) sides. Note the decreased intensity of staining in the OML (asterisks) on the side
ipsilateral to the lesion (B) in comparison with that of
the OML of the contralateral side (C).
OML, Outer molecular layer; IML, inner
molecular layer; GCL, granule cell layer. Scale bars:
A, 500 µm; B, C, 250 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (95K GIF file)]
Fig. 2.
Digitized confocal microscopic images of NMDAR1
(B, D, F,
H, J, L, N,
P) and synaptophysin (SYN;
A, C, E, G,
I, K, M, O)
immunofluorescence in the dentate gyri of an unoperated control animal
(Ctrl, A-D) and animals
examined 2 (E-H), 5 (I-L), and 9 (M-P) d
postlesion. The series on the left represent fields from
the nonlesioned, contralateral side; the series on the
right represent fields from the lesioned, ipsilateral
side. Note that the pattern of synaptophysin-positive puncta is uniform
across the entire molecular layer (OML and
IML) in both sides of the control animal
(A, C) and in the contralateral side of
the 2 d (E), 5 d (I),
and 9 d (M) animals. In contrast, an overt
decrease in synaptophysin immunofluorescence is evident in the OML
compared with the IML on the ipsilateral side in the 2 d
(G), 5 d (K), and 9 d
(O) animals. NMDAR1 immunofluorescence is relatively
uniform throughout the entire molecular layer (OML and
IML) in the control animal (B,
D) and the contralateral side of all the lesioned
animals (F, J, N).
In the 2 d postlesion animal, a similar, homogeneous pattern is
evident across the molecular layer on the ipsilateral side
(H). In contrast, an overt increase in the
immunofluorescence intensity of the OML compared with the IML is
apparent in the ipsilateral side of the animals 5 (L)
and 9 d (P) postlesion. Scale bar, 30 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (131K GIF file)]
Qualitative evaluation of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence
NMDAR1 immunofluorescence in the dentate gyri of unoperated and
sham-lesioned controls was intense in the granule cell somata and their
dendrites throughout the entire extent of the molecular layer, whereas
nuclei were unstained (Fig. 2B,D).
The intensity of immunofluorescence was slightly elevated in the IML
relative to the OML (Fig. 2B,D).
These observations are consistent with previous descriptions of NMDAR1
immunostaining in the rat dentate gyrus (Petralia et al., 1994 ). In
animals killed 2 d postlesion, the intensity of staining across
the ipsilateral molecular layer (Fig. 2H) appeared
identical to that observed in the contralateral molecular layer (Fig.
2F) or in comparison with the molecular layer of the
control animals (Fig. 2B,D).
However, at both 5 and 9 d postlesion, there was an overt increase
in the staining intensity of processes in the ipsilateral OML relative
to the ipsilateral IML (Fig. 2L,P).
The immunofluorescence intensity at 5 and 9 d postlesion across
the contralateral molecular layer (Fig.
2J,N) did not appear
different from the pattern in control animals (Fig. 2B,D). To verify the qualitative
impressions of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence intensity changes, we
performed a series of quantitative evaluations of the same animals.
Quantitative evaluation of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence: within-group
comparisons of ipsilateral versus contralateral regions
Given previous evidence that shrinkage occurs within the
denervated region of the molecular layer (Caceres and Steward, 1983 ), the impression of an intensity increase in the OML could be the result
of either an increase in the density of dendrites with normal staining
or an actual increase in the staining intensity within individual
dendrites. To distinguish between these two possibilities, we
determined quantitatively the average immunofluorescence intensity
within individual cellular profiles using high-magnification confocal images of the IML and OML. The intensity values obtained are
thus independent of area, and the negative contribution of unlabeled
portions of the field was subtracted by establishing a pixel intensity
threshold (see Materials and Methods) (Gazzaley et al., 1996a ,b).
