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The Journal of Neuroscience, February 1, 1998, 18(3):1148-1160
Endbulb Synapses in the Anteroventral Cochlear Nucleus Express a
Specific Subset of AMPA-Type Glutamate Receptor Subunits
Ya-Xian
Wang1,
Robert J.
Wenthold1,
Ole P.
Ottersen2, and
Ronald S.
Petralia1
1 National Institute on Deafness and Other
Communication Disorders/National Institutes of Health, Bethesda,
Maryland 20892, and 2 University of Oslo, N-0317 Oslo,
Norway
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ABSTRACT |
The anteroventral cochlear nucleus (AVCN) acts as the first relay
center in the conduction of auditory information from the ear to the
brain, and it probably performs a crucial role in sound localization.
Auditory nerve input to the principal neurons of the AVCN, the
spherical bushy cells, appears to be mediated by an excitatory amino
acid such as glutamate, which acts at a specialized, large synaptic
ending called an endbulb of Held. Presumably, endbulb synapses contain
some specific combination of glutamate receptors to facilitate rapid
neurotransmission of auditory signals. AMPA glutamate receptor
composition at the endbulb synapses was examined with both light and
electron microscope immunocytochemistry. Electron microscope
localization of AMPA receptors was examined with two techniques,
preembedding immunoperoxidase and postembedding immunogold, which
provide maximum sensitivity and greatest accuracy, respectively. Dense
and frequent labeling was seen with the AMPA receptor subunit antibodies GluR2/3 and GluR4, which were colocalized at the endbulb synapses. In contrast, immunolabeling with antibody to GluR2 was low.
These data indicate that the major glutamate receptor at this synapse
is an AMPA receptor made up mainly of GluR3 and GluR4 subunits.
Receptors composed of these subunits display properties, such as
calcium permeability and rapid desensitization, that facilitate their
specialized functions in auditory information processing.
Key words:
cochlear nucleus; auditory; AMPA; glutamate receptors; spherical bushy cell; endbulb
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INTRODUCTION |
The spherical bushy cells of the
anteroventral cochlear nucleus (AVCN) receive a direct input from the
auditory nerve via a specialized synaptic contact called the endbulb of
Held (for review, see Cant, 1992 ). This endbulb exhibits unique
structural and functional specializations used in the initial
processing of auditory information in the CNS that are necessary for
sound localization and analysis. The endbulb is an enlarged calyx-type terminal that surrounds the bushy cell soma, contains large round vesicles, and forms multiple synaptic contacts with the soma. In
addition, the endbulb forms attachment plaques with the soma and forms
synapses with dendrites along the endbulb surface, opposite the side of
the endbulb that contacts the bushy cell soma. The endbulb provides a
secure, excitatory synaptic connection between the auditory nerve fiber
and the spherical bushy cell soma; this permits the spherical bushy
cell to show a primary-like response almost identical to the response
of the auditory nerve (for review, see Rhode and Greenberg, 1992 ). This
allows an auditory spike stream to pass, virtually unchanged, from the
auditory nerve to the superior olivary complex (SOC) via the AVCN.
Thus, the frequency information of the temporal discharge of the
auditory nerve is preserved; this probably is important for the
binaural mechanism for sound localization. In addition to the auditory
input via the endbulb of Held, the spherical bushy cell receives inputs from other nuclei, including tuberculoventral cells of the deep dorsal
cochlear nucleus, a few interneurons of the ventral cochlear nucleus,
the contralateral cochlear nucleus, and the SOC (Wenthold and Hunter,
1990 ; Wickesberg et al., 1994 ; Juiz et al., 1996a ,b ; Yao et al., 1996 );
presumably these other inputs are necessary to obtain the proper
response pattern of the spherical bushy cell.
The spherical bushy cell auditory nerve-endbulb synapse is believed to
be glutamatergic (for review, see Wenthold et al., 1993 ; Hackney et
al., 1996 ). Spherical bushy cells contain mRNA for AMPA receptors
(Hunter et al., 1993 ). Also, preliminary studies have indicated the
presence of AMPA and other glutamate receptors (NMDA, kainate, delta,
metabotropic) (Petralia and Wenthold, 1992 ; Hunter and Wenthold, 1994 ;
Petralia et al., 1994a ,b ,c , 1996a , 1997a ,b ; Sato et al., 1995 ; for
review, see Wenthold et al., 1993 , 1997a ,b ). In the present study, we
examined the endbulb synapses on spherical bushy cells of the
dorsorostral AVCN to determine the kinds of AMPA receptors involved in
endbulb neurotransmission. We used preembedding immunoperoxidase and
postembedding immunogold in combination (Petralia et al., 1997a ; Rubio
and Wenthold, 1997 ) to show that the major glutamate receptors of the
endbulb synapse are AMPA receptor complexes containing mainly GluR3 and
GluR4, suggesting that most of these glutamate receptors are calcium permeable and exhibit a rapid response. The latter characteristics of
AVCN endbulb synapses may be essential for sound localization.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Antibody production, purification, and
characterization. Details of antibody production, purification,
and characterization have been described previously (Table
1). GluR2/3 antibody also is called
GluR2/3/4c because it recognizes the variant GluR4c (Gallo et al.,
1992 ). Monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies to GluR2/3 generally
produced similar distributions in the brain (Petralia and Wenthold,
1992 ; Petralia et al., 1996b , 1997a ; Rubio and Wenthold, 1997 ).
