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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 1999, 19(13):5311-5321
Fast Excitatory Synaptic Transmission Mediated by Nicotinic
Acetylcholine Receptors in Drosophila Neurons
Daewoo
Lee and
Diane K.
O'Dowd
Departments of Developmental and Cell Biology, Anatomy and
Neurobiology, University of California Irvine, Irvine, California
92697-1280
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ABSTRACT |
Difficulty in recording from single neurons in vivo
has precluded functional analyses of transmission at central synapses in Drosophila, where the neurotransmitters and receptors
mediating fast synaptic transmission have yet to be identified. Here we demonstrate that spontaneously active synaptic connections form between
cultured neurons prepared from wild-type embryos and provide the first
direct evidence that both acetylcholine and GABA mediate fast
interneuronal synaptic transmission in Drosophila. The
predominant type of fast excitatory transmission between cultured
neurons is mediated by nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs).
Detailed analysis of cholinergic transmission reveals that spontaneous EPSCs (sEPSCs) are composed of both evoked and action
potential-independent [miniature EPSC (mEPSC)] components. The mEPSCs
are characterized by a broad, positively skewed amplitude histogram in
which the variance is likely to reflect differences in the currents
induced by single quanta. Biophysical characteristics of the
cholinergic mEPSCs include a rapid rise time (0.6 msec) and decay ( = 2 msec). Regulation of mEPSC frequency by external calcium and cobalt
suggests that calcium influx through voltage-gated channels influences the probability of ACh release. In addition, brief depolarization of
the cultures with KCl can induce a calcium-dependent increase in sEPSC
frequency that persists for up to 3 hr after termination of the
stimulus, illustrating one form of plasticity at these cholinergic
synapses. These data demonstrate that cultured embryonic neurons,
amenable to both genetic and biochemical manipulations, present a
unique opportunity to define genes/signal transduction cascades
involved in functional regulation of fast excitatory transmission at
interneuronal cholinergic synapses in Drosophila.
Key words:
Drosophila; nAChRs; interneuronal synapses; mEPSC; EPSC; fast excitatory cholinergic transmission
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INTRODUCTION |
The ability to combine behavioral
and biochemical approaches with sophisticated molecular genetics has
made Drosophila an important organism for identification of
genes involved in the development and functioning of the nervous
system. Furthermore, the electrophysiological studies feasible at the
larval and embryonic neuromuscular junction (NMJ) have made it possible
to assess the phenotypic consequences of mutating specific genes,
providing important insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying
transmission at peripheral glutamatergic synapses (Wu, 1996 ; Wu and
Bellen, 1997 ). The NMJ in Drosophila also exhibits features
of activity-dependent synaptic plasticity, including paired-pulse
facilitation and post-tetanic potentiation. Alterations in these
properties in a number of mutant and transgenic strains have
demonstrated that cAMP-cAMP response element-binding protein (Zhong
and Wu, 1991 ; Davis et al., 1996 ) and CaM kinase II signaling (Griffith
et al., 1994 ; Wang et al., 1994 ) are involved in regulating plasticity
at these glutamatergic synapses. Because some of these animals exhibit
learning and memory defects, it seems likely that these signaling
cascades are also important in regulating transmission and plasticity
at central synapses.
Prerequisite to testing this hypothesis is the ability to examine the
functional properties of fast transmission at central synapses in
mutant and wild-type flies. However, to date, the technical challenge
of recording from single neurons in the CNS has precluded
electrophysiological analyses of central synaptic transmission in
Drosophila. Although a recently described intact embryonic
nerve cord preparation suggests that it will be possible to examine
some aspects of fast synaptic transmission in vivo (Baines
and Bate, 1998 ), an alternate approach that has been used successfully
to study the functional properties of transmission at central synapses
in other animals focuses on connections that form between neurons grown
in cell culture (Banker and Goslin, 1991 ). Drosophila
neurons, from both embryos (Seecof et al., 1973 ; Wu et al., 1990 ;
O'Dowd, 1995 ) and larvae (Wu et al., 1983 ), differentiate in
dissociated cell culture under various growth conditions. Standard whole-cell recording techniques have documented the expression of
voltage-gated ion channels (Solc et al., 1987 ; O'Dowd and Aldrich, 1988 ; O'Dowd et al., 1989 ; Leung and Byerly, 1991 ; O'Dowd et al., 1995 ; Tsunoda and Salkoff, 1995 ) and the development of electrical excitability in cultured neurons (Saito and Wu, 1991 ; O'Dowd, 1995 ;
Zhao and Wu, 1997 ). Development of the electrical membrane properties
of neurons in embryonic cultures appears to be similar to maturation
occurring in vivo based on data obtained from neurons in an
intact embryonic nerve cord preparation (Baines and Bate, 1998 ).
