 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 1998, 18(11):4133-4144
Regulation of the Nigrostriatal Pathway by Metabotropic Glutamate
Receptors during Development
Dietmar
Plenz and
Stephen T.
Kitai
University of Tennessee, College of Medicine, Department of Anatomy
and Neurobiology, Memphis, Tennessee 38163
 |
ABSTRACT |
Dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra heavily innervate the
striatum, making it the nucleus with the highest levels of dopamine in
the adult brain. The present study analyzes the time course and the
density of striatal innervation by nigral dopamine neurons and
characterizes the role of the neurotransmitter glutamate during the
development of the nigrostriatal pathway. For this purpose, organotypic
cultures containing the cortex, the striatum, and the substantia nigra
(triple cultures) were prepared from rat brains at postnatal day (PND)
0-2 and were cultured for up to 60 d in vitro
(DIV). Dopamine fibers and neurons were labeled using tyrosine
hydroxylase (TH) immunohistochemistry. Striatal TH-ir fiber density was
quantitatively analyzed using confocal laser scanning microscopy
(CLSM). In long-term triple cultures (44 ± 3 DIV), the striatal
dopamine fiber density was high and was weakly correlated with the
number of nigral dopamine neurons. The high striatal dopamine fiber
density mainly resulted from an enhanced ingrowth and ramification of
dopamine fibers from nigral neurons during 8-17 DIV. The metabotropic
glutamate receptor (mGluR) antagonist
L(+)-2-amino-3-phosphonopropionic acid (L-AP-3) selectively inhibited this dopaminergic innervation of the
striatum, whereas ionotropic GluR antagonists had no effect. The
L-AP-3-mediated inhibition was prevented by the mGluR
agonist
1S,3R-aminocyclopentane-1,3-dicarboxylic acid (1S,3R-ACPD). The inhibition of the
striatal dopaminergic innervation by L-AP-3 was
further confirmed by anterograde tracing of the nigrostriatal
projection with Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin. These results indicate that glutamate, by acting on group I mGluRs, plays an important "trophic" role for the development of the
nigrostriatal dopamine pathway.
Key words:
development; substantia nigra; striatum; nigrostriatal
projection; cortex; metabotropic glutamate receptor; dopamine; neurotrophic factor; organotypic culture
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Dopamine neurons in the substantia
nigra pars compacta (SNc) heavily innervate the striatum during
development (Olson et al., 1972 ; Seiger and Olson, 1973 ; Voorn et al.,
1988 ). This dopaminergic innervation is tissue-specific because
dopamine neurons in organotypic mesencephalon cultures preferentially
innervate the striatum but not the hippocampus or cerebellum
(Østergaard et al., 1990 ; Holmes et al., 1995 ). Striatal neurons exert
some growth-promoting effect on mesencephalic dopamine neurons. They
increase the [3H]dopamine uptake in dissociated
mesencephalon cultures prepared from mouse or rat and also stimulate
neurite outgrowth in dopamine neurons (Prochiantz et al., 1979 ;
Hemmendinger et al., 1981 ; Tomozawa and Appel, 1986 ; Dal Toso et al.,
1988 ; Zhou et al., 1994 ). The mechanisms involved in these interactions
between dopaminergic nigral neurons and striatal neurons are not
clear.
Glutamate is a highly abundant neurotransmitter in the striatum. The
striatum receives major glutamatergic projections from most cortical
areas (McGeorge and Faull, 1989 ) and also from the thalamus (e.g.,
Lapper and Bolam, 1992 ). The cortical projections have been shown to be
important for proper maturation of striatal neurons (Plenz and Aertsen,
1996b ). Furthermore, nigral dopamine neurons themselves may contain
glutamate (Shiroyama et al., 1996 ). Glutamate acts on both ionotropic
receptors and G-protein-coupled metabotropic receptors (mGluR)
(Seeburg, 1993 ; Nakanishi, 1994 ). mGluRs are divided into several
groups based on agonist interactions and associated second messengers
(Nakanishi, 1994 ). In the cortex, the striatum, and the substantia
nigra, group I mGluRs (mGluR1, mGluR5) are particularly highly abundant
(Shigemoto et al., 1992 ; Romano et al., 1995 ; Testa et al.,
1995 ). Via these receptors, glutamate stimulates phosphoinositide (PI)
hydrolysis in striatal and cortical neurons (Doble and Perrier, 1989 ;
Schoepp et al., 1992 ; Bevilacqua et al., 1995 ; Lorezini et al., 1996 ;
Manzoni et al., 1996 ; Thomsen et al., 1996 ).
Several lines of evidence suggest that mGluR group I activation and
subsequent PI hydrolysis might play an important role in neuronal
differentiation and synaptogenesis during development. First,
morphological differentiation of pheochromocytoma 12 cells requires the
activation of specific PI kinases (Jackson et al., 1996 ). Second, in
the developing visual cortex, the stimulation of PI hydrolysis by
excitatory amino acids only occurs during a critical postnatal period
of synaptic modification (Bear and Dudek, 1991 ). This stimulation is
inhibited by the mGluR group I antagonist AP-3. Third, growth factors
that have important roles in the maturation and survival of neurons
during development selectively upregulate PI-coupled mGluR5 in
astrocytes (Miller et al., 1995 ). In the present study, we tested
whether glutamate by acting via group I mGluRs might also be important
for the development of the nigrostriatal pathway.
We have recently established that in cortex-striatum-substantia nigra
organotypic cultures (triple cultures), striatal and cortical neuronal
classes show an electrophysiology and morphology similar to that of
corresponding classes in the in vivo and the acute slice
preparation (Plenz and Kitai, 1996a ,b , 1998 ). In the present study,
this culture system was used to study the role of mGluRs during the
development of the nigrostriatal pathway using tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH) immunohistochemistry combined with confocal laser scanning
microscopy (CLSM) and anterograde tracing with Phaseolus
vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Preparation of triple cultures
For the preparation of the cortex-striatum-substantia nigra
organotypic cultures, coronal sections (350-400 µm) from rat brains (Harlan Sprague Dawley, Indianapolis, IN) at postnatal day (PND) 0-2
were cut on a microslicer (D.S.K., Ted Pella, CA). Slices containing
the striatum and the cortex were used for dissection of dorsolateral
cortical and striatal tissue (Fig.
1A). For the substantia
nigra (including pars compacta and pars reticulata), ventrolateral
sections from mesencephalic slices were selected, and medial tissue
regions were avoided (Fig. 1B). The tissue was arranged in serial order (Fig. 1C) on a small rectangular
piece of a Millicell-CM membrane (Millipore, Bedford, MA) with 20 µl of chicken plasma (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) on a coverslip. Then 20 µl
of bovine thrombin (1000 National Institutes of Health units/0.75 ml;
Sigma) was added. After plasma coagulation, the cultures were put into
narrow culture tubes (Nunc, Naperville, IL), and medium was added (750 µl). The unbuffered standard medium consisted of 50% basal medium
Eagle, 25% HBSS, and 25% horse serum with 0.5% glucose and 0.5 mM L-glutamine added (all Gibco, Grand Island, NY). After 3 and 27 d in vitro (DIV), 10 µl of
mitosis inhibitor was added for 24 hr (4.4 mM
cytosine-5- -arabinofuranoside, 4.4 mM uridine, and 4.4 mM 5-fluorodeoxyuridine; calculated to final concentration;
all Sigma). The medium was changed every 3-5 d [for further details,
see Gähwiler (1981) ; Plenz and Aertsen (1996a) ; Plenz and Kitai
(1996b) ].