Preembedding immunoperoxidase: tissue preparation. Young
male Sprague Dawley rats (125-250 gm) were anesthetized and perfused transcardially as described previously (Petralia and Wenthold, 1992 ;
Petralia et al., 1994a ,b ,c , 1996a ,b , 1997a ,b ). The fixative was cold
4% paraformaldehyde in 0.12 M phosphate buffer, pH
7.2-7.3, with or without 0.1% glutaraldehyde; glutaraldehyde was
added mainly for electron microscope studies. Brains were removed,
fixed, and sectioned with a vibratome (Pelco DTK-3000W microslicer) at 50 µm. To minimize movements of the cochlear nuclei during
sectioning, 1% agarose in PBS was sometimes used. Some vibratome
sections were infiltrated with 30% sucrose in PBS, frozen using
acetone cooled with dry ice, and stored at 80°C; these sections
were thawed and rinsed in PBS.
All experiments at National Institutes of Health were performed in
accordance with the National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care
and Use of Laboratory Animals (National Institutes of Health
Publication no. 85-23). All efforts were made to minimize animal
suffering, to reduce the number of animals used, and to use
alternatives to in vivo techniques. Animal protocols used in
this study at National Institutes of Health were approved by the
National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke/National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Animal Care and
Use Committee.
Preembedding immunoperoxidase: immunocytochemistry. Sections
were incubated in 10% normal goat serum (NGS) in PBS (blocking solution for polyclonal antibodies) for 1 hr and in primary antibody overnight at 4°C, and further processed with
avidin-biotin-peroxidase (Vectastain kit; Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA) and 3 ,3-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride as
described previously.
Sections used for electron microscopy were fixed in 1% osmium
tetroxide, dehydrated, and embedded in Poly/BED 812 resin
(Polysciences, Warrington, PA) as described previously (Petralia and
Wenthold, 1992 ). Thin sections of ~75 nm were cut from the edge of
the 50 µm vibratome sections (i.e., perpendicular to the plane of the section), using an LKB Ultratome IV or Leica Reichert Ultracut S
ultramicrotome, and examined without further staining in a JEOL JEM-100CX II transmission electron microscope at 60 kV. Most thin sections were taken from parasagittal vibratome sections from the
lateral part of the AVCN; thin sections usually were cut perpendicular to the base of the AVCN and were from the rostral portion of the section.
Postembedding immunogold. The technique used in the present
study has been described (Petralia et al., 1997a ; Rubio and Wenthold, 1997 ; Wang et al., 1997 ) and is a modification of a technique published
previously (Matsubara et al., 1996 ; Landsend et al., 1997 ). Male Wistar
rats prepared in Norway were anesthetized and perfused as described in
the last two studies, and male Sprague Dawley rats prepared at National
Institutes of Health were anesthetized and perfused as described above
for preembedding immunoperoxidase. The fixative that was used was 4%
paraformaldehyde plus 0.5% glutaraldehyde. Washing and vibratomy were
performed in phosphate buffer (0.1 M with/without 4%
glucose). Tissue (300 µm sections or hand-cut pieces) was then
cryoprotected using a series of 10, 20, and 30% glycerol (last step
overnight) in 0.1 M phosphate buffer and was plunge-frozen
in liquid propane in a Leica KF80 (Norway) or EM CPC (National
Institutes of Health). Frozen tissue was immersed in 1.5% uranyl
acetate in methanol at 90°C in a Leica AFS freeze-substitution instrument, infiltrated in Lowicryl HM 20 resin at 45°C, and polymerized with UV light ( 45°C to 0°C). Thin sections were cut on an ultramicrotome as described for preembedding
immunoperoxidase.
In some cases, immunolabeling was preceded by etching in sodium
ethanolate, but usually this was not done. Then sections were incubated
in 0.1% sodium borohydride + 50 mM glycine in
Tris-buffered saline/0.1% Triton X-100 (TBST) for 10 min. Grids were
incubated in blocking serum in TBST for 10 min (10% NGS in most cases;
2% human serum albumin in some cases). Then grids were incubated in
primary antibody in serum/TBST for 2 hr, followed by washes in TBST,
blocking in serum/TBST, and incubation in 1:20 immunogold (Amersham,
Arlington Heights, IL) in serum/TBST plus 0.5% polyethylene glycol
(20,000 molecular weight); 5, 10, or 15 nm immunogold particles were
used for single labeling and 5 + 15 nm used for double labeling. After
further washes, sections were dried and stained with 1% uranyl acetate
and 0.3% lead citrate.
AVCN cytology. In the rat, large spherical bushy cells form
the only major cell type of the rostral area of the AVCN and were designated as type c round cells (with large endbulbs) by Harrison and
Irving (1965) ; these probably correspond to the large spherical cells
of the cat (Osen, 1969 ; Webster, 1995 ). This area was designated as
area III of the ventral cochlear nucleus by Harrison and Irving (1965) .