Here we demonstrate that embryonic Drosophila neurons are
also capable of forming functional synaptic connections with each other
in culture, providing a unique opportunity to examine the electrophysiological properties of interneuronal synaptic transmission. In these neurons the predominant form of fast excitatory synaptic transmission is cholinergic and is mediated by nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). Spontaneous synaptic currents mediated by GABA
receptors were also observed in a subpopulation of neurons. Comparison
of the synaptic currents in neurons cultured from mutant and transgenic
animals with the wild-type data presented in this paper will enable
identification of specific genes involved in the function/regulation of
central synaptic transmission.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Fly strains. Two wild-type populations were used in
this study. The first strain (wt1) refers to a Canton-S stock
maintained in the laboratory for 10 years. The second stock (wt2) is a
"Cantonized" white stock (w1118:CS10) generated by outcrossing
between w1118 and a Canton-S stock for 10 generations (Boynton and
Tully, 1992 ). wt2 was kindly provided by Dr. T. Tully (Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory).
Cultures. Each culture was prepared from two midgastrula
stage embryos, plated on uncoated glass coverslips, and grown in a
defined medium (DDM1) as described previously (O'Dowd, 1995 ). Cultures
were maintained in an incubator supplied with 5% CO2 at
23-25°C for up to 9 d.
Immunostaining. Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and GABA
expression were examined using the Vectastain
avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method (Vector, Burlingame, CA).
Neurons at 3-9 d in vitro (DIV) were fixed with 4%
paraformaldehyde for 30 min at room temperature. For ChAT staining the
primary antibody, monoclonal antibody 4B1 (Takagawa and Salvaterra,
1996 ), was used at a dilution of 2 µg/ml of IgG in a 4°C overnight
incubation. This antibody was kindly provided by Dr. P. Salvaterra
(City of Hope). The secondary antibody (biotinylated anti-mouse IgG;
Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was used at a 1:500 dilution in a 2 hr room
temperature incubation. For GABA staining the primary antibody
(polyclonal anti-GABA antibody; Sigma) was used at a dilution of 1:1000
in a 4°C overnight incubation. The secondary antibody (biotinylated
anti-rabbit IgG; Sigma) was used at a 1:200 dilution in a 3 hr room
temperature incubation. For both ChAT and GABA staining the
streptavidin-peroxidase complex solution was applied at a 1:50
dilution for 1 hr at room temperature. The DAB reaction was processed
for 1-2 min, a time chosen such that no background staining was
observed in control cultures processed in parallel in the absence of
primary antibody. In each experiment the total number of neurons and
the number of immunopositive neurons were counted in four randomly
chosen fields of view on four different coverslips, and the percentage
of positive neurons was calculated. The mean percentage of positive
neurons was determined from the average percentage of labeled neurons
in four or five independent experiments for ChAT and GABA,
respectively. The classification of cells as neuronal, based on their
morphology, is justified by a previous study demonstrating that >90%
of the differentiated cells in these cultures are stained with anti-HRP
antibodies (O'Dowd, 1995 ) that specifically bind to
Drosophila neurons (Jan and Jan, 1982 ).