Within-group comparisons of comparable regions in the ipsilateral
versus contralateral dentate gyrus were performed, because the
contralateral OML receives a very limited crossed projection from the
opposite EC (Steward et al., 1976 ) and is thus only subtly deafferented
by this lesion (Davis et al., 1988 ). A series of paired Student's
t tests of the ipsilateral OML versus the contralateral OML
revealed no difference between sides in either control group (sham and
unoperated groups) or the group of animals 2 d postlesion,
although in the 2 d postlesion animals, there was a trend toward
an increase in the ipsilateral side. In contrast, statistically
significant increases in the staining intensity of the ipsilateral OML
was evident at both 5 and 9 d postlesion in comparison with the
respective contralateral OML. Such changes were specific to the
denervated OML, because comparisons of the ipsilateral IML versus the
contralateral IML in control groups and all of the lesioned groups
demonstrated no significant differences in intensity levels.
Comparisons of the immunofluorescence intensity within granule cell
somata revealed an increase in the ipsilateral side relative to the
contralateral side at 5 and 9 d postlesion but no differences at
the earlier time point or in control groups. Thus, the only significant
differences in the intensity of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence between sides
was an intensity increase in the OML and granule cell bodies at 5 and
9 d postlesion in the denervated ipsilateral side.
To verify the change in the ipsilateral OML, we compared the ratios of
the intensity of the OML/IML between the ipsilateral and contralateral
sides for all groups. The staining intensity value of the IML serves as
a nonvarying denominator, because ipsilateral versus contralateral
comparisons revealed no significant differences in IML intensity levels
between the sides in any group. In agreement with comparisons of the
absolute intensity values (see above), comparisons of the OML/IML
ratios revealed a significant increase in the ipsilateral OML/IML ratio
compared with the contralateral OML/IML ratio at 5 and 9 d
postlesion, whereas no change was observed in either control group or
the 2 d postlesion group (Fig. 3).
Fig. 3.
Bar graphs comparing ratios of NMDAR1
immunofluorescence intensity values of the OML/IML in unoperated
(Control), sham, 2 d, 5 d, and 9 d
postlesion groups. Statistical comparisons were performed both within
groups (ipsilateral vs contralateral sides; Student's unpaired
t test) and across groups (ANOVA and Scheffé's test). Statistical analyses revealed that ipsilateral OML/IML ratios of
both the 5 and the 9 d group were significantly increased (asterisks; p < 0.05) compared with
either the corresponding contralateral OML/IML ratios (within-group
comparisons) or each of the ipsilateral ratios from the control, sham,
and 2 d groups (across-group comparisons). There were no other
statistically significant differences either between contralateral and
ipsilateral sides or for either side compared across the groups. Note
that the quantitative data expressed here and in Figure 7 are ratios
that reflect relative differences in mRNA and protein levels and not
absolute concentrations. Values represent the mean ± SEM of 5 rats per group (30 measurements per rat).
[View Larger Version of this Image (39K GIF file)]
Quantitative evaluation of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence:
across-group comparisons
To compare the NMDAR1 immunofluorescence intensity in the OML
between lesioned and control groups and between the lesioned groups at
different time points after lesioning, the ratios of the intensity of
the OML/IML were used. Statistical analyses (ANOVA and post hoc
Scheffé's test) of the ipsilateral OML/IML intensity ratios
demonstrated that both the 5 and 9 d groups were significantly increased compared with either control group or the 2 d group, but
were not significantly different from one another (Fig. 3). The OML/IML
ratios of the control groups and the 2 d postlesion group were
also not significantly different from each other (Fig. 3). Such changes
were specific for the lesioned side, because comparisons of the
contralateral OML/IML ratios revealed no differences across any of the
groups. Thus, the immunofluorescence intensity in the ipsilateral OML
of the 5 and 9 d postlesion groups is not only elevated in
comparison with the contralateral OML (see above) but also relative to
the OML of the control groups, whereas no significant differences are
detectable in the 2 d postlesion group in either within-group
(ipsilateral vs contralateral) or across-group comparisons (Fig. 3).
These quantitative data are thus consistent with the qualitative
observations reported above and demonstrate that the visual impression
of an intensity increase in the denervated OML arises from an actual
increase in the staining intensity within individual cellular
profiles.