Just caudal to area III is area I, which contains spherical bushy cells
known as type i round cells (with pale endbulbs) and type h large
multipolar cells; the type i round cells probably correspond to the
small spherical cells of the cat (Osen, 1969 ; Webster, 1995 ). The
spherical cell axon projects via the trapezoid body to the ipsilateral
lateral superior olive (LSO) and bilaterally to the medial superior
olive (MSO) (Webster, 1995 ). The remainder of the AVCN (caudal and
ventral areas) is part of area II and contains type g oval cells (with
modified endbulbs) and some other cell types. Areas I and III together
correspond to the anterior division or spherical cell area of the AVCN
described in other animals (cat: Osen, 1969 , Brawer et al., 1974 , Cant
and Morest, 1979a ; chinchilla: Morest et al., 1990 ; guinea pig: Hackney
et al., 1990 ; mouse: Webster and Trune, 1982 ; Bilak et al., 1996 ; rat:
Webster, 1995 ). In addition to spherical bushy cells, the anterior
division of the AVCN contains stellate cells, with the majority found
in the more caudal (posterior) portion.
Areas surveyed. Ultrastructural studies were limited to the
rostrodorsal region (i.e., spherical cell area) of the AVCN, so that
all identified endbulb synapses are likely to be associated with
spherical bushy cells.
In this study, neuronal staining refers to staining of the cell body,
excluding the nucleus, and of major dendrites that were traced from the
cell body, whereas neuropilar staining refers to staining of processes
not traced to specific cell bodies and the unresolvable matrix between
cells (Petralia and Wenthold, 1992 ; Petralia et al., 1994a ,b ; our
unpublished data).
Coronal sections of the AVCN typically included sections from two to
three levels from rostral to caudal (based on Paxinos and Watson, 1986 )
and were taken from the following numbers of animals: GluR1,
n = 6; GluR2/3, n = 5; GluR4,
n = 3; and PBS controls, n = 8. Parasagittal sections of the AVCN typically included sections from
three to four levels from lateral to medial and were taken from the
following numbers of sides/numbers of animals: GluR1, n = 33/25; GluR2, n = 10/10; GluR2/3, n = 23/19; GluR4, n = 30/18; and PBS controls,
n = 50/38. For immunoperoxidase electron microscopy, thin sections were examined from parasagittal sections taken from the
following numbers of animals: GluR1, n = 1; GluR2,
n = 4; GluR2/3, n = 7; GluR4,
n = 5; and PBS controls, n = 4.
For postembedding immunogold, thin sections were examined from one
block from each of two animals for each antibody: GluR2, GluR2/3, and
GluR4. In addition, four cells (GluR2/3 antibody) were examined in a
series of up to 21 consecutive sections (with some missing sections).
Within this series, a subseries of 13 sections was used to reconstruct
part of the synaptic contact region of one large endbulb, to elucidate
the shapes and positions of 26 synapse-active zones, and to determine
the distribution of gold particles in these active zones. Sections used
in these series were collected on formvar/carbon-coated single-slot
grids (Electron Microscopy Sciences, Fort Washington, PA) and thus
could only be labeled on one side of the section. Immunogold counts at
synapses included all gold particles found in the synaptic cleft and
postsynaptic density (Rubio and Wenthold, 1997 ). Synapse measurements
were taken on 50,000× prints.
Controls. Controls included (1) immunoblot analyses of brain
regions and peripheral organs (Wenthold et al., 1990 , 1992 ; Petralia et
al., 1997a ), (2) controls in which PBS was substituted for the primary
antibody (PBS controls), and (3) preadsorption controls in which each
antibody was incubated with its corresponding peptide (Petralia and
Wenthold, 1992 ; Petralia et al., 1997a ). PBS controls were performed on
some sections in every run of all experiments.
For immunogold, there were 10 control experiments (designated here as
Experiments 1-10): (1) NGS/TBST only substituted for the primary
antibody, along with one each of five different gold-labeled secondary
antibodies 5 nm (control Experiment 1) and 10 nm (Experiment 2) goat
anti-rabbit, and 5 (Experiment 3), 10 (Experiment 4), and 15 (Experiment 5) nm goat anti-mouse; (2) GluR4 primary antibody along
with either 15 nm goat anti-mouse (Experiment 6), or 5 nm goat
anti-rabbit + 15 nm goat anti-mouse (Experiment 7); and (3) GluR2/3
monoclonal primary antibody along with one each of three different
secondary antibody combinations 5 nm goat anti-rabbit only (Experiment
8), 5 nm goat anti-rabbit + 15 nm goat anti-mouse (Experiment 9), and 5 nm goat anti-mouse + 15 nm goat anti-rabbit (Experiment 10).
This study combines two established methods (i.e., immunoperoxidase,
immunogold) for immunocytochemical localization of glutamate receptors.