Electrophysiology. The whole-cell recording technique was
used to monitor EPSCs and EPSPs from cultured neurons between 1 and 9 DIV. EPSCs were recorded with whole-cell pipettes (3-6 M ) filled
with internal solution containing (in mM): 120 CsOH, 120 D-gluconic acid, 0.1 CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 20 NaCl, 1.1 EGTA, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.2. For
EPSP and action potential (AP) recordings, potassium gluconate (120 mM) was substituted for CsOH and D-gluconic acid. The external solution contained (in mM): 140 NaCl, 1 CaCl2, 4 MgCl2, 3 KCl, 5 HEPES,
pH 7.2. All data shown are corrected for the 5 mV liquid junction
potentials generated in these solutions. Resting potentials were
measured as the voltage drop observed in current-clamp mode after
establishment of the whole-cell configuration. EPSCs recorded in the
absence of TTX were defined as sEPSCs, and those recorded in the
presence of 1 µM TTX were defined as mEPSCs. The
following additional drugs were bath-applied:
D-tubocurarine (curare, 100 nM; Aldrich
Chemicals), 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX, 5 µM), D( )-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid
(APV, 50 µM), and picrotoxin (PTX, 10 µM).
Data were acquired with an Axopatch 1D (Axon Instruments) amplifier, a
Digidata D-A converter (Axon Instruments), a pentium-equipped Gateway
2000 computer, and either pCLAMP6 (Axon Instruments) or SCAN (SES,
University of Strathclyde, Scotland) software. All recordings were made
at room temperature.
Analysis of mEPSCs. mEPSC frequency in a single neuron was
determined from 20-100 current traces, each 500 msec in duration, all
obtained between 2-7 min after breaking into the whole-cell configuration. During this time there was no significant rundown in
frequency. Individual events were detected using an automated mini
detection software (Mini Analysis Program, Jaejin Software) with
threshold criteria of 10 pA (fourfold greater than the RMS noise
level of 2.5 pA) and a charge transfer of 7 fC. Single-channel activity
(observed only rarely) was manually rejected during visual inspection
of each record. Current traces were filtered at 2 kHz and digitized at
4 kHz using PClamp 6 software. mEPSC biophysical properties were
determined from records filtered at 2 kHz and digitized at 20 kHz using
SCAN, a trigger-based detection program with an amplitude threshold of
10 pA. The mean amplitude and rise time were determined by averaging
the values obtained from 25 or more single events in each neuron. Decay
time constants were determined by fitting a single exponential
distribution to the falling phase of the averaged mEPSC from each
neuron. A small number of mEPSCs with rise times >2 msec were excluded
from this analysis.
KCl stimulation. Cultures between 3 and 6 DIV were
depolarized by brief exposure to high potassium using the following
procedures. (1) 1x KCl: Coverslips were transferred into Petri dishes
containing DDM1 growth medium to which 50 mM KCl had
been added. After a 5 min incubation the coverslips were briefly washed
three times in fresh DDM1. Coverslips were transferred into dishes
containing fresh DDM1 and returned to the CO2 incubator for
1 hr before electrophysiological analysis. (2) 3x KCl: KCl exposure and
wash were repeated three times, separated by 5 min intervals in DDM1.
After the last wash, coverslips were transferred into dishes containing
fresh DDM1 and returned to the CO2 incubator for 1 hr
before electrophysiological analysis. (3) 3x KCl + 3 mM
Co2+: The same protocol was used as for 3x KCl, with
the modification that the high potassium solution also contained 3 mM cobalt. The sEPSC frequency in mock-treated cultures,
processed in parallel with treated cultures where normal DDM1 replaced
the DDM1 supplemented with KCl, was not significantly different from
untreated cultures, and therefore the data in these two groups were
pooled for statistical comparisons. Two-thirds of the whole-cell
recordings were performed blind with respect to the treatment conditions.
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RESULTS |
Previous studies from our laboratory documenting the
differentiation of electrically excitable neurons in dissociated cell cultures prepared from midgastrula stage Drosophila embryos
(O'Dowd, 1995 ) did not report evidence of spontaneous synaptic
activity in these cells. This is perhaps not surprising in that these
experiments focused primarily on the properties of large isolated
neurons at 1-2 DIV. However, many of the neurons in these cultures
were physically contacted by the neurites of a number of neighboring cells, and this led us to ask whether these neurons could form functional synaptic connections with each other. Initial experiments to
examine this question were directed at determining the pattern of
neurotransmitter expression in the cultured Drosophila
neurons. Immunocytochemical studies revealed that many of the cultured neurons, when plated at a moderately high density, were stained with a
monoclonal antibody to ChAT, the synthesizing enzyme for the
neurotransmitter acetylcholine (Fig.