View larger version (46K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Preparation of cortex-striatum-substantia nigra
cultures (triple cultures). A, B,
Cortical (cx), striatal (cp), and nigral
(sn) tissue regions dissected from transversal rat
brains at PND 0-2 indicated by black lines [E22; plate
7 and 19 taken from Altman and Bayer (1995) ]. C,
Arrangement of the dissected tissues during culturing.
D-H, Quantitative analysis of striatal
TH-ir fiber densities. D, A CLSM picture at high
magnification taken 8 µm below the striatal surface. First, an
estimation of the background intensity is achieved by placing a
line onto regions with no TH-ir fibers present
(E, background). Then, straight
lines are placed at 0, 45, 90, and 135°
(measure, only 0° shown). E,
G, Typical pixel intensities over distance for a
background and a measure line,
respectively. F, The background distribution from which
a threshold was chosen at mean + 4 × SD (filled
arrows in F, H; broken
lines in E, G). H,
This threshold used to determine the number of pixels above threshold
(PAT) in the pixel intensity distribution
obtained from the measure (gray
area).
|
|
Pharmacological treatment
All drugs were added directly to the culture medium.
Tetrodotoxin (TTX; Sigma), 6,7-dinitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (DNQX;
Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA), and
(±)-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP-5; Research Biochemicals)
were dissolved directly in the culture medium. The mGluR antagonists
L(+)-2-amino-3-phosphonopropionic acid (L-AP-3;
Tocris Cookson, St. Louis, MO) and the mGluR agonist 1S,3R-aminocyclopentane-1,3-dicarboxylic acid
(1S,3R-ACPD; Tocris Cookson) were dissolved in
0.1N NaOH. Before application, the drug solution was neutralized by
0.1N HCl, and drugs were added directly to the culture tubes to the
final concentrations. Normal groups were treated with the 0.1N
NaOH/0.1N HCl mixture alone. Batches of cultures, consisting of 30-40
cultures, were prepared. One batch was always taken from one litter.
After 8 DIV, each batch was divided into four to five groups containing
six to eight triple cultures, and drugs were added. The pharmacological
treatment was repeated at 12 DIV. The cultures were fixed at 16 DIV and were processed for immunohistochemistry.
Anterograde tracing of nigrostriatal fibers with PHA-L
The triple cultures were transferred to a chamber mounted on an
inverted microscope (Nikon Diaphot 300; Nikon, Melville, NY). The glass
bottom of the recording chamber allowed for visual selection of the
substantia nigra within the triple cultures that were submerged in HBSS
(Gibco) with 350 mg of NaHCO3 added at 36.5 ± 1°C.
Glass micropipettes with a tip diameter of 5-10 µm were filled with PHA-L (2.5% in 10 mM phosphate; Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA) and positioned in the substantia nigra with the aid of
a micromanipulator (MX-2; Narishige USA, Sea Cliff, NY). PHA-L was
injected iontophoretically (5-10 µA; duty cycle, 7 sec on-7 sec
off; 20 min) (Gerfen and Sawchenko, 1984 ). Only one injection was made
for each culture after 14 DIV. Because the injections were performed
under nonsterile conditions, the days after the injections, cultures
were treated with a culture medium with an antibiotic-antimycotic
solution (0.125 ml/100 ml of medium; Gibco). After a survival time of
2 d, the cultures were double-immunostained for PHA-L and TH (see below).
Immunohistochemistry
Long-term cultures were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (PF) and
2% picric acid in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (PB), pH 7.4, overnight at 4°C and then were incubated in 2%
H2O2 in 0.1 M PBS and 0.3% Triton
X-100 (30 min; Sigma). For developmental studies, triple cultures were
washed (0.1 M PB; three times for 10 min each; 4°C), fixed in 4% PF and 0.1 M PB (30 min; 23°C), and washed
again (0.1 M PB; three times for 10 min each; 4°C).
Subsequent washing was done in 0.1 M PBS (three times for
10 min each) if not otherwise indicated.
For TH immunohistochemistry, all triple cultures were incubated
overnight in mouse anti-TH (1:500; Incstar, Stillwater, MN) in 0.1 M PBS containing 3% normal horse serum (Vector
Laboratories) and 0.3% Triton X-100. They were washed and then
incubated in fluorescein anti-mouse IgG (FITC; 1:150; Vector
Laboratories) in PBS containing 0.3% Triton X-100 for 3 hr at room
temperature and were covered in 2.5% 1,4-diazabicyclo-[2.2.2]-octane
(50% glycerol in PBS; Sigma) or in Vectashield (Vector Laboratories). After washing in 0.05 M Tris-buffered saline (TBS; three
times for 10 min each), the triple cultures were incubated in mouse monoclonal peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP; 1:500; Sigma) for 2 hr. They
were washed (0.05 M TBS; three times for 10 min each) and
reacted with 0.1% 3,3'-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride (DAB; 0.1 M TBS; 0.002% H2O2).
Cultures were then Nissl-stained and mounted.
For double labeling of PHA-L and TH, triple cultures were incubated in
mouse anti-TH (1:1000) and biotinylated goat anti-PHA-L (1:1000; Vector
Laboratories) in 0.1 M PBS with 3% normal goat serum, 3%
normal horse serum (Vector Laboratories), and 0.3% Triton X-100 (48 hr; 4°C). After washing, they were incubated in fluorescein avidin D
(FITC; 1:150; Vector Laboratories) and Texas Red anti-mouse IgG (1:150;
Vector Laboratories; 0.1 M PBS; 0.3% Triton X-100; 3 hr;
23°C).
The fluorescent stains were analyzed using CLSM (Bio-Rad MRC 1000;
Olympus Immunochemicals, Lake Success, NY). Optical sections (0.5-5 µm) were taken throughout the entire depth of the tissue. For
each section, a Kalman filter (n = 3) and background
subtraction (n = 1) were used to increase the
signal-to-noise ratio.
Quantitative analysis of morphological parameters
Number of nigral TH-ir neurons. The number of nigral
TH-ir neurons was estimated using a fluorescence light microscope
(BX50; Olympus America, Melville, NY) with a CCD camera attached to a computer image analysis system (IPLab Spectrum; Signal Analysis Corporation, Vienna, VA). During early stages of the project, the TH-ir
neuron numbers obtained from the fluorescent pictures were
counterchecked after conversion to a permanent stain using PAP.
Counting differences between both methods were <5%, and for most
cultures the number of TH-ir neurons was obtained from fluorescent pictures. In cases with very high TH-ir numbers (>300), the neuronal density of TH-ir neurons was calculated from five small areas under
40× magnification and averaged. Then, the total number of neurons was
estimated from the total area covered by TH-ir neurons.
Somatic cross-sectional area of nigral TH-ir neurons. The
somatic cross-sectional area of TH-ir neurons was obtained from 100×
fluorescent pictures. A square grid of fixed size (240 × 310 µm) was arbitrarily placed over an area with TH-ir neurons, and all
neurons within that area or intersecting two borders were measured
digitally by outlining the cell bodies. On average, 10 cultures per
group with 40 cell bodies per culture were analyzed.