Generally, similar results were obtained with the two methods,
providing strong evidence that the described glutamate receptor
distribution is real, as shown previously for other types of neurons
(Petralia et al., 1997a ; Rubio and Wenthold, 1997 ). Thus, this combined
method can act as a control for method-based artifacts. For both
techniques, concentrations of primary antibodies were selected to
produce little or no background staining at light or electron
microscope levels. Such background artifactual staining was examined in
both control sections and within the experimental sections, in
structures that are presumed not to contain glutamate receptors.
Immunoperoxidase- and immunogold-labeled sections were considered
acceptable if they showed little or no labeling inside the mitochondria
and nucleus.
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RESULTS |
Light microscopy
Sagittal (Fig. 1) and coronal
sections of the AVCN gave similar results for immunostaining with
antibodies to the AMPA receptor subunits. There was little or no
staining with GluR1 antibody, light staining with GluR2 antibody,
moderate to moderately dense staining with GluR4 antibody, and
moderately dense staining with antibody to GluR2/3. Staining with the
latter two antibodies was prevalent in all regions [I, II, and III of
Harrison (Harrison and Irving, 1965 )] and was found in presumptive
spherical cells (identified by their location, medium to large size,
and round to ovoid shape), as well as in various types of multipolar
neurons throughout the AVCN. GluR2/3 and GluR4 antibodies also produced many densely staining puncta in the neuropil of the AVCN, and GluR4
antibody stained numerous fine neuropilar processes.

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Figure 1.
Parasagittal sections of the rostrodorsal portion
of the anteroventral cochlear nucleus, immunolabeled with antibodies to GluR1 (b), GluR2 (c),
GluR2/3 (d), and GluR4 (e).
a, PBS control. Note the absence of staining in the
control, little or no staining for GluR1, light staining for GluR2,
moderately dense staining for GluR2/3, and moderate to moderately dense
staining for GluR4. Scale bar, 50 µm.
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Electron microscopy: identification of spherical cell synapses
This study was limited mostly to identified spherical cell
synapses. Identification of spherical cells was based largely on the
identification of endbulb synapses on the cell body, because the other
major neurons of this region, the stellate or medium-sized multipolar
cells, do not bear endbulbs (for review, see Cant, 1992 ). Endbulb
synapses contain large round vesicles in a very large terminal that
makes multiple, asymmetric synaptic contacts (active zones) with a
large soma. Often, these active zones extend slightly into the
presynaptic terminal; sometimes the postsynaptic membrane is found on
the side of a short spine projecting into the endbulb. Attachment
plaques are seen between the endbulb and the soma. Attachment plaques
(term refers specifically to the individual densities) or puncta
adherentia (term refers to the entire junctional complex) are
identified by the large, similar pre- and postsynaptic densities,
straight cell membranes, and widened cleft (in some cases, a thin,
intermediate dense line can be seen in the middle of the cleft); these
junctions have not been well studied and may include more than one
morphological variant (Gulley et al., 1978 ; Cant and Morest, 1979b ). In
comparison, only the postsynaptic density is thick in the endbulb
active zones. The endbulbs also form synapses with dendrites (i.e., on
the side of the endbulb opposite that of the somal/endbulb synapse); in addition, synapses are formed with the base of the main dendrite projecting from the soma.
Criteria for positive identification of a spherical bushy cell were
based on the presence of endbulbs, but also on cell shape and size. Rat
spherical bushy cells are large and roughly oval in shape
(Saldaña et al., 1988 ). The nuclear "cap" of Nissl, which is
well defined in cat spherical bushy cells (Osen, 1969 ; Cant, 1981 ),
tends to be poorly developed in guinea pigs (Hackney et al., 1990 ) and
chinchillas (Morest et al., 1990 ) and was never distinct in our rat
sections. Cells used in this study had at least one endbulb profile
contacting the cell; identification was based on published descriptions
and micrographs (Lenn and Reese, 1966 ; Gentschev and Sotelo, 1973 ; Cant
and Morest, 1979b ; Cant, 1981 ; Rees et al., 1985 ; Ryugo and Sento,
1991 ; Ryugo et al., 1996 ). All large round vesicle-containing synapses,
on a soma having an identified endbulb profile, were considered to be
portions of endbulb synapses, based on previous auditory nerve degeneration studies (Cant and Morest, 1979b ; Cant, 1981 ).
Electron microscopy: immunoperoxidase
Little or no staining was seen with antibody to GluR1 in spherical
cells. Staining with antibody to GluR2 was low in spherical cells. Low
to moderate staining was seen in some postsynaptic membranes and
densities at round vesicle synapses, including endbulb profiles (Fig.
2). In contrast to GluR1 and GluR2
antibodies, antibodies to GluR2/3 and GluR4 produced substantial
cytoplasmic staining in spherical cell bodies as well as in many
dendrites throughout the adjacent neuropil. With antibody to GluR4,
patches of staining often were particularly prevalent on Golgi
complexes. Staining with antibodies to GluR2/3 and GluR4, in
postsynaptic membranes and densities in active zones of round vesicle
synapses including endbulbs, was common and ranged from light to dense (Fig. 2). However, unstained active zones were seen frequently at these
synapses. Postsynaptic staining also was common in active zones of
dendrites forming synapses with endbulbs (i.e., opposite the
endbulb-spherical cell soma synapse).