1A). A smaller
population of neurons was stained with a polyclonal antibody for the
neurotransmitter GABA (Fig. 1B). Quantitative
analysis revealed that ~80% of the cultured neurons (3-6 DIV) were
ChAT positive and 15% were GABA positive (Fig. 1C). These
findings suggest that most of the neurons use acetylcholine as a
neurotransmitter, whereas a much smaller subset of the cells uses
GABA.

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Figure 1.
ChAT and GABA expression in cultured
Drosophila neurons. A, Bright-field
photomicrograph of a culture at 6 DIV stained with a monoclonal
antibody to choline acetyltransferase (ChAT).
Although the majority of neurons are positive in this field of view,
unstained neurons are indicated by arrowheads.
Inset, Background level of staining in the absence of
primary antibody. B, Bright-field photomicrograph of a
culture at 4 DIV stained with a polyclonal antibody to GABA. Two
positive neurons are indicated by arrows. Scale bar, 20 µm. C, Quantitative analysis of the percentage of
neurons positive for ChAT or GABA assessed in cultures between 3 and 6 DIV. Bars indicate SEM, and number of experiments is indicated in
parentheses.
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Fast synaptic transmission mediated by nAChR and GABA receptors in
cultured Drosophila neurons
Whole-cell recordings, from neurons between 3 and 9 DIV, revealed
that in addition to expressing both GABA and ChAT, these neurons are
capable of forming spontaneously active functional synaptic connections
with each other. Spontaneous PSCs (sPSCs) (Fig.
2A), characterized by a
rapid rise and decay, were observed in ~50% of the cultured
wild-type neurons that exhibited physical contacts with neurites from
neighboring cells. Initial experiments demonstrated the presence of a
second kinetically distinct classes of sPSCs in a subpopulation of
neurons (Fig. 2B). In our standard recording
solutions, these slowly decaying events were inward at 55 mV but were
clearly outward at potentials more depolarized than 30 mV (Fig.
2B). This reversal, near the theoretical chloride equilibrium potential in these conditions
(ECl = 46 mV), suggested that these
events were mediated by GABA-gated chloride channels. This was
confirmed by the blockade of these currents with PTX, a specific GABA
receptor antagonist (data not shown). In some neurons both the fast
transient currents and slow GABAergic currents were observed.
Therefore, to examine the properties of rapid transient sPSCs in
isolation, all of the subsequent recordings were obtained in the
presence of PTX (10 µM).

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Figure 2.
Two classes of kinetically distinct spontaneous
synaptic currents recorded from cultured Drosophila
neurons. A, Fast sPSCs recorded from a neuron at 3 DIV,
typical of the currents recorded in ~50% of the wild-type neurons.
Holding potential was 75 mV. B, An example of a
kinetically distinct class of sPSCs, recorded in a second wild-type
neuron at 3 DIV, is characterized by a slow decay time constant. These
slow sPSCs are inward when the cell is held at 55 mV and outward at
25 and 5 mV, reversing near the calculated chloride equilibrium
potential ( 46 mV).
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The reversible blockade of the rapid transient sPSCs by bath
application of 100 nM curare demonstrates that they are
mediated by nAChRs (Fig. 3). These
currents were not affected by either glutamate (CNQX, APV) or GABA
receptor (PTX) antagonists. To determine whether the cholinergic PSCs
were excitatory, we examined their reversal potential. In a single
neuron at 7 DIV the averaged PSC (20-50 individual events) was inward
at voltages below 45 and outward at +60 mV (Fig.
4A). A current-voltage
relationship generated by measuring the peak amplitude at each voltage
shows a reversal potential near 0 mV (Fig. 4A). A
similar depolarized reversal potential was observed in all the neurons
examined (n > 10), suggesting that these fast
cholinergic PSCs are excitatory. This was confirmed by current-clamp
recordings, where spontaneous cholinergic postsynaptic potentials were
able to trigger APs in the recipient neuron (Fig. 4B). These data demonstrate that the predominant form
of fast excitatory synaptic transmission in the cultured
Drosophila neurons is cholinergic and mediated by
nAChRs.