Determining the contribution of NMDAR1 immunoreactive astrocytes to
immunofluorescence intensity measurements
To evaluate the presence of NMDAR1 in astrocytes of the dentate
gyrus, as well as their potential contribution to intensity changes, we
simultaneously immunolabeled sections from control and lesioned brains
using antibodies to NMDAR1 and GFAP. Confocal microscopy revealed that
astrocytes within the molecular layer of the contralateral and
ipsilateral sides were immunoreactive for NMDAR1. Qualitative confocal
laser scanning microscopic evaluation of the contralateral OML of
lesioned animals and the OML of control animals revealed that the
intensity of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence within GFAP-labeled astrocytes
was either equivalent to or greater than the intensity of the
surrounding dendritic profiles (Fig. 4A,B). In contrast,
NMDAR1 immunofluorescence intensity within astrocytes in the
ipsilateral OML of lesioned animals was sometimes equivalent, but often
less intensely stained, than surrounding dendrites (Fig.
4C,D). This reveals that any contribution
to NMDAR1 immunofluorescence intensity levels by astrocytes would
actually decrease the average intensity measurement of the profiles in the ipsilateral OML. In addition, NMDAR1 immunoreactive processes that
were GFAP-negative (i.e., dendrites) could be followed from the IML to
the OML, whereupon crossing this border, the immunofluorescence intensity would increase (Fig. 4E). Thus, although we
have not assessed whether there is an overall change in NMDAR1
immunofluorescence intensity within the astrocytes in response to
lesion, we are confident that the intensity alterations we report here
are occurring within the granule cell dendrites.
Fig. 4.
Pairs of digitized confocal microscope images
taken through the OML of the contralateral (A,
B) or ipsilateral (C, D)
side from a rat examined 5 d postlesion showing
NMDAR1-immunoreactive astrocytes identified by double-labeling
immunofluorescence for GFAP (red, A,
C) or NMDAR1 (green,
B, D). In the contralateral OML field
(A, B), the intensity of NMDAR1
immunofluorescence in the processes of astrocytes
(arrows) is equivalent to, or greater than, the staining
intensity of the surrounding dendrites. In contrast, in the ipsilateral
(lesioned) OML field (C, D), the intensity of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence in processes of astrocytes (arrows) is much less in comparison with that of the
surrounding dendrites. Asterisks denote the
corresponding positions of astrocytic nuclei in each pair.
E, Image showing section spanning the ipsilateral molecular layer (IML and OML) taken from
the same 5 d postlesion animal. In this image, immunofluorescence
for both GFAP (red) and NMDAR1
(green) is shown simultaneously. Note a greater
intensity of NMDAR1 immunofluorescence in GFAP-negative processes
(i.e., dendrites) in the OML compared with the IML. A single
NMDAR1-labeled dendrite (arrows) can be followed
continuously from the IML into the OML, where the intensity of the
NMDAR1 immunofluorescence increases. Scale bar, 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (124K GIF file)]
Qualitative evaluation of NMDAR1 mRNA hybridization intensity
In both control and lesioned animals, an intense NMDAR1 mRNA
hybridization signal was localized over the somata of the dentate gyrus
granule cells and the pyramidal cells of the CA fields, as has been
described previously in rat brain (Moriyoshi et al., 1991 ). In both
unoperated and sham-lesioned controls, a very light hybridization
signal was observed across the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus and
the stratum radiatum of the CA fields, which could be attributed to
either very low levels of dendritic mRNA or labeling of astrocytes
(Fig. 5C). In animals 2 d postlesion, an
identical hybridization pattern was evident in both the ipsilateral and
contralateral dentate gyrus. At 5 and 9 d postlesion, however, an
increased hybridization signal for NMDAR1 mRNA intensity was apparent
over the entire dentate gyrus molecular layer of the side ipsilateral
to the lesion (Fig. 5B). By contrast, the stratum radiatum
of the CA field (Fig. 5B) and the contralateral dentate gyrus molecular layer (Fig. 5A) appeared unchanged relative
to control animals (Fig. 5C). Additionally, at 5 and 9 d postlesion, a subtle increase in mRNA hybridization intensity in the
stratum lacunosum moleculare of CA1 was observed in the ipsilateral
side (Fig. 5B) relative to the contralateral side (Fig.