Striatal TH-ir fiber densities. The striatal density of
TH-ir fibers was obtained from optical sections taken at 100×
magnification using CLSM. The sections had an optical thickness of 0.8 µm and were positioned 6-8 µm below the striatal surface. First, a
line was placed on tissue regions with no TH-ir fibers present, and the
pixel intensities along this line were measured (Fig.
1D,E, background). Then,
four straight lines were placed at 0, 45, 90, and 135°, and the pixel
intensities along each line were obtained (Fig.
1D,G, measure). A
threshold value was chosen at mean plus 4 × SD from the
background pixel intensity distribution (Fig. 1F) and
was used to determine the number of pixels above threshold (PAT) in the
measures (Fig. 1H). The PAT values were normalized to
100 µm and averaged (nPAT). This measuring was repeated for seven
arbitrarily chosen locations within the striatum for each culture. The
results from the seven locations were then averaged. The calculations
were done in Mathematica (Wolfram Research, Champaign, IL) on a Sun
SPARCstation (Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, CA).
Anterograde tracing with PHA-L. The location of the PHA-L
injection was based on the presence of labeled neurons and glia cells
in the nigral culture and, in some cases, on the tissue damage caused
by the injection electrode. At the striatal level, seven locations were
arbitrarily chosen, and each striatal location was screened for the
presence of PHA-L-ir fibers at 100× magnification using CLSM. At each
location, optical sections were taken from the surface to the bottom of
the tissue in steps of 2 µm. The number of PHA-L-ir fibers per
optical section was counted and averaged over all sections and all
locations for each culture. To test for TH and PHA-L double labeling,
we scanned sections with PHA-L-ir and TH-ir fibers singly under high
resolution.
Striatal culture thickness as revealed by the depth distribution
of TH-ir fibers. The striatal culture thickness was measured using
vertical scans at 100× magnification (step size, 0.8 µm), thereby
analyzing the distribution of TH-ir fibers. For each culture, seven
arbitrarily chosen locations were examined, and the results were
averaged. In general, the striatum flattened twice as much as the
cortical or nigral tissue during culturing. Judging from the
penetration depth of the TH stain in those thicker areas, we always
achieved a complete penetration of the striatum with the
antibodies.
Neuronal density estimations. The density of striatal
neurons was analyzed from Nissl-stained cultures using a light
microscope with a drawing tube attached. For each culture, a square
grid of fixed size (200 × 320 µm) was arbitrarily placed over a
striatal area, and all neurons within that area or intersecting two
borders were counted. Ten areas were analyzed and averaged per
culture.
Data are expressed as mean ± SEM if not otherwise stated. For the
statistical analysis, the one-way ANOVA with a post
hoc Student-Newman-Keuls test (significance level,
p < 0.05) has been used if not otherwise stated.
Correlation was estimated by regression analysis combined with
F and t statistics (Zar, 1984 ).
 |
RESULTS |
Nigral TH-ir neurons and striatal TH-ir fiber density in long-term
triple cultures
In long-term triple cultures grown for 44 ± 3 DIV
(n = 23), intensively labeled TH-ir neurons were found
exclusively in the nigral culture. These neurons were normally located
within a subregion of the substantia nigra with an average of 135 ± 28 TH-ir neurons per culture. TH-ir neurons were characterized by a
relatively large somatic cross-sectional area of 305 ± 4 µm2 (n = 372) and three to five
primary dendrites that extended for several hundred micrometers.
Primary and higher order dendrites were generally smooth and sparsely
branched (Fig.
2A,B).
The axon of TH-ir neurons heavily arborized in the striatum (Fig.
2C,D) that showed an average TH-ir fiber density
of 70.0 ± 6.4 nPAT. In the long-term cultures, this density was
only weakly correlated with the number of nigral TH-ir neurons (see
Figs. 2, 4H; F = 3.56;
r = 0.38; df = 1, 21; p = 0.073;
y = a + bx with a = 62 ± 7 and b = 0.070 ± 0.038; mean ± SEM). The thickness of the striatal culture was 39.1 ± 4.5 µm (n = 23) as measured by the average depth
distribution of TH-ir fibers.

View larger version (126K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
TH-ir neurons in the substantia nigra and
corresponding striatal TH-ir fibers in long-term
cortex-striatum-substantia nigra organotypic cultures.
A, B, Nigral TH-ir neurons in a long-term
triple culture with a low (n = 22) and a high
(n = 360) total number of TH-ir nigral neurons,
respectively. C, D, Corresponding
striatal TH-ir fibers for the cultures shown in A and
B, respectively. Note the slightly increased number of
striatal TH-ir fibers for the culture with high total numbers of TH-ir
neurons. Pictures are projections of a series of optical sections that
covered the total depth of the nigral and striatal tissue.
cp, Striatum; sn, substantia nigra. Scale
bar: A-D, 100 µm.
|
|
Development of the nigrostriatal pathway
In the developmental study, we attempted to ascertain the time of
the main ingrowth of TH-ir fibers into the striatum. Triple cultures
from one single batch were analyzed at 5, 8, 11, 14, and 17 DIV for the
number of nigral TH-ir neurons and the striatal density of TH-ir fibers
(Fig. 3). The number of TH-ir neurons per
culture did not differ between the different groups (F = 0.89; df = 4, 26; p = 0.48; 308 ± 32 neurons/culture/group).

View larger version (147K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Development of the striatal TH-ir fiber density
and growth characteristics of TH-ir nigral fibers in triple cultures.
A, Development of the striatal TH-ir fiber density
(upper row) at 5, 8, 11, 14, and 17 DIV. The earliest
ingrowth of new TH-ir fibers occurs between 5 and 8 DIV
(arrowhead). The cytoplasmatic area of the cell body in
TH-ir neurons is relatively small during the first week but increases
during the second week (lower row). Note the constant
size of the nucleus during this postnatal period. All pictures are
single optical sections. B, Statistical analysis of
TH-ir fiber ingrowth into the striatum. The striatal TH-ir fiber
density is low at 5 and 8 DIV and increases during the following 9 d (mean ± SEM). At 17 DIV, the striatal TH-ir fiber density has
reached a significantly higher level (*) when compared with that at 5 and 8 DIV. C, TH-ir fibers (DAB converted) with an
axonal growth cone (arrowhead) several millimeters
outside the nigral tissue within the plasma clot (8 DIV). Note the low
tendency to branch (arrow). D, Single
TH-ir fiber that grows at the border of the striatal area (8 DIV). Note
the early branching point (arrow) and the multiple
growth cones (arrowheads) that result from this and
subsequent branching points. cp, Striatum;
sn, substantia nigra. Scale bar: A,
C, D, 100 µm.
|
|
At 5 DIV, no TH-ir fibers were visible in the striatum. However, many
TH-ir elements were randomly dotted throughout the striatum (Fig.