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Figure 3.
Fast transient synaptic currents are mediated by
nAChRs. Superimposed current traces (20 × 500 msec sweeps) at a
holding potential of 75 mV during bath perfusion with indicated drugs
at the following concentrations: APV, 50 µM; CNQX, 5 µM; PTX, 10 µM; and curare, 100 nM. Records obtained from a single neuron at 6 DIV. Fast
sPSCs were reversibly blocked by bath application of curare but were
not affected by CNQX, APV, or PTX.
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Figure 4.
Cholinergic synaptic currents are
excitatory. A, Averaged mEPSCs (>20 traces at each
potential) recorded in the presence of 1 µM TTX from a
single neuron at 6 DIV at indicated holding potentials. The peak
current-voltage relationship indicates a reversal potential near 0 mV. B, In current-clamp mode, nAChR-mediated sEPSPs were
recorded from a single neuron (6 DIV) at two different holding
potentials. At rest, 35 mV in this neuron, an sEPSP triggers a
spontaneous AP with a threshold at 28 mV. When the cell is held at
55 mV by injection of hyperpolarizing current, the sEPSPs are
depolarizing, but they do not give rise to regenerative events.
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AP-dependent and AP-independent components of fast
excitatory transmission
Fast cholinergic sEPSCs recorded from the cultured neurons have
both an AP-dependent and an AP-independent component as illustrated in
Figure 5. Recordings of sEPSCs from a
single neuron at 5 DIV reveals a large variability in the amplitudes of
individual events (Fig. 5A,C). Bath application of 1 µM TTX, to block generation of spontaneous APs, reduced
the mean current amplitude (Fig. 5A,B). These events are AP
independent and are defined as cholinergic mEPSCs. In the population of
neurons examined, the mean amplitude of the sEPSCs was significantly
larger than that of the mEPSCs (30.7 ± 2.3, n = 16 and 24.8 ± 1.4, n = 24, respectively;
p < 0.05, Student's t test). The frequency
of sEPSCs and mEPSCs in the population of neurons examined was quite
variable (0.1 to 10 Hz), but the average sEPSC frequency (2.6 Hz) was
also significantly higher than the average mEPSCs frequency (1.1 Hz)
(Fig. 5C). These data demonstrate that evoked currents
driven by spontaneous Na-dependent action potentials comprise a
significant component of the sEPSCs in the population of neurons
examined.

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Figure 5.
sEPSCs have both TTX-sensitive and
TTX-insensitive components. A, sEPSCs recorded from a
single wild-type neuron (5 DIV) at 75 mV in normal external solution
(top three traces). mEPSCs recorded from the same neuron
after perfusion of the bathing media with 1 µM TTX to
block spontaneous APs (bottom three traces).
B, Amplitude distribution of sEPSCs versus mEPSCs
recorded from the same neuron. Inset, The mean sEPSC
amplitude was significantly larger than the mEPSC amplitude in the
population of neurons examined (*p < 0.05, Student's t test). C, The average sEPSC
frequency was also significantly higher than mEPSC frequency in wt1
neurons (**p < 0.01, Student's t
test). Bars indicate SEM, and number of neurons is indicated
parentheses.
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Increase in sEPSC incidence and frequency during early development
in vitro
Initial experiments at 3-4 DIV, where many neurons are contacted
by processes from one or more neighboring cells, revealed that sEPSCs
were observed in ~50% of the neurons examined. However, neurons in
cultures prepared from midgastrula stage embryos undergo extensive
neurite outgrowth during the first 24 hr, and by 1 DIV the processes of
some neurons are already in contact with those of others. sEPSCs were
recorded in ~18% of the neurons exhibiting physical contacts with
other cells at 1 DIV (Fig.
6A). This incidence rate was significantly lower than the 50% characteristic of neurons in
cultures examined between 2 and 9 DIV. In the cells with currents, the
mean sEPSC frequency observed in neurons at both 1 and 2 DIV was also
lower than that seen at 3 DIV. There was no further change in these
parameters between 3 and 9 DIV (Fig. 6B). Therefore, although the neurites continue to elaborate between 3 and 9 DIV, the
sEPSC incidence and frequency are stable under the standard growth
conditions used.