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Figure 2.
Electron micrographs of the anteroventral cochlear
nucleus immunolabeled (immunoperoxidase method) with antibodies to
GluR2 (a), GluR2/3 (b), and
GluR4 (c). E, Endbulb.
Arrows indicate postsynaptic densities on spherical
cells. Note the dense staining seen in synapses immunolabeled for
GluR2/3 or GluR4. In contrast, low staining is seen in the synapses
labeled for GluR2 (staining in the synapse on the right
may not be above background). A distinct patch of staining is seen in
the neck of the spine on the left in a;
in contrast, patches of staining are common in the cytoplasm of cells
labeled with GluR2/3 or GluR4 antibodies. Note also the patch of
staining for GluR4 seen in the presynaptic terminal (compare with
presynaptic gold-labeling in Fig. 5). The stained process in the
top right corner of c is probably a glial
process. Scale bar, 0.5 µm.
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Electron microscopy: immunogold
On the basis of the patterns of receptor distribution suggested by
the immunoperoxidase studies, immunogold labeling was used to localize
more accurately labeling for antibodies to GluR2, GluR2/3, and GluR4.
Gold particles (10 nm) were associated with the active zones of round
vesicle synapses, including endbulbs on spherical cell somas, using
antibodies to GluR2/3 (Fig. 3) and GluR4
(Figs. 4, 5). Two or more gold particles
were found at 86% (average, 4.28 gold particles per synapse, counting
all gold particles and all endbulb synapses) (Table
2) of individual synapses in sections
labeled with antibody to GluR2/3 and at 71% (average, 2.37 gold
particles per synapse) of individual synapses in sections labeled with
antibody to GluR4. In comparison, immunogold labeling was uncommon at
these active zones using antibody to GluR2 (9%; average, 0.40 gold
particles per synapse). Immunogold labeling increased only slightly
when the concentration of primary antibody was increased (from 1.33 µg/ml to 4 µg/ml) and the gold size reduced (from 10 nm to 5 nm) to
maximize gold labeling (Table 2); the latter antibody concentration and
gold size were identical to those used in a study of GluR2
immunolabeling in fusiform cell synapses of the dorsal cochlear
nucleus, where substantial GluR2 labeling was found (Rubio and
Wenthold, 1997 ). The gold particles seen at the endbulb synapses with
the AMPA receptor antibodies usually were associated closely with the
postsynaptic membrane. However, a few gold particles sometimes were
found on the presynaptic side of these synapses with antibody to GluR4
(Fig. 5); presynaptic gold was seen only
rarely with GluR2/3 or GluR2 (Fig. 3). Postsynaptic gold labeling also
was common (50-60%) at active zones of synapses of dendrites forming
contacts with endbulbs (i.e., on the side opposite that of the
somal-endbulb synapse (Figs. 3, 5; Table 2). Sometimes gold-labeled
synapses were found on short spines projecting from the soma into the
endbulb (Fig. 5); rarely, these spines extended to the opposite surface
of the endbulb (Fig. 3). Thus, we cannot rule out that some of the
smaller dendrite processes, counted in this study, actually are somal
projections (Cant and Morest, 1979b ). Double labeling (15 nm + 5 nm
gold) showed that GluR2/3 (monoclonal antibody) (Rubio and Wenthold,
1997 ) and GluR4 immunolabeling colocalized frequently at round vesicle
synapses on spherical cell somas (Fig. 6;
Table 3).

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Figure 3.
Electron micrographs of the anteroventral cochlear
nucleus immunolabeled (immunogold method; 10 nm gold) with antibodies
to GluR2/3 (a-c) and GluR2 (d).
A, Attachment plaque; D, dendrite-forming synapse with endbulb; E, endbulb; Pv,
synapse with pleomorphic vesicles; asterisk, spine
projecting from spherical cell body; arrows,
postsynaptic membrane. The vesicles in the endbulb in a
have been artifactually flattened by compression. Note that the
postsynaptic density of the endbulb synapse in b is
slightly attenuated in the center where gold is absent; this may be a
perforated synapse. Scale bar, 0.5 µm.
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Figure 4.
Electron micrograph of the anteroventral cochlear
nucleus immunolabeled (immunogold method; 10 nm gold) with antibody to
GluR4. About half of the cell profile is included in the micrograph. This micrograph illustrates the overall pattern of endbulb-synapse terminal profiles along the somal membrane. One of these terminals (asterisk) is shown at high magnification in the inset.
E, Endbulb shown at higher magnification in Figure 5;
I, Intranuclear rod (Feldman and Peters, 1972 );
N, nucleus; arrows, postsynaptic
densities labeled with gold. Scale bar, 2 µm; inset
scale bar, 0.5 µm.
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Table 2.
Summary of the postembedding immunoreactivity for glutamate
receptor subunits at synapses on spherical bushy cells
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Figure 5.