3A). At 8 DIV, some TH-ir fibers with varicosities were seen
in the striatum. At 11 DIV, the striatum was intensively and
homogeneously innervated by TH-ir fibers. During the following 6 d, the density of striatal TH-ir fibers increased further (Fig. 3A,B). The striatal TH-ir fiber
density at 17 DIV was significant higher when compared with that at 5 DIV and 8 DIV (Fig. 3B). At 17 DIV, the striatal TH-ir
density did not differ from those densities measured in long-term
cultures (67.9 ± 12.2 nPAT at 17 DIV vs 71.4 ± 5.1 nPAT at
44 DIV; two-tailed t test; compare Figs. 3B, 4H).

View larger version (37K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Effect of glutamate receptor blockade on striatal
TH-ir fiber density during development. A, Effect on
TH-ir fiber density of drugs applied alone or in combination (50 µM DNQX; 50 µM AP-5; 100 µM
L-AP-3). Values are mean ± SEM.
Numbers in parentheses indicate the
number of cultures per group. The asterisk indicates
significantly different from normal (p < 0.05). B, C, Striatal TH-ir fibers from
the normal and the L-AP-3 groups. Pictures are projections
of a series of optical sections that covered the total striatal depth.
D, E, Corresponding striatal TH-ir fibers
at higher magnification (single optical section; 7 µm below the striatal surface). F, Correlation between
striatal TH-ir fiber density and the number of nigral TH-ir neurons
under normal conditions after 16 DIV (linear regression,
r = 0.55; n = 45;
p < 0.001; slope, 8.5/100 nigral TH-ir neurons;
n = 8 experiments combined). G,
Correlation between striatal TH-ir fiber density and the number of
nigral TH-ir neurons grown in the presence of 100 µM
L-AP-3 after 16 DIV (linear regression,
r = 0.13; n = 34;
p = 0.46; slope, 0.4/100 nigral TH-ir neurons;
n = 8 experiments combined). The effect of
L-AP-3 is independent of the total number of TH-ir neurons
present in the substantia nigra. H, Correlation between
striatal TH-ir fiber density and the number of nigral TH-ir neurons for
long-term cultures (44 ± 3 DIV; linear regression,
r = 0.38; n = 23;
p = 0.073; slope, 7.0/100 nigral TH-ir neurons).
I, Distribution of the somatic cross-sectional area of
nigral TH-ir neurons grown under normal conditions and in the presence
of 100 µM L-AP-3. L-AP-3 results
in a slightly but consistently smaller cell body area of TH-ir neurons
(n = 372 per group). Scale bar: B,
C, 200 µm; D, E, 50 µm. cp, Striatum.
|
|
Analysis of the branching pattern of individual TH-ir axons revealed
that during the first week in culture, TH-ir fibers radiated from the
nigral tissue and grew several millimeters in the surrounding plasma
clot. No indication of directional outgrowth was visible; however there
was a tendency for TH-ir fibers not to traverse the tissue that most
likely corresponded to the substantia nigra pars reticulata (see also
Fig. 5). A significant difference in growth pattern was present
depending on whether TH-ir axons came close to the striatal border or
not. Whereas fibers growing away from the striatum only rarely gave off
collaterals (Fig. 3C), fibers growing into or passed the
border of the striatum showed a high tendency of branching by 8 DIV
(Fig. 3D).
Glutamate transmission and the ingrowth of TH-ir fibers to
the striatum
We tested for pharmacological effects during the period of
strongest innervation (from 8 to 16 DIV) of the striatum by TH-ir fibers. In a first set of experiments, the effect of TTX that is known
to block sodium spike activity was measured. TTX (1 µM) strongly reduced the striatal density of TH-ir fibers to 14.5% of the
normal level (n = 5 per group; data not shown).
Then, the effect of GluR blockade was tested. In a previous study,
the ionotropic GluR antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) at 10 µM was shown to block completely striatal
activity in the triple cultures (Plenz and Kitai, 1998 ). For the
developmental studies, we used the closely related ionotropic GluR
antagonist DNQX at 50 µM; DNQX is more water-soluble than
CNQX with an inhibition of binding (IC50) to
cortical membranes twice that of CNQX (Honoré et al., 1988 ).
Furthermore, in the striatum, the NMDA GluR antagonist AP-5 at 30 µM was shown to abolish completely NMDA-GluR-mediated responses (Jiang and North, 1991 ). Similar dose-response
relationships also hold for cortical neurons (Jones and Baughman, 1988 ;
Bear et al., 1996 ) and nigral dopamine neurons (Chergui et al., 1993 ; Futami et al., 1995 ; Mercuri et al., 1996 ). L-AP-3 was
chosen for the mGluR antagonist because it was reported to inhibit
mGluR-mediated phosphoinositide hydrolysis (Schoepp et al., 1990 ) and
to affect striatal synaptic plasticity (Calabresi et al., 1992 ).
DNQX (50 µM), AP-5 (50 µM), and
L-AP-3 (100 µM) applied together
significantly reduced the striatal density of TH-ir fibers during the
development of the triple cultures (Fig. 4A). This effect was because of the action of L-AP-3. DNQX and AP-5
applied alone had no effect. The number of TH-ir neurons per culture
did not differ between groups (F = 0.15; df = 4, 27; p = 0.96; 218 ± 12 neurons/culture/group).
The effect of the mGluR antagonist L-AP-3 on the
development of the nigrostriatal pathway
At the light microscopic level, the effect of the mGluR antagonist
L-AP-3 on the development of the nigrostriatal system was apparent (Figs. 4B-E,
5C). Only very few striatal
TH-ir fibers were present in the L-AP-3 compared with the
normal group. However, individual TH-ir fibers when present in the
L-AP-3 group were as intensely labeled for TH as were those
under normal conditions (Fig.
4D,E). Similarly, under normal
conditions, as well as in the L-AP-3 group, the cell body
and the dendrites of TH-ir nigral neurons were intensively stained for
TH (Figs. 5A,C,
6D,F).

View larger version (133K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Effect of metabotropic glutamate receptor
treatment on TH-ir fiber ingrowth into the striatum during development.
Cortex-striatum-substantia nigra organotypic cultures were grown for
16 DIV and stained for TH using FITC as a fluorocrome
(light). Drugs were added from 8 to 16 DIV.
A, Normal. B, mGluR agonist
1S,3R-ACPD at 100 µM.
C, mGluR antagonist L-AP-3 at 100 µM. D, mGluR agonist
1S,3R-ACPD at 100 µM and
mGluR antagonist L-AP-3 at 100 µM. In all
conditions, the number of TH-ir neurons in the substantia nigra is
high, and numerous dendritic processes are present. Pictures are a
montage of confocal pictures covering the total depth for each culture.
cp, Striatum; cx, cortex;
sn, substantia nigra. Scale bar: A-D,
500 µm.
|
|

View larger version (109K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
A, Dose-response relationship of
the mGluR antagonist L-AP-3 and the mGluR agonist
1S,3R-ACPD is shown. L-AP-3
(100 µM) significantly decreased the striatal TH-ir fiber
density (*). At a concentration of 1000 µM
L-AP-3, the striatal tissue degenerated, and no
measurements could be done. The mGluR agonist
1S,3R-ACPD did not result in any
significant increase in the striatal density of TH-ir fibers. However,
a tendency toward higher densities with increased concentrations was
present. The broken line and dotted lines
indicate the mean ± SEM for the normal group
(n = 11). B,
1S,3R-ACPD applied at 100 µM has no significant effect on the
L-AP-3-induced reduction of striatal TH-ir fibers.