5A). On emulsion-dipped slides counterstained with cresyl
violet, clusters of silver grains indicating the presence of probe
hybridized to NMDAR1 mRNA were concentrated over neurons (identified by
their lightly stained nuclei) throughout the granule and pyramidal cell
layers. In the dentate gyrus molecular layers of both control and
lesioned animals, a small number of darkly stained nuclei, indicative
of glial cells, were also overlain by clusters of silver grains (Fig.
5D). However, in the dentate gyrus molecular layer
ipsilateral to the perforant path lesion, the majority of the silver
grains were diffusely distributed throughout the neuropil, occupying
the spaces lying between such darkly Nissl-stained and more lightly
stained nuclei (Fig. 5D), suggesting that NMDAR1 mRNA is
present within dendrites.
Fig. 5.
Photomicrographs showing cRNA probe hybridization
to NMDAR1 mRNA in sections through the contralateral (A)
and ipsilateral (B, D) side of the
hippocampus in a rat examined 5 d postlesion, or through one side
of a control animal (C). In dark-field images (A-C), note the greater
hybridization intensity of both the OML and IML
(asterisk) in the ipsilateral side (B)
relative to the contralateral side (A) or the control
animal (C). D,
Higher-magnification bright-field image of a section through the
molecular layer, counterstained with cresyl violet. Clustered silver
grains overlay darkly Nissl-stained glia (arrows).
Silver grains were also diffusely localized throughout the neuropil of
the molecular layer, overlying spaces between labeled nuclei.
CA1-sr, CA1 stratum radiatum. Scale bars:
A-C, 250 µm; D, 25 µm
[View Larger Version of this Image (162K GIF file)]
To verify the subcellular, and possibly dendritic, distribution of
NMDAR1 mRNA, in situ hybridization histochemistry was
performed on rat hippocampal neurons grown in culture. When grown at
low density, the cell somata and dendrites can be clearly
distinguished. In emulsion autoradiograms of cultures hybridized with
antisense NMDAR1 mRNA, label was distributed in neuronal somata and
throughout dendritic trees (Fig.
6A,B). Not every
dendritic tree was labeled to the same extent, and every branch was not
labeled equally. By contrast, label showing hybridization of antisense
actin mRNA was confined to neuronal somata (Fig.
6C,D). In addition to labeled neurons,
both actin and NMDAR1 mRNAs were expressed in astrocytes (data not
shown). Sense strand controls showed no label above background.
Fig. 6.
Pairs of photomicrographs showing cRNA probe
hybridization to NMDAR1 mRNA (A) or actin mRNA
(C) in cultured rat hippocampal neurons
visualized under dark-field (A, C)
or phase-contrast optics (B, D). NMDAR1
mRNA hybridization is evident within neuronal somata and along
dendrites, two of which are shown by arrowheads. Actin mRNA is confined to the neuronal somata (C).
Scale bar, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (129K GIF file)]
Quantitative evaluation of NMDAR1 mRNA hybridization intensity:
within-group comparisons of ipsilateral versus contralateral
regions
Differences in hybridization patterns observed in the film
autoradiograms were investigated quantitatively by densitometric analysis. Intensity levels were measured in the dentate gyrus OML, IML,
and CA1-sr. Somatic layers were not analyzed, because hybridization
levels frequently exceeded the linear range of the film. Within-group,
ipsilateral versus contralateral molecular layer comparisons revealed
an increase in hybridization intensity 5 d postlesion within the
ipsilateral OML and IML compared with the contralateral OML and IML,
respectively. There was no change detected in the CA1-sr at this time
point. In contrast to the increases in the ipsilateral IML and OML
detected at 5 d postlesion, analysis of both control groups and
the 2 and 9 d postlesion groups revealed no differences in
hybridization intensity levels in the OML, IML, or CA1-sr between
ipsilateral and contralateral sides. However, in the 9 d
postlesion group, there was a trend toward an increased hybridization
intensity in the ipsilateral OML and IML relative to the contralateral
side.