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Figure 6.
Incidence and frequency of EPSCs are stable in
neurons at 3 d in vitro (DIV).
A, The average percentage of neurons in which sEPSCs
were recorded was determined on a daily basis from multiple experiments
(n) with total of 17-69 wild-type neurons
examined at each day. B, In the cells in which synaptic
currents were recorded, the sEPSC/mEPSC frequency was determined and
plotted as a function of days in culture. All sEPSCs were recorded in
control saline, and all mEPSCs were recorded in the presence of 1 µM TTX. Bars indicate SEM, and number of neurons is
indicated in parentheses.
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Broad, positively skewed mEPSC amplitude distribution is
independent of release probability
Amplitude histograms of mEPSP/mEPSCs at peripheral
cholinergic synapses in vertebrates are characterized by a single
Gaussian distribution or the sum of multiple Gaussians with distinct
modes (Katz, 1966 ). This suggests little variance in the response
induced by release of a single quantum (vesicle) of ACh at these
synapses. In contrast, the range of mEPSC amplitudes at cholinergic
synapses in a single Drosophila neuron was broad (Fig.
7A), and the amplitude histograms were positively skewed, rather than showing a single Gaussian distribution or multiple peaks at defined modes (Fig. 7B). Theoretically, the relatively large variance in mEPSC
amplitude could be caused by activation of currents at a number of
different locations that were variably attenuated by electrotonic
decay. However, we found no evidence of a correlation between amplitude and decay time constant of the individual mEPSCs (Fig. 7C),
suggesting that electrotonic filtering is not responsible for the broad
amplitude distribution.

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Figure 7.
Broad, skewed mEPSC amplitude histogram in single
cells. A, Variability in the amplitude of individual
mEPSCs in a single neuron at 7 DIV. B, The mEPSC
amplitude histogram constructed from 408 individual events recorded
from this neuron reveals a broad distribution that is positively
skewed. C, Scatter plot of amplitude versus decay time
constant for the individual events. A linear regression fit to the data
demonstrates little correlation (r = 0.073),
indicating that the amplitude variability is not caused by electrotonic
filtering.
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To determine whether mEPSCs generated by release of multiple quanta
might contribute to the variation in amplitude, we investigated the
relationship between release probability and mEPSC amplitude. If mEPSCs
represent currents resulting from release of a mixture of single and
multiple quanta, the mEPSC amplitude distribution should co-vary with
release probability. However, if each mEPSC represents the response to
a single quantum, then the amplitude should be independent of release
probability. Similar to the findings in several other preparations,
mEPSC frequency (release probability) was influenced by extracellular
calcium concentrations at these cholinergic synapses in
Drosophila. Under the standard recording conditions of 1 mM Ca2+, the mEPSC frequency was
1.06 ± 0.14 Hz. Increasing extracellular calcium to 2 mM increased the mEPSC frequency, whereas a frequency lower
than rest was observed at 0.5 mM Ca2+
(Fig. 8A). A threefold
change in frequency was observed between 0.5 and 2 mM in
the population of wild-type neurons examined (Fig. 8B). When no exogenous calcium was added to the
recording solution, mEPSCs were observed in only a small percentage of
the neurons examined (3/34). As predicted for currents generated by
release of a single vesicle, the mEPSC amplitude was independent of
release probability, as illustrated by the overlapping mEPSC amplitude histograms generated from a single cell, at two different calcium concentrations (0.5 and 2 mM Ca2+) (Fig.
8C). Furthermore, there was no change in the mean amplitude as a function of calcium concentration in the population of neurons examined (Fig. 8D). These data support the conclusion
that the broad, skewed distribution of mEPSC amplitudes represents the variability in the currents induced by single quanta.

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Figure 8.
mEPSC frequency but not amplitude is
regulated by extracellular Ca2+ concentration.
A, Superimposed current traces (20 × 500 msec
sweeps in each) obtained at three different extracellular calcium
concentrations in the presence of 1 µM TTX.
B, Mean mEPSC frequency in the indicated number of
neurons at three different calcium concentrations. C,
mEPSC amplitude histograms from a single cell at 2 mM and
0.5 mM Ca2+. Inset, Averaged mEPSCs
generated from 103 events in 0.5 mM Ca2+
and from 310 events in 2 mM Ca2+.