(F = 10.02; p = 0.0002; df = 3, 66; p > 0.05). C,
1S,3R-ACPD applied at 1000 µM significantly prevents the L-AP-3-induced
reduction of striatal TH-ir fibers (F = 4.59;
p = 0.0062; df = 3, 55; *p < 0.05). Numbers in parentheses indicate
cultures per group. Values are mean ± SEM. Data are pooled from
three (B) and two (C)
experiments. D-G, Corresponding confocal pictures for
the experiments in C are shown. cp,
Striatum; sn, substantia nigra. Scale bar:
D-G, 100 µm.
|
|
A summary from eight experiments with 100 µM
L-AP-3 allowed us to examine the correlation between the
number of nigral TH-ir neurons and the resulting striatal densities of
TH-ir fibers in more detail. Under normal conditions at 16 DIV, a clear
correlation between the striatal TH-ir fiber density and the number of
nigral TH-ir neurons was found (Fig. 4F;
F = 15.89; df = 1, 44; p < 0.001) with the striatal TH-ir fiber density increasing on average by 8.5 nPAT
per 100 TH-ir nigral neurons (r = 0.55;
a = 27 ± 8; b = 0.085 ± 0.022). This slope dependency was not significantly different from the
regression found in the long-term triple cultures (Fig.
4H; t = 0.238; p > 0.5). In the presence of L-AP-3, this correlation was
completely absent (Fig. 4G; F = 0.55;
df = 1, 33; p = 0.46; r = 0.13;
a = 22 ± 2.3; b = 0.004 ± 0.006) and significantly different from the correlation found at 16 DIV
under normal conditions (t = 3.47; p < 0.001). L-AP-3 did not affect the survival of TH-ir neurons
because the average number of nigral TH-ir neurons was similar for both
groups [326 ± 39 for normal (n = 45) vs 323 ± 61 for L-AP-3 (n = 34); two-tailed
t test). Also, no effect was found on the striatal culture
thickness by L-AP-3 (Table
1). The distributions for the somatic
cross-sectional area revealed that a considerable portion of TH-ir
neurons grown in the presence of L-AP-3 had a smaller
somatic cross-sectional area when compared with normal (Fig.
4I; 305 ± 3.7 µm2 for
normal vs 266 ± 3.3 µm2 for
L-AP-3; n = 372/group; two-tailed
t test). Furthermore, the striatal neuronal density was
slightly lower in the presence of L-AP-3 (Table
2).
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table 1.
Striatal culture thickness as measured by the depth
distribution of striatal TH-ir fibers and number of nigral TH-ir
neurons per group for the combined mGluR agonist/antagonist experiments
|
|
Manipulation of the nigrostriatal system by mGluR agonists
and antagonists
The putative role of mGluRs during the development of the
nigrostriatal pathway was further supported by experiments using the
mGluR agonist 1S,3R-ACPD and the mGluR antagonist
L-AP-3 together (Figs. 5, 6). A comparison of whole mount
pictures from triple cultures indicated that
1S,3R-ACPD had an overall beneficial effect on
the neuronal growth in the culture system (Fig.
5A,B).
Dose-response relationships (Fig. 6A) showed that
there was a tendency for higher concentrations of
1S,3R-ACPD to result in slightly higher striatal
TH-ir fiber densities. L-AP-3 had no effect on the striatal
density of TH-ir fibers at 10 µM but significantly reduced this density at 100 µM. L-AP-3 at
1000 µM resulted in a complete degeneration of striatal
and cortical tissue but not nigral tissue (data not shown), and no
measurement on striatal TH-ir fiber densities was done for this group.
When given both the agonist and the antagonist together,
1S,3R-ACPD at 100 µM did not
reverse the inhibitory action of 100 µM
L-AP-3 on the striatal TH-ir fiber density (Figs. 5,
6B) but at 1000 µM did (Fig.
6B-G). No significant differences were found for the
number of TH-ir neurons and the striatal culture thickness in these
combined agonist and antagonist experiments (Table 1).
Tracing the nigrostriatal projection with PHA-L
To test whether L-AP-3 decreases the enzyme TH within
fibers or whether L-AP-3 reduces the number of
nigrostriatal fibers, we traced the nigrostriatal projection
anterogradely with PHA-L. One single PHA-L injection was placed
iontophoretically at 14 DIV into each nigral part of cultures grown
under normal conditions (normal; n = 12) and cultures
grown in the presence of 100 µM L-AP-3 from
8-16 DIV (L-AP-3; n = 15). After 2 d
of survival, the cultures were fixed and analyzed for TH and PHA-L. If
the injection site was within an area with high numbers of TH-ir
neurons present (400 × 400 µm; >20), the injection was
classified SNc+; otherwise, it was
SNc . In normal and SNc+
cultures (n = 5, Fig.
7A), PHA-L-ir fibers were
always found in the striatum in addition to a high density of striatal
TH-ir fibers (Fig. 7B). The average number of PHA-L fiber
segments per section in those cultures was 12 ± 2. PHA-L-ir
fibers were also positive for TH (three sections examined for each
culture, Fig. 7B). In normal and SNc
cultures (n = 7), PHA-L-ir fibers were never found in
the striatum despite a high striatal density of TH-ir fibers (data not
shown). In L-AP-3 and SNc+ cultures
(n = 7, Fig. 7C), a significantly lower
number of PHA-L-ir fiber segments was found in the striatum (0.1 ± 0.1) compared with the number found in normal and
SNc+ cultures (two-tailed Student's t
test). Only few striatal TH-ir fibers were present per section (Fig.
7D). In L-AP-3 and SNc
cultures (n = 8), as in the normal and
SNc group, no striatal PHA-L-ir fibers were
found.

View larger version (104K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Reconstruction of the nigrostriatal projection
using PHA-L injections into the substantia nigra. A,
Nigral region with TH-ir neurons (A1) and the
corresponding PHA-L injection site (A2) in a triple
culture grown for 16 DIV under normal conditions. The location of the
PHA-L injection (x) is revealed by the radiation
of PHA-L-ir fibers (A2, arrow) from a
relatively dark area. B, PHA-L-ir fibers that are also
positive for TH. B1, Optical section (depth, 0.5 µm;
100×) at a depth of 4 µm from the surface of the striatal tissue.
B2, Corresponding striatal region showing the presence
of PHA-L-ir fibers. Note that every fiber in that region is also TH-ir
as indicated by the arrows in B1 and
B2. C, Nigral region with TH-ir neurons
(C1) and the corresponding PHA-L injection site
(C2, x) in a triple culture grown for 16 DIV with the presence of L-AP-3 from 8 to 16 DIV.