To further evaluate changes in the OML and IML hybridization intensity
between sides, intensity ratios of OML/CA1-sr and IML/CA1-sr were used,
because the CA1-sr intensity level did not change between sides at any
time point (see above) and, therefore, serves as a nonvarying
denominator. This analysis confirmed an increase in both the OML and
the IML of the ipsilateral side as compared with the contralateral side
at 5 d postlesion, with no change in the control groups or the
2 d postlesion group (Fig.
7A,B). However,
comparisons of the OML/CA1-sr and IML/CA1-sr ratios between the
ipsilateral and contralateral sides at 9 d postlesion revealed a
statistically significant increase (Fig.
7A,B), suggesting that a change
affecting both the OML and the IML is indeed occurring 9 d
postlesion. Although there was a nonsignificant trend toward increased
intensity levels of the ipsilateral OML and IML at 9 d when the
absolute intensity values of the ipsilateral and contralateral sides
were compared (see above), it is likely that the use of a nonvarying
denominator in the ratio comparisons decreased the variability and,
thus, revealed a change occurring at 9 d postlesion.
Fig. 7.
Bar graphs comparing ratios of NMDAR1 mRNA
hybridization intensity values of the IML/CA1-sr (A),
the OML/CA1-sr (B), and the OML/IML (C)
for all control and lesioned groups. Statistical comparisons were
performed both within groups (ipsilateral vs contralateral sides;
Student's unpaired t test) and across groups (ANOVA and Scheffé's test). Comparisons of either the IML/CA1-sr
(A) or the OML/CA1-sr (B) ratios showed
that the ipsilateral values at 5 and 9 d
(asterisks, p < 0.05) are increased
compared either with the corresponding contralateral side (within-group
comparisons) or with any of the ipsilateral ratios of the other groups
(across-group comparisons). There were no other statistically
significant differences, either between contralateral and ipsilateral
sides of the same groups or for comparisons of corresponding sides
across groups. Additionally, there were no statistically significant
differences in the OML/IML ratios (C) in either
within-group or across-group comparisons. Values represent the
mean ± SEM for four rats.
[View Larger Version of this Image (45K GIF file)]
Quantitative evaluation of NMDAR1 mRNA hybridization
intensity: across-group comparisons
To compare NMDAR1 mRNA hybridization intensity levels in the OML
and IML across groups, the OML/CA1-sr and IML/CA1-sr ratios were used.
Analysis of the ipsilateral ratios revealed an increase of both the
OML/CA1-sr and the IML/CA1-sr ratios at 5 and 9 d postlesion
compared with either control group or the 2 d postlesion group
(Fig. 7A,B). Additionally, the
ratios were not significantly different from one another at 5 and
9 d or among the controls and the 2 d group (Fig.
7A,B). A similar analysis using
ratios taken from the side contralateral to the lesion demonstrated no differences across the OML/CA1-sr or the IML/CA1-sr ratios for any of
the groups analyzed (Fig. 7A,B).
Thus, at 5 and 9 d postlesion, the hybridization intensity of the
ipsilateral OML and IML increases compared with the contralateral OML
and IML (see above) (within-group comparisons) and the OML and IML of
control animals.
Additional statistical analyses demonstrated no difference in the
OML/IML ratios at any postlesion time point for either within-group comparisons or across-group comparisons (Fig. 7C), revealing
that postlesion increases in hybridization intensity levels of the OML
and IML were of similar magnitude and, therefore, did not produce a
differential pattern of hybridization intensity across the molecular
layer as was evident for NMDAR1 immunofluorescence.