Electron micrographs of the anteroventral cochlear
nucleus immunolabeled (immunogold method; 10 nm gold) with antibody to GluR4. The endbulb in b is shown at lower magnification
in Figure 4. Note that four gold particles are found in the presynaptic terminal away from the plasma membrane. D, Dendrite
forming synapse with endbulb; E, endbulb;
arrows, postsynaptic densities. Scale bar, 0.5 µm.
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Figure 6.
Electron micrographs of the anteroventral cochlear
nucleus double-labeled (immunogold method) with antibodies to GluR2/3
(monoclonal; 15 nm) and GluR4 (5 nm). Arrows,
Gold-labeled postsynaptic densities; arrowheads, groups
of 5 nm gold particles. The ovoid appearance of the vesicles in these
examples is caused by the artifactual compression of the round vesicles
of these endbulb (E) synapses. The synapse in
c is oblique and is a high magnification of the left
synapse in a. Scale bar, 0.1 µm (same scale for
b-d).
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Table 3.
Colocalization of postembedding immunoreactivity for
glutamate receptor subunits GluR2/3 and GluR4 at synapses on
spherical bushy cells
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Reconstruction of endbulb active zone areas using a series of
consecutive sections immunolabeled with antibody to GluR2/3 showed that
gold particles could be concentrated centrally in the synapse in many
cases and peripherally in some cases (Fig. 7). It also showed that only a small
population of synapses has no gold along the entire surface area of the
active zone. This confirms that labeling for these AMPA receptor
subunits is found in most synapse-active zones.

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Figure 7.
Electron micrographs of the anteroventral cochlear
nucleus immunolabeled (immunogold method; 10 nm gold) with antibody to GluR2/3. Sections were taken in series through an endbulb on a spherical bushy cell (a), and the positions of
active zones and gold particles (b-f) were
mapped in two dimensions (g). a,
Seventh section in series shown at low magnification; this micrograph is included to illustrate the overall structure of the endbulb in
relation to the spherical cell soma. b-e, Four sections
from part of the endbulb synapse (sections 1-4 from the series).
Asterisk demarcates the same position in all
micrographs. f, Third section in the series, printed
about the same size as the diagram in g. Small
arrows denote the beginning and end of the endbulb region mapped in g. g, Diagram of the map of 13 serial sections of the endbulb. The beginning of each section is marked
by an arrowhead on the far left; the
eighth section was lost and is marked with a lighter
arrowhead. Sections varied in thickness from silver to yellow,
with an estimated average thickness of 70 nm. This is represented on
the diagram, with a total of 910 nm for the 13 sections. The synaptic
active zones (all are in the same endbulb) are outlined
and lightly shaded. Three attachment plaques are shaded
more densely. Two separations in the plasma membrane of the endbulb are
indicated by thin lines near the right.
Gold particles are indicated by dots. The junctional
complex seen in the far left of b-d
(including a single gold particle in c) is unclear and
is not included in g. D, Dendrite forming
synapse with endbulb (i.e., on the side opposite that of the
somal/endbulb synapse); E, endbulb; I,
intranuclear rod; N, nucleus; large
arrows, postsynaptic densities with gold. Scale bars:
a, 3 µm; b-e, 0.5 µm;
f, 1 µm.
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Tangential distribution of gold particles along the postsynaptic
membrane for antibodies to GluR2, GluR2/3, and GluR4 was fairly even,
with the majority of gold particles within the central three-quarters
of the postsynaptic membrane (Fig. 8).
These three histograms were based on the inclusion of all
gold-containing synaptic active zones used in the study from Table 2.
Two additional sets of three histograms also were prepared (not shown)
using samples restricted to active zone profiles with a diameter of >250 and 300 nm, to avoid the inclusion of peripheral cuts through active zones (Landsend et al., 1997 ). These limits were based on the
smallest active zones seen in the serial reconstruction (Fig.
7g) at about 200 nm; by comparison, serial reconstructions through cat endbulbs show some active zones <200 nm (Ryugo et al.,
1996 ) and within the range of the smallest active zone profiles used in
our study. Distributions of gold particles seen in these histograms
were similar overall to those seen in Figure 8.

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
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|
Figure 8.
Tangential distribution of immunogold labeling (10 nm) with antibodies to GluR2/3 (a), GluR4
(b), and GluR2 (c) along
endbulb active zone profiles, from 70, 26, and 16 synapses,
respectively.
|
|
Controls
Controls for immunoperoxidase labeling were negative using both
light (Fig. 1) and electron microscopy. Gold particles were rare or
absent in controls for immunogold labeling.
 |
DISCUSSION |
To our knowledge, this study provides the first morphological
evidence for glutamate receptors on the postsynaptic membrane of
auditory nerve-endbulb synapses on spherical bushy cells of the AVCN.
Both preembedding immunoperoxidase and postembedding immunogold
techniques showed that the major type of postsynaptic glutamate
receptor of endbulbs is an AMPA receptor containing mainly GluR3 and
GluR4 subunits. This suggests that endbulb AMPA receptors are
calcium-permeable and desensitize rapidly; such characteristics may
facilitate auditory neurotransmission. The immunogold technique showed
that endbulb AMPA receptors are present at most synapse-active zones
throughout the endbulb-soma contact zone and are distributed evenly
along the postsynaptic membrane.