D1, Confocal projection of a striatal region covering a
total depth of 5 µm at 40× magnification showing the presence of few
striatal TH-ir fibers in the L-AP-3 group. The density of
TH-ir fibers at the striatal level is much reduced in the
L-AP-3 group compared with that in the normal group
(B1). D2, Corresponding region
demonstrating the lack of PHA-L-ir fibers in the striatum.
cp, Striatum; sn, substantia nigra. Scale
bar: A, 100 µm; B, 20 µm;
C, D, 200 µm.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Development of the nigrostriatal pathway in vivo and in
triple cultures
In the rat in vivo, TH-ir and dopamine-ir neurons are
present at embryonic day 13-13.5, and the innervation of the
ganglionic eminence takes place 2 d later (Tennyson et al., 1975 ;
Specht et al., 1981 ; Voorn et al., 1988 ). At PND 1, the morphology of dopamine neurons is almost mature (Tepper et al., 1994 ). At PND 0-2,
patches with dense dopamine fibers are distributed throughout the
striatum. From PND 8-20, dopamine fibers become more diffuse in the
striatum, and the number of varicose dopamine fibers increases dramatically, reaching almost adult levels at the end of the third week
after birth (Voorn et al., 1988 ). In the triple cultures, nigral TH-ir
neurons showed the typical morphology and distribution described during
in vivo development (Tepper et al., 1994 ), and the period of
strongest innervation of the striatum occurred during 8-17 DIV that
correspond to a postnatal period of PND 10-19. Also during this
period, the striatal culture becomes diffusely and very homogeneously
innervated by TH-ir fibers. Thus, in the triple cultures, the time
course and spatial characteristics of the postnatal development of the
nigrostriatal pathway corresponds well with those in vivo.
The diffuse distribution of highly varicose TH-ir fibers after 17 DIV
very closely matches the appearance of dopamine fibers in the rat
striatum in vivo at a corresponding age [Voorn et al.
(1988) , their Fig. 25G,I]. The dot-like
TH-ir elements seen during the first week of culturing in the striatum
most likely represent the degenerating early dopamine fibers that were
severed during the preparation of the triple cultures.
In long-term cultures, TH-ir fibers were also found in a few cases in
the cortex (Plenz and Kitai, 1996b ). In those cases, the fibers were
thin, sinuous, and smooth with irregular swellings and showed a layered
distribution similar to that described in vivo (Berger et
al., 1974 ; Lindvall et al., 1974 ). These cortical TH-ir fibers differed
in their appearance from striatal TH-ir fibers and were only very few
compared with the many striatal dopamine fibers.
The results from the PHA-L experiments furthermore demonstrated that
mainly dopamine neurons from the nigral tissue innervated the striatal
culture. When injections were placed outside the nigral TH-ir region,
no PHA-L-ir fibers were detected in the striatum. Thus, neurons from
regions outside the SNc (e.g., substantia nigra reticulata), despite
the lack of target tissue, did not innervate the striatum in the triple
cultures.
In summary, the developmental features of the nigrostriatal
pathway in vivo are also primarily expressed in the triple
cultures with respect to the time course of striatal innervation,
spatial distribution, the morphology of dopamine fibers, and the
selectivity of tissue innervated.
Target specificity of nigral dopamine axons
In the triple cultures, dopamine axons from the SNc not only
preferentially innervated the striatum, but they, to a very high level,
exclusively ramified within the striatum. The sequence of radiated
outgrowth and increased branching within striatal territory ultimately
led to the intense innervation of the striatal area that resulted in
the typical macroscopic innervation patterns shown in Figure 5. These
results indicate that the arborization of nigral dopamine axons is
facilitated by the striatum.
A growth-promoting effect of striatal neuronal tissue has been
described by several in vitro studies. In mouse dissociated dopamine neurons, [3H]dopamine uptake and dopamine
synthesis are significantly increased in the presence of striatal
target cells (Prochiantz et al., 1979 ). This effect is specific to
striatal neurons, does not involve striatal glia (Di Porzio et al.,
1980 ), and can be mimicked by striatal neuronal membrane fractions
(Prochiantz et al., 1981 ). The strongest effect is obtained from
striatal neuronal membrane fractions taken during the second and third
week after birth. This period corresponds with the period during which
the main increase in striatal dopamine fibers takes place in the triple cultures. In rat dissociated dopamine neurons, in addition to enhancing
[3H]dopamine uptake three- to fourfold, extracts
from striatal tissue have also been reported to stimulate neurite
outgrowth (Tomozawa and Appel, 1986 ; Dal Toso et al., 1988 ; Zhou et
al., 1994 ). Studies using organotypic mesencephalic slices cocultured
with either the striatum or nontarget-specific brain areas (Østergaard
et al., 1990 ; Holmes et al., 1995 ) further demonstrated that
mesencephalic dopamine axons preferentially innervate the striatum.
Taken together, these results strongly indicate that striatal neurons
promote neurite outgrowth from dopamine neurons. Our study extends
these findings both at a more quantitative and morphological level, in
an in vitro system in which neurons develop into a mature
state with electrophysiological and morphological properties similar to
those described in vivo and in the acute slice (Plenz and
Aertsen, 1996a ,b ; Plenz and Kitai, 1996a ,b , 1998 ).
The correlation between the striatal TH-ir density at 44 DIV was
similar to the correlation obtained at 16 DIV, although the range of
TH-ir neuron numbers covered was smaller in the long-term cultures. In
general, the striatal TH-ir fiber density increased on average by
7.0 ± 3.8 nPAT per 100 nigral TH-ir neurons in the long-term
cultures as well as at 16 DIV. Long-term cultures were also used for
electrophysiological analysis (Plenz and Kitai, 1998 ), and during the
preparation of these cultures, we selected smaller and more lateral
tissue regions to avoid the ventral tegmental area. This difference in
nigral tissue size most likely explains the on-average smaller neuron
numbers and consequently the weaker correlation found in those
cultures.
In summary, our results suggest that during development, dopamine
neurons preferentially ramify within the striatum. The correlation between the striatal dopamine fiber density and the nigral dopamine neuron numbers indicates that axons of nigral dopamine neurons ramify
independently from the presence of other dopamine fibers in the
striatum.
Localization of group I mGluRs in the cortex, striatum,
and substantia nigra
The most striking finding of the present study is that
mGluRs play an important role during the development of the
nigrostriatal pathway. The ingrowth of dopamine fibers into the
striatum and subsequent ramification within the striatum were strongly
inhibited by the mGluR antagonist L-AP-3. This inhibition
was prevented by the mGluR agonist 1S,3R-ACPD.
L-AP-3 and 1S,3R-ACPD are acting preferentially on mGluR group I receptors (mGluR1, mGluR5) that, via
their PI hydrolysis-linked second messenger functions, provide vitally
important support for synaptogenesis during development (Bear and
Dudek, 1991 ; Miller et al., 1995 ; Jackson et al., 1996 ). Because both
drugs were added to the medium, no conclusions can be drawn as to the
site of drug action. However, several hypothesis can be presented.
First, L-AP-3 could act directly on nigral dopamine neurons
preventing their growth. If so, L-AP-3 seemed to arrest the
growth of nigral dopamine neurons because it did not change the overall
morphology, the survival rate, or the intensity of the TH stain of
nigral dopamine neurons but mainly prevented their axonal growth. This
growth-arresting effect of L-AP-3 is also supported by the
smaller somatic cross-sectional cell body area of TH-ir neurons in the
presence of L-AP-3 (compare Fig. 3A). Second,
L-AP-3 could interrupt a signaling cascade between nigral axons and striatal tissue that normally leads to the intensive ramification of dopamine fibers within the striatum. Third,
L-AP-3 could act at the cortical level, which in turn
affects the maturation of the striatal and nigral system.