DISCUSSION
The objective of this study was to investigate cellular and
molecular mechanisms underlying NMDA receptor plasticity in response to
denervation and subsequent synaptic reorganization. There were three
principal findings based on quantitative immunofluorescence and
in situ hybridization methods for localizing NMDAR1 to
dentate gyrus granule cells after transection of the perforant path.
First, changes in NMDAR1 immunofluorescence intensity and mRNA
hybridization levels were evident only on the side ipsilateral to the
lesion and occurred with a similar time course. Second, perforant path transection induced an overt increase in immunofluorescence intensity within dentate gyrus granule cell somata and the portion of their distal dendrites that lay within the denervated OML, although we cannot
rule out an additional contribution by changing intensity levels in
astrocytes. Third, lesion-induced changes in NMDAR1 mRNA hybridization
levels were manifested by the novel appearance of significant
hybridization throughout the full extent of the dentate
gyrus molecular layer, which, when combined with correlative mRNA
localization studies of cultured hippocampal neurons, suggest that
NMDAR1 mRNA is a member of a limited population of mRNAs that can be
localized within dendrites. Thus, these data indicate that NMDAR1 mRNA
and protein exhibit spatially distinct patterns of lesion-induced
changes, which suggests that whereas mRNA transport increases
throughout the entire dendritic extent, cellular mechanisms exist that
control the intradendritic distribution or modification of NMDAR1
protein within a limited region of dendrites whose afferent activity is
perturbed. Such mechanisms may include local protein synthesis and
increased dendritic protein transport. Finally, the time course of such
changes suggests that NMDAR1 regulation may be more intimately related
to the period of terminal proliferation and synaptogenesis than to the
earlier period of terminal degeneration.
Localization of NMDAR1 mRNA within dendrites
The present data suggest that NMDAR1 mRNA is one of a select
population of mRNAs that is translocated into dendrites. Others of this
kind include MAP2 (Garner et al., 1988 ), the -subunit of CaM kinase
II (Burgin et al., 1990 ; Benson et al., 1992 ), Arc (Link et al., 1995 ;
Lyford et al., 1995 ), and the inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor
(Furuichi et al., 1993 ). A previous single cell PCR study has shown
that NMDAR1 mRNA is present within dendrites (Miyashiro et al., 1994 ),
which is consistent with results showing clear dendritic localization
of NMDAR1 mRNA within dendrites of cultured hippocampal neurons (Benson
1997 ; present study). However, previous localization studies in
vivo have not shown any evidence of a dendritic distribution
(Moriyoshi et al., 1991 ; Laurie and Seeburg, 1994 ). This discrepancy
most likely reflects very low basal levels of dendritic NMDAR1 mRNA,
which become suprathreshold for overt detectability after perforant
path lesion.
NMDAR1 mRNA hybridization was also visualized within astrocytes both
in vivo and in vitro, suggesting that the
lesion-induced increase in hybridization intensity may have been
partially attributable to changes within astrocytes. It has been
demonstrated previously that EC lesions induce astrocyte hypertrophy
within the molecular layer that is largely confined to the denervated
OML (Jensen et al., 1994 ). However, the striking increase in NMDAR1
mRNA hybridization levels throughout the full extent of the
molecular layer after perforant path transection and the diffuse
distribution of numerous silver grains throughout the neuropil suggest
a major contribution to such increases by granule cell dendrites.
However, we cannot exclude the possibility of an accompanying change in
mRNA hybridization levels within astrocytes, which may be the basis for
the apparent increase in CA1 stratum lacunosum moleculare.
Potential mechanisms underlying protein and mRNA alterations
Both NMDAR1 protein and mRNA changes were first detected at 5 d postlesion, which suggests that such initial changes may have been
induced by terminal proliferation, since this time point is before the
major onset of new synapse formation (Steward and Vinsant, 1983 ).