Expression and organization of AMPA receptors at
endbulb synapses
AMPA receptors found postsynaptic to spherical cell-primary
auditory terminals contain GluR3 and GluR4, but few may contain GluR2,
and GluR1 may be absent or rare. Previous in situ
hybridization studies indicate that spherical cells contain (1) GluR2,
GluR3, and GluR4, but not GluR1 mRNA; (2) low levels of GluR2 mRNA and moderate levels of GluR3 mRNA (GluR4 mRNA expression was not
quantified); and (3) only one-fourth to one-fifth as much GluR2 mRNA as
is found in fusiform cells of the dorsal cochlear nucleus or cerebellar Purkinje cells (Hunter et al., 1993 ). Light microscope immunoperoxidase studies have shown similar results for receptor protein levels. Based
on the present study, along with an earlier general study of the brain
including the cochlear nuclei (Petralia et al., 1997a ), there is little
or no staining in the AVCN with GluR1 antibody, low staining with GluR2
antibody, and moderate to dense staining with GluR2/3 and GluR4
antibodies (similar findings have been de- scribed in avian
cochlear nuclei although GluR2 antibody was not used) (Levin et al.,
1997 ), again suggesting that the major AMPA receptor subunits of the
AVCN are GluR3 and GluR4. By comparison, both GluR2 and GluR2/3
antibodies produced substantial staining in the dorsal cochlear nucleus
(Petralia et al., 1996b , 1997a ), suggesting that GluR2 is more common
in neurons of the dorsal cochlear nucleus than in neurons of the AVCN.
In the present study, GluR2 immunogold labeling at endbulb synapses is
about one-fifth (0.44 gold particles per synapse) of that found at two
kinds of fusiform cell synapses (dorsal cochlear nucleus: 1.9 gold
particles per synapse for auditory nerve synapses; 2.2 gold particles
per synapse for parallel fiber synapses) (Rubio and Wenthold, 1997 ), using identical antibody concentrations and gold particle sizes. (Because only low levels of GluR2 immunolabeling are found throughout the AVCN, a direct comparison with synapses rich in GluR2 within the
AVCN could not be made.) This ratio is remarkably similar to that
obtained for mRNA, supporting the suggestion that GluR2 subunits are
infrequent in spherical cells and spherical cell-endbulb synapses. Use
of two concentrations of the GluR2 antibody provides further proof that
a low GluR2/GluR3 ratio is a real phenomenon at endbulb synapses and
that this antibody is labeling all available epitopes, i.e., the
labeling intensity for GluR2 does not show a further increase after
using higher antibody concentrations. Another alternative explanation
for low immunolabeling with GluR2 antibody is that epitope
accessibility is compromised because of interference by associated
proteins. However, the only described AMPA receptor-associated protein,
GRIP, appears to interact with the far C terminus of GluR2 (Dong et
al., 1997 ), i.e., the site of epitopes for GluR2/3 antibody but not for
GluR2 antibody (Petralia et al., 1997a ).
The serial reconstruction of part of an endbulb showed a structure and
a distribution of active zones similar to those described in the cat
(Ryugo et al., 1996 , 1997 ). AMPA receptors are found in most active
zones of endbulbs and also are spread throughout each active
zone-postsynaptic membrane. The overall even distribution of AMPA
receptor subunits in the active zones was demonstrated using both
serial reconstructions and linear tangential measurements along the
individual section profiles and is consistent with findings in other
studies of ionotropic glutamate receptors in the CNS (AMPA, Nusser et
al., 1994 ; Baude et al., 1993 , 1995 ; Bernard et al., 1997 ; delta,
Landsend et al., 1997 ). Finally, the perpendicular distribution of
immunogold particles in the synapse indicates a postsynaptic
localization of AMPA receptors at the endbulb synapse, consistent with
findings in other areas of the nervous system (Nusser et al., 1994 ;
Baude et al., 1995 ; Bernard et al., 1997 ). Occasional presynaptic gold
particles seen with GluR4 antibody is consistent with findings in other
regions (Baude et al., 1995 ; Matsubara et al., 1996 ); however, this
evidence for presynaptic GluR4 is preliminary and requires more
detailed analysis in a future study.