A cortical and/or striatal action of both drugs is supported by the
intensive expression of mGluR5 mRNA (Testa et al., 1995 ) and the mGluR5
receptor (Romano et al., 1995 ) in the adult cortex and striatum. This
expression is even stronger in the developing cortex and striatum
(Testa et al., 1994 ; Romano et al., 1996 ). Furthermore, a developmental
peak of mGluR-stimulated PI hydrolysis occurs during the early
postnatal weeks in the rat at a period of intense synaptogenesis
(Palmer et al., 1990 ). In the developing substantia nigra of the rat,
by PND 0, the mGluR1 is highly abundant (Shigemoto et al.,
1992 ). In addition, nigrostriatal axon terminals seem to carry mGluR
receptors because 6-OHDA lesion irreversible reduces the binding sites
for mGluR at the striatal level (Wullner et al., 1994 ).
In summary, group I mGluR are particularly highly expressed in the
cortex, the striatum, and the substantia nigra, and this expression is
enhanced during early development. Thus, L-AP-3 and
1S,3R-ACPD by primarily acting via these
receptors could exert the growth effects described for the
nigrostriatal pathway in this study.
Second messenger pathways involved in the regulation of the
nigrostriatal pathway by group I mGluRs
In the developing and adult striatum,
trans-ACPD (Manzoni et al., 1996 ; Thomsen et al., 1996 ) and
1S,3R-ACPD (Schoepp et al., 1992 ) strongly
increase striatal PI turnover, and this increase is inhibited by
L-AP-3 (Lorezini et al., 1996 ). Thus, the inhibition of PI
hydrolysis via L-AP-3 could be one major pathway through which the development of the nigrostriatal pathway is severely affected. In striatal neurons and transfected Xenopus
oocytes, L-AP-3 was shown to act as a competitive inhibitor
on PI formation (Manzoni et al., 1991 ) and for group I mGluRs (Saugstad
et al., 1995 ; but see Schoepp et al., 1990 ). In our study, the reversal of the L-AP-3-mediated inhibition of the nigrostriatal
pathway was achieved with relatively high doses of
1S,3R-ACPD. Even with those high doses, this
effect is probably mediated via mGluRs because it was shown that ACPD
as high as 1 mM is not active on ionotropic glutamate
receptors in the striatum (Manzoni et al., 1996 ).
In the developing and adult cortex, trans-ACPD increases PI
turnover (Mortensen et al., 1995 ; Bevilacqua et al., 1995 ) and intracellular Ca2+ concentration (Koh et al., 1991b )
in cortical neurons. The increase in PI turnover is reduced by
L-AP-3 (Mortensen et al., 1995 ; Mistry et al., 1996 ). It is
also known that 1S,3R-ACPD up to 1 mM
is not neurotoxic for cortical neurons (Koh et al., 1991a ) and even protects cortical neurons from NMDA-induced neurotoxicity (Koh et al.,
1991b ). In triple cultures grown in the presence of
1S,3R-ACPD, no signs of neurotoxicity could be
detected as evidenced by the macroscopic appearance (Fig.
5B) and the striatal neuronal density estimate (Table 2). On
the contrary, as judged from the robustness of the tissue during
handling and the autofluoresence, these cultures appeared even
"healthier" than normal, indicating an overall beneficial effect of
1S,3R-ACPD during development.
In conclusion, our results demonstrate that glutamate, by acting on
group I mGluR subtypes, plays an important role in the development of
the nigrostriatal pathway. Thus, mGluR agonists may be useful for
restoring developmental deficits and/or preventing neurodegeneration of
the dopaminergic pathways in the basal ganglia.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 31, 1997; revised March 5, 1998; accepted March 9, 1998.
This study was supported by Grants NS-20702 and NS-26473 from the
National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and
Stroke. D.P. received a fellowship from the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft and the National Parkinson Foundation. We thank
Dr. Bin Teng for expert technical assistance with the preparation of
cultures, immunohistochemistry, and morphological analysis.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. S. T. Kitai, University
of Tennessee, College of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and
Neurobiology, 875 Monroe Avenue, Memphis, TN 38163.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Altman J,
Bayer SA
(1995)
In: Atlas of prenatal rat brain development. Boca Raton, FL: CRC.
-
Bear J,
Fountain NB,
Lothman EW
(1996)
Responses of the superficial entorhinal cortex in vitro in slices from naive and chronically epileptic rats.
J Neurophysiol
76:2928-2940[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Bear MF,
Dudek SM
(1991)
Stimulation of phosphoinositide turnover by excitatory amino acids. Pharmacology, development, and role in visual cortical plasticity.
Ann NY Acad Sci
627:42-56[Abstract].
-
Berger B,
Tassin JP,
Blanc G,
Moyne MA,
Thierry AM
(1974)
Histochemical confirmation for dopaminergic innervation of the rat cerebral cortex after destruction of the noradrenergic ascending pathways.
Brain Res
81:332-337[ISI][Medline].
-
Bevilacqua JA,
Downes CP,
Lowenstein PR
(1995)
Transiently selective activation of phosphoinositide turnover in layer V pyramidal neurons after specific mGluR stimulation in rat somatosensory cortex during early postnatal development.
J Neurosci
15:7916-7928[Abstract].
-
Calabresi P,
Maj R,
Pisani A,
Mercuri NB,
Bernardi G
(1992)
Long-term synaptic depression in the striatum: physiological and pharmacological characterization.
J Neurosci
12:4224-4233[Abstract].
-
Chergui K,
Charléty PJ,
Akaoka H,
Saunier CF,
Brunet J-L,
Buda M,
Svensson TH,
Chouvet G
(1993)
Tonic activation of NMDA receptors causes spontaneous burst discharge of rat midbrain dopamine neurons in vivo.
Eur J Neurosci
5:137-144[ISI][Medline].
-
Dal Toso R,
Giorgi O,
Soranzo C,
Kirschner G,
Ferrari G,
Favaron M,
Benvegnù D,
Presti D,
Vicini S,
Toffano G,
Azzone GF,
Leon A
(1988)
Development and survival of neurons in dissociated fetal mesencephalic serum-free cell cultures. 1. Effects of cell density and of an adult mammalian striatal-derived neuronotrophic factor (SDNF).
J Neurosci
8:733-745[Abstract].
-
Di Porzio U,
Daguet MC,
Glowinski J,
Prochiantz A
(1980)
Effect of striatal cells on in vitro maturation of mesencephalic dopaminergic neurones grown in serum-free conditions.
Nature
288:370-373[Medline].
-
Doble A,
Perrier ML
(1989)
Pharmacology of excitatory amino acid receptors coupled to inositol phosphate metabolism in neonatal rat striatum.
Neurochem Int
15:1-8.
-
Futami T,
Takakusaki K,
Kitai ST
(1995)
Glutamatergic and cholinergic inputs from the pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus to dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta.
Neurosci Res
21:331-342[ISI][Medline].
-
Gähwiler BH
(1981)
Organotypic monolayer cultures of nervous tissue.
J Neurosci Methods
4:329-342[ISI][Medline].
-
Gerfen CR,
Sawchenko PE
(1984)
An anterograde neuroanatomical tracing method that shows the detailed morphology of neurons, their axons and terminals: immunohistochemical localization of an axonally transported plant lectin, Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L).
Brain Res
290:219-238[ISI][Medline].