Terminal proliferation may induce receptor changes through the release
of diffusable elements, since certain soluble factors produced by CNS
tissue have been demonstrated to increase the number of acetylcholine
receptors and promote clustering in muscle fibers (Jessell et al.,
1979 ; Schaffner and Daniels, 1982 ). Such increases were maintained
through at least 9 d postlesion, which is during the early period
of reactive synaptogenesis. Thus, a longer time course will be pursued
in future studies to evaluate whether receptor levels return to control
levels after the majority of synapses have been replaced. However,
preliminary observations on two animals revealed that receptor levels
remain elevated 17 d postlesion (A. Gazzaley, D. Benson, G. Huntley, and J. Morrison, unpublished observations). A previous
autoradiographic study of ligand binding to the NMDAR in the dentate
gyrus after EC lesioning also detected an increase in binding levels in
the OML of the ipsilateral side, but only after 21 d postlesion
and not limited to the ipsilateral OML (Ulas et al., 1990 ). The
discrepancy in the time course may represent a difference in the
sensitivity of the techniques used and/or differential changes
affecting other NMDAR subunits (e.g., 2A-D). It is also possible that
the observed changes in immunofluorescence and hybridization levels may
represent a response to denervation, which was either delayed or did
not attain a magnitude sufficient to be detected by the techniques used, at 2 d postlesion.
NMDAR1 immunofluorescence is primarily a reflection of the cytoplasmic
pool of the NMDAR1 subunit protein within the dendrites and soma.
Immunoelectron microscopic analyses of NMDAR1 immunolabeling in
hippocampal and neocortical pyramidal neurons have revealed dense
patches of NMDAR1 labeling throughout the somatodendritic cytoplasm
often associated with microtubules, rough endoplasmic reticulum, and
the Golgi apparatus, suggesting that the cytoplasmic patches of
labeling may represent the synthesis and transport pools of the protein
(Huntley et al., 1994 ; Petralia et al., 1994 ). The increases in NMDAR1
immunofluorescence intensity may represent increases in protein
concentration primarily within these cytoplasmic pools, because a
previous study has demonstrated that immunofluorescence intensity is a
reflection of protein concentration (Good et al., 1992 ). It is likely,
although still speculative, that such changes reflect increases in
synaptically localized receptors, because previous studies using this
lesion paradigm have revealed subsequent increases in NMDAR ligand
binding (Ulas et al., 1990 ).
Previous studies, along with the findings presented in this paper,
suggest that the increase in NMDAR1 immunofluorescence within the OML
of the lesioned side is at least partially the result of increased
local protein synthesis of the NMDAR1 subunit within the denervated
dendritic segments of the molecular layer. Electron microscopy has
shown that granule cell dendrites contain polyribosomes, which are
located predominantly under the base of dendritic spines (Steward and
Levy, 1982 ) and which are in association with membranous cisterns that
may represent the functional equivalent of rough endoplasmic reticulum
(Steward and Reeves, 1988 ). A study of synaptodendrosomes, subcellular
fractions of pinched-off axon terminals and dendrites, revealed
incorporation of radiolabeled amino acids in newly synthesized
proteins, some of which become incorporated as components of the
synaptic membrane (Rao and Steward, 1991 ). Interestingly, one such
synaptic membrane protein had a molecular weight of 116 kDa, equivalent
to that of NMDAR1 found within synaptic plasma membrane fractions
(Brose et al., 1993 ). Most convincingly, Torre and Steward (1996)
demonstrated recently that dendrites isolated from their parent cell
body can both synthesize and glycosylate proteins, a necessary step in the post-translational processing of membrane-spanning neurotransmitter receptors (Torre and Steward, 1992 , 1996 ). Thus, taken together, these
data establish the presence of protein synthetic and processing machinery within dendrites.