D, The mean mEPSC amplitude observed in the indicated
number of neurons at three different external calcium concentrations.
Bars indicate SEM, and number of neurons is indicated in
parentheses.
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mEPSC frequency regulated by calcium entry through
voltage-gated channels
To determine whether the dependence of mEPSC frequency on
extracellular calcium concentration was mediated by voltage-gated Ca2+ channels, we examined mEPSCs in the standard
external concentration of 1 mM Ca2+ in
the presence and absence of a calcium channel blocker. As illustrated
in Figure 9A, bath application
of 3 mM Co2+ reversibly decreases mEPSC
frequency in a single neuron. The average mEPSC frequency recorded in 1 mM Ca2+ + 3 mM
Co2+ was significantly lower than that recorded in 1 mM Ca2+ alone, in the population of
neurons examined (Fig. 9B). These data demonstrate that
AP-independent influx of calcium ions through voltage-gated calcium
channels influences the probability of ACh release from the presynaptic
terminals at rest. The effects of focal depolarization on mEPSC
frequency was also examined by recording from a neuron before and
during pressure ejection of 50 mM KCl in the presence of
TTX (Fig. 9C). A rapid and dramatic increase in the mEPSC
frequency of approximately 11-fold was observed during the depolarizing
stimulus (Fig. 9D). This finding suggests that depolarization of nerve terminals, in the absence of sodium-dependent APs, also influences the probability of release.

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Figure 9.
Flux of calcium through voltage-gated ion channels
regulates mEPSC frequency at rest and during depolarization.
A, Superimposed current traces (20 × 500 msec
sweeps in each) reveal a reversible decrease in mEPSC frequency when 3 mM Co2+ is added to the recording
solution (1 µM TTX, 1 mM
Ca2+). B, The mean mEPSC frequency
was significantly lower in recordings obtained from neurons in the
presence of 3 mM Co2+ when compared with
control (*p < 0.05, Student's t
test). C, Top two traces represent
current recordings from a neuron in control solution (1 µM TTX, 1 mM Ca2+). The
bottom two traces, recorded after pressure ejection of
50 mM KCl from a pipette located ~20 µm from the cell
body, represent the average increase in mEPSC frequency seen during the
10 sec KCl puff. D, The mean mEPSC frequency recorded
before (Control) and during the 10 sec puff of 50 mM KCl (**p < 0.01, Student's
t test). Bars indicate SEM, and number of neurons is
indicated in parentheses.
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Kinetic properties of cholinergic mEPSCs
Kinetic parameters of the mEPSCs, reflecting the properties of the
nAChRs in the postsynaptic membrane, were assessed in individual neurons. The distribution of the 10-90% rise times of mEPSCs in single cells could be reasonably fit with a single Gaussian
distribution (Fig.
10A). The mean mEPSC
rise time for each neuron was determined by averaging the rise times of
all individual events. The decay time constant was determined by
fitting a single exponential distribution to the decay phase of the
average mEPSC (Fig. 10B). Most neurons exhibited both
a rapid rise time and a fast decay time constant. A box plot
illustrates the range and variability in these parameters for the whole
population of neurons examined (Fig. 10C). There was no
indication from these analyses of more than one kinetically distinct
population of mEPSCs. Furthermore, analysis of the data as a function
of development did not reveal any significant differences in mEPSC
properties between 3 and 9 DIV (Table
1).

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Figure 10.
Cholinergic mEPSCs are characterized
by rapid activation and decay kinetics. A, A histogram
of the 10-90% rise time was generated from 314 events recorded from a
single neuron at 7 DIV. The data are fit with a single Gaussian curve
with the mean indicated by the arrow. B,
The averaged mEPSC in this neuron exhibits a typical rapid decay phase
that is well fit by a single exponential distribution with a of 1.5 msec. C, A box plot illustrates the
variability in the 10-90% rise time and decay time constant for the
mEPSCs in the population of neurons examined. The 5th and 95th
percentiles are indicated by the whiskers, and the 25th,
50th, and 75th percentile boundaries are indicated by the
box for each group. , Maximum values; , minimum
values; , the mean.