-
Hemmendinger LM,
Garber BB,
Hoffmann PC,
Heller A
(1981)
Target neuron-specific process formation by embryonic mesencephalic dopamine neurons in vitro.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
78:1264-1268[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Holmes C,
Jones SA,
Greenfield SA
(1995)
The influence of target and non-target brain regions on the development of mid-brain dopaminergic neurons in organotypic slice culture.
Dev Brain Res
88:212-219[Medline].
-
Honoré T,
Davies SN,
Drejer J,
Fletcher EJ,
Jacobsen P,
Lodge D,
Nielsen FE
(1988)
Quinoxalinediones: potent competitive non-NMDA glutamate receptor antagonists.
Science
241:701-703[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Jackson TR,
Blader IJ,
Hammonds-Odie LP,
Burga CR,
Cooke F,
Hawkins PT,
Wolf AG,
Heldman KA,
Theibert AB
(1996)
Initiation and maintenance of NGF-stimulated neurite outgrowth requires activation of phophoinositide 3-kinase.
J Cell Sci
109:289-300[Abstract].
-
Jiang Z-G,
North RA
(1991)
Membrane properties and synaptic responses of rat striatal neurones in vitro.
J Physiol (Lond)
443:533-553[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Jones KA,
Baughman RW
(1988)
NMDA- and non-NMDA-receptor components of excitatory synaptic potentials recorded from cells in layer V of rat visual cortex.
J Neurosci
8:3522-3534[Abstract].
-
Koh JY,
Palmer E,
Cotman CW
(1991a)
Activation of the metabotropic glutamate receptor attenuates N-methyl-D-aspartate neurotoxicity in cortical cultures.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
88:9431-9435[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Koh JY,
Palmer E,
Lin A,
Cotman CW
(1991b)
A metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist does not mediate neuronal degeneration in cortical culture.
Brain Res
561:338-343[ISI][Medline].
-
Lapper SR,
Bolam JP
(1992)
Input from the frontal cortex and the parafascicular nucleus to cholinergic interneurons in the dorsal striatum of the rat.
Neuroscience
51:533-545[ISI][Medline].
-
Lindvall O,
Björklund A,
Moore RY,
Stenevi U
(1974)
Mesencephalic dopamine neurons projecting to the neocortex.
Brain Res
81:325-331[ISI][Medline].
-
Lorezini P,
Bisso GM,
Fortuna S,
Michalek H
(1996)
Differential responsiveness of metabotropic glutamate receptors coupled to phosphoinositide hydrolysis to agonists in various brain areas of the adult rat.
Neurochem Res
21:323-329[Medline].
-
Manzoni OJ,
Poulat F,
Do E,
Sahuquet A,
Sassetti I,
Bockaert J,
Sladeczek FA
(1991)
Pharmacological characterization of the quisqualate receptor coupled to phospholipase C (Qp) in striatal neurons.
Eur J Pharmacol
207:231-241[Medline].
-
Manzoni O,
Fagni L,
Rassendren F,
Poulat F,
Sladeczek F,
Bockaert J
(1996)
(trans)-1-Amino-cyclopentyl-1,3-dicarboxylate stimulates quisqualate phosphoinositide-coupled receptors but not ionotropic glutamate receptors in striatal neurons and Xenopus oocytes.
Mol Pharmacol
38:1-6[Abstract].
-
McGeorge AJ,
Faull RLM
(1989)
The organization of the projection from the cerebral cortex to the striatum in the rat.
Neuroscience
29:503-537[ISI][Medline].
-
Mercuri NB,
Grillner P,
Bernardi G
(1996)
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors mediate a slow excitatory postsynaptic potential in the rat midbrain dopaminergic neurons.
Neuroscience
74:785-792[ISI][Medline].
-
Miller S,
Romano C,
Cotman CW
(1995)
Growth factor upregulation of a phosphoinositide-coupled metabotropic glutamate receptor in cortical astrocytes.
J Neurosci
15:6103-6109[Abstract].
-
Mistry R,
Prabhu G,
Godwin M,
Challiss RA
(1996)
Stimulatory effects of the putative metabotropic glutamate receptor antagonist L-AP3 on phosphoinositide turnover in neonatal rat cerebral cortex.
Br J Pharmacol
117:1309-1317[ISI][Medline].
-
Mortensen M,
Suzdak PD,
Thomsen C
(1995)
The effect of lorazepam tolerance and withdrawal on metabotropic glutamate receptor function.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther
274:155-163[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Nakanishi S
(1994)
Metabotropic glutamate receptors: synaptic transmission, modulation, and plasticity.
Neuron
13:1031-1037[ISI][Medline].
-
Olson L,
Seiger A,
Fuxe K
(1972)
Heterogeneity of striatal and limbic dopamine innervation: highly fluorescent islands in developing and adult rats.
Brain Res
44:283-288[ISI][Medline].
-
Østergaard K,
Schou JP,
Zimmer J
(1990)
Rat ventral mesencephalon grown as organotypic slice cultures and co-cultured with striatum, hippocampus, and cerebellum.
Exp Brain Res
82:547-565[ISI][Medline].
-
Palmer E,
Nangel TK,
Krause JD,
Roxas A,
Colman CW
(1990)
Changes in excitatory amino acid modulation of phophoinositide metabolism during development.
Dev Brain Res
51:132-134[Medline].
-
Plenz D,
Aertsen A
(1996a)
Neural dynamics in cortex-striatum co-cultures. I. Anatomy and electrophysiology of neuronal cell types.
Neuroscience
70:861-891[ISI][Medline].
-
Plenz D,
Aertsen A
(1996b)
Neural dynamics in cortex-striatum co-cultures. II. Spatio-temporal characteristics of neuronal activity.
Neuroscience
70:893-924[ISI][Medline].
-
Plenz D,
Kitai ST
(1996a)
Generation of high frequency oscillations in local circuits of rat somatosensory cortex cultures.
J Neurophysiol
76:4180-4184[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Plenz D,
Kitai ST
(1996b)
Organotypic cortex-striatum-mesencephalon cultures: the nigro-striatal pathway.
Neurosci Lett
209:177-180[ISI][Medline].
-
Plenz D,
Kitai ST
(1998)
Up and down states in striatal medium spiny neurons simultaneously recorded with spontaneous activity in fast-spiking interneurons studied in cortex-striatum-substantia nigra organotypic cultures.
J Neurosci
18:266-283[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Prochiantz A,
Di Porzio U,
Kato A,
Berger B,
Glowinski J
(1979)
In vitro maturation of mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons from mouse embryos is enhanced in presence of their striatal target cells.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
76:5387-5391[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Prochiantz A,
Daguet M-C,
Herbet A,
Glowinski J
(1981)
Specific stimulation of in vitro maturation of mesencephalic dopaminergic neurones by striatal membranes.
Nature
293:570-572[Medline].
-
Romano C,
Sesma MA,
McDonald CT,
O'Malley K,
Van den Pol AN,
Olney JW
(1995)
Distribution of metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR5 immunoreactivity in rat brain.
J Comp Neurol
355:455-469[ISI][Medline].
-
Romano C,
Van den Pol AN,
O'Malley KL
(1996)
Enhanced early developmental expression of the metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR5 in rat brain: protein, mRNA splice variants, and regional distribution.
J Comp Neurol
367:403-412[ISI][Medline].
-
|