Local protein synthesis may be important during synaptic plasticity
resulting from alterations in afferent drive (Steward and Levy, 1982 ),
which is supported by an increased incidence of polyribosomes beneath
dendritic spines within the denervated dendritic segments of the
dentate gyrus after EC lesioning (Steward, 1983 ). Additionally,
increases in ribosomal RNA (Philips et al., 1987 ) and in the
incorporation of radiolabeled amino acids (Fass and Steward, 1983 ;
Philips et al., 1987 ) occur exclusively within the denervated OML. The
time course of such observations are maximal during the period of
terminal proliferation and occur exclusively within the OML, which
coincides with the increase in NMDAR1 immunofluorescence observed in
the present study and, thus, supports the idea that a lamina-specific
increase in NMDAR1 protein might result in part from increased local
protein synthesis. In support of this hypothesis, a recent study
demonstrated that growth factor-induced synaptic plasticity is
dependent on local protein synthesis (Kang and Schuman, 1996 ). It is
also possible that the increased intensity in the denervated lamina may
be the result of increased transport of NMDAR1 protein synthesized in
the soma, since immunofluorescence intensity increased in granule cell
somata at 5 and 9 d postlesion.
Unlike NMDAR1 immunofluorescence, NMDAR1 mRNA hybridization levels
increased throughout the full extent of the molecular layer after
perforant path transection. Similarly, EC lesions do not differentially
affect the distribution across the molecular layer of two other
dendritic mRNAs, those encoding MAP2 (Steward and Wallace, 1994 ) and
CAMKII (Benson et al., 1992 ; Steward and Wallace, 1994 ). Likewise,
LTP induction in the perforant path induces an increase in dendritic
Arc mRNA (Link et al., 1995 ; Lyford et al., 1995 ) and CAMKII mRNA
(Thomas et al., 1994b ) equally in both the IML and the OML. Thus,
although the activation of the protein synthetic machinery may be
specific for isolated postsynaptic zones that have been deafferented,
the increase in mRNA hybridization appears to be broadly distributed
throughout the entire dendrite. Increased levels of mRNA in the
dendrites may be the result of an increased rate of dendritic transport
or by an alteration in mRNA stability. It is also possible that the
observed increase in hybridization intensity reflects changes in the
accessibility of the probe to the mRNA.
Functional significance
Both physiological (Reeves and Steward, 1988 ) and behavioral
recovery (Loesche and Steward, 1977 ; Reeves and Smith, 1987 ) from
unilateral EC lesions have been documented to occur during the time
period examined. From these studies, it was hypothesized that the early
phase of physiological recovery, before the major onset of new synapse
formation, may be the result of an increase in the number of receptors,
producing an increase in the activity of surviving synapses similar to
denervation supersensitivity in muscle fibers (Reeves and Steward,
1988 ). The present data support this hypothesis by suggesting that
increases in the concentration of NMDARs, and possibly other GluR
subtypes (Geddes et al., 1985 ; Ulas et al., 1990 ), may facilitate this
early return of function. Findings suggest that the initial
establishment of long-term facilitation in Aplysia involves
a redistribution of the reserve pool of excitatory amino acid receptors
to supply newly formed synaptic sites, whereas later stages may require
increased protein synthesis of receptors to replenish the reserve pool
(Trudeau and Castellucci, 1995 ).
The results of this study are consistent with our initial hypothesis
that NMDAR1 protein and mRNA levels are modifiable by changes in
afferent activity. It is likely that the response of selectively
modulating receptor concentrations within the dendrites is not limited
to overt experimental manipulations such as lesions, but is a standard,
albeit more subtle, component of the postsynaptic response to
modifications in afferent activity that occur during normal brain
functioning and synaptic plasticity.
FOOTNOTES
Received Oct. 28, 1996; revised Dec. 23, 1996; accepted Jan. 3, 1997.
This work was supported by the Charles A. Dana Foundation, the
Alexander and Alexandrine Sinsheimer Foundation, National Institutes of
Health Grants AG06647 (J.H.M.) and NS34659 (G.W.H.), and National Science Foundation Grant IBN-9419900 (D.L.B.). A.H.G. is a Dana Scholar. We thank Dr. Nancy Weiland from Rockefeller University for
assistance with image analysis of in situ hybridization
autoradiograms.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. J. H. Morrison, Fishberg
Research Center for Neurobiology, The Mount Sinai School of Medicine,
Box 1065, One Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, NY 10029-6574.
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