AMPA receptor function at endbulb synapses
These data indicate that many endbulb-AMPA receptors may be
composed of GluR3 + GluR4 and lack GluR2. Such AMPA receptors are
calcium-permeable and show rapid desensitization (Jonas et al., 1994 ;
Mosbacher et al., 1994 ; Geiger et al., 1995 ; Jonas and Burnashev,
1995 ). Calcium-permeable AMPA receptors are found in a number of cell
types in the nervous system, and there is a close negative correlation
between abundance of GluR2 and calcium-permeability in neurons (Geiger
et al., 1995 ; Jonas and Burnashev, 1995 ; Seeburg, 1996 ; Petralia,
1997 ). Jonas et al. (1994) , using patch clamping and single-cell PCR,
found that nonpyramidal neocortical neurons have high calcium
permeability and low GluR2 expression (a complete absence of GluR2 was
rare), whereas pyramidal neurons have relatively low calcium
permeability and high GluR2 expression. Geiger et al. (1995) , using
similar techniques, examined neurons from several brain regions and
concluded that the calcium permeability of native AMPA receptors is
inversely correlated with relative abundance of GluR2. In addition, for
most types of neurons, their data are consistent with a model of a
pentameric AMPA receptor in which a single GluR2 subunit is sufficient
to produce heteromeric AMPA receptor complexes with low calcium
permeability. Thus, neurons with only low levels of GluR2 (less than
~25%, based on relative abundance of GluR2 compared with the total
of all AMPA receptor subunits) produce mostly GluR2-lacking,
calcium-permeable AMPA receptors, and produce few GluR2-containing,
calcium-impermeable AMPA receptors (Jonas et al., 1994 ; Geiger et al.,
1995 ; Jonas and Burnashev, 1995 ). Calcium-permeable AMPA receptors,
presumably lacking GluR2, have been demonstrated in the avian cochlear
nucleus (Otis et al., 1995 ; Zhou et al., 1995 ; Solum et al., 1997 ).
AMPA receptors containing high levels of flop variants of GluR3 or GluR4 show rapid desensitization (Mosbacher et al., 1994 ). This allows
rapid neurotransmission, as suggested for parts of the auditory system
(Raman et al., 1994 ; Geiger et al., 1995 ). Rapid neurotransmission also
may involve calcium entry through GluR2-lacking AMPA receptors; this
could activate calcium-dependent potassium channels to facilitate
termination of the excitatory postsynaptic potential (Geiger et al.,
1995 ). A rapid response of spherical bushy cells to auditory nerve
stimulation is expected, because these neurons are believed to act as
relays of high-frequency information from the auditory nerve to other
auditory centers (Isaacson and Walmsley, 1995 ). Rapid neurotransmission
in the cochlear nucleus and other auditory nuclei may be necessary for accurate transmission of temporal signals involved in sound
localization (Raman et al., 1994 ).
The high density of neurotransmitter release sites (i.e., active zones)
and associated AMPA receptors at endbulb synapses may improve
transmission of timing information (avian studies) (Trussell et al.,
1993 , Otis et al., 1996 ). Briefly, neurotransmitter release
from multiple sites on endbulbs causes delayed clearance of
neurotransmitter; this activates a steady potassium conductance that
reduces the membrane time constant, thereby speeding and improving the
precision of repetitive firing. This phenomenon also promotes
desensitization, which may protect the cell from excessive calcium
entry through these GluR2-lacking AMPA receptors.
Other receptors at endbulb synapses
Preliminary studies indicate that other types of glutamate
receptors (kainate, delta, NMDA, metabotropic) exist only at low levels
at endbulb synapses (one exception may be mGluR1 at synapses between
dendrites and endbulbs) (Wang et al., 1996 , 1997 ; our unpublished
data). This suggests that either these receptors play only minimal
roles at endbulb synapses (for NMDA receptors, see Wickesberg and
Oertel, 1989 ; Isaacson and Walmsley, 1995 ), or uncommon receptors are
sufficient for significant function (for metabotropic receptors, see
Lachica et al., 1995 ).
Dendrite synapses
Differences in immunolabeling with AMPA receptors were seen
between endbulb-bushy cell soma synapses and endbulb-dendrite synapses. In the AVCN anterior division, the latter dendrites are
almost certainly derived from spherical bushy cells; most likely they
are distal dendrites from cells other than the one forming the somal
synapses with that particular endbulb (Cant and Morest, 1979a ,b ; Rees
et al., 1985 ; Ryugo and Sento, 1991 ; Ryugo et al., 1996 ). Immunogold
particles for GluR2/3 and GluR4 immunolabeling were less frequent in
endbulb-dendrite synapses compared with endbulb-soma synapses. If
these differences occur in the same population of spherical bushy
cells, postsynaptic AMPA receptors would be differentially distributed
in these cells. Differential distribution of glutamate receptors has
been reported for other neurons (Petralia et al., 1994a ; Landsend et
al., 1997 ; Rubio and Wenthold, 1997 ; Zhao et al., 1997 ). This is
consistent with the reduced cytoplasmic content of the distal dendrites
of spherical bushy cells and the paucity of their synaptic contacts, and it supports suggestions that these dendrites play only a minor role
in primary auditory neurotransmission (Cant and Morest, 1979b ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 16, 1997; revised Nov. 6, 1997; accepted Nov. 11, 1997.
This study was supported by the National Institute on Deafness and
Other Communication Disorders Intramural Research Program. We thank Dr.
M. E. Rubio for many helpful suggestions; Dr. K. K. Osen for
preparing some of the tissue used in the preliminary study and for
helpful suggestions; A. S. Landsend, B. Riber, and K. M. Gujord for help and advice on the immunogold technique; Dr. J. Fex for
reviewing this paper; and Dr. P. Streit for providing monoclonal
GluR2/3.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ronald S. Petralia, National
Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders/National Institutes of Health, 36/5D08, 36 Convent Drive, MSC 4162, Bethesda, MD
20892-4162.
 |
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