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The characteristic properties of cholinergic transmission described in
this paper are not specific to the particular strain of wild-type
flies, as demonstrated by analysis of cholinergic currents in a second
wild-type strain, wt2, a Cantonized white stock. There was no
difference in the incidence of neurons receiving sEPSCs in the two
different strains: 50% in wt1 compared with 49% in wt2. In addition
the mean frequencies of the sEPSCs and mEPSCs, 2.5 ± 0.6 Hz
(n = 18) and 1.1 ± 0.2 Hz (n = 21), respectively, in wt2 were not different from those seen in the wt1
neurons (Fig. 5C). Finally, the biophysical properties
observed in cultured neurons prepared from the two different wild-type
populations were very similar (Table
2).
Activity-dependent modulation of cholinergic
synaptic transmission
The capacity to exhibit both short-term and long-lasting
alterations in the efficacy of transmission is a common feature of chemical synapses mediating fast transmission in the CNS. To
investigate the parameters involved in regulating transmission at
cholinergic synapses between Drosophila neurons we chose to
assess the affects of brief depolarization. Our first experiment
examined the acute effects of depolarization on synaptic activity.
Focal application of 50 mM KCl for a short period (5 sec),
using a micropipette (2-3 µm in diameter), induced a fast and
dramatic elevation in sEPSC frequency (Fig.
11A). This was
followed by a slower depletion phase where the sEPSC frequency declined
below base line levels. A second application of KCl within 1-2 min did
not significantly increase sEPSC frequency during the pulse (data not
shown). However, the ability of neurons to respond to high potassium
recovered after a 5 min rest period in normal external solution (Fig.
11B). These data suggest that acute depolarization
results in a brief increase in neurotransmitter release followed by a
refractory period, consistent with a transient depletion of
neurotransmitter stores.

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|
Figure 11.
Brief depolarization of
differentiated wild-type neurons induces calcium-dependent
persistent increase in sEPSC frequency. A, A 5 sec, focal application of 50 mM KCl, pressure-ejected from
a micropipette ~20 µm from the cell body, induces a rapid and
transient increase in sEPSC frequency riding on a sustained inward
current, followed by a decline to below baseline levels within 10 sec.
Higher-resolution images of sEPSCs recorded before
(a), during (b), and after
(c) the KCl puff are indicated below.
B, In a single neuron, similar responses are observed to
two puffs of KCl when separated by a 5 min rest period in normal
external solution. C, Three different paradigms used for
global depolarization of cultures at 3-6 DIV by exposure to 50 mM KCl in DDM1. Recordings obtained 1-3 hr after stimulus
illustrate an increase in sEPSC frequency after repetitive KCl
stimulation that is blocked if stimulation is conducted in the presence
of Co2+. D, Mean sEPSC frequency,
assayed 1-3 hr after treatment, is plotted for each of the
depolarization paradigms. The slightly higher mean sEPSC frequency
after 1x KCl was not significantly different from control. However, a
significant increase in sEPSC frequency was observed in cultures
treated with high 3x KCl when compared with control (ANOVA;
***p < 0.0001, Fisher PLSD). This increase was
blocked when Co2+ was present during the repeated
exposure to high potassium. Bars indicate SEM, and the number of
neurons is indicated in parentheses.
|
|
To determine whether it was possible to cause a persistent change in
transmission at cholinergic synapses, bath exposure of the whole
culture to 50 mM KCl was used to induce a global increase in activity. Cultures at 3-6 DIV were transferred from their DDM1 growth medium to DDM1 containing 50 mM KCl for 5 min.
Cultures were transferred back into fresh DDM1 and returned to the
incubator (Fig. 11C). There was no significant change in the
mean sEPSC frequency in a population of neurons within these cultures
examined 1-3 hr after the treatment (Fig. 11D).
Extending the depolarizing stimulus to 15 min (uninterrupted) resulted
in neurons that appeared morphologically unhealthy 1 hr after the
treatment, suggesting that this extended exposure to high potassium was
detrimental to cell survival. However, when we increased the total time
of depolarization to 15 min, using repetitive depolarizations separated
by short rest intervals (Fig. 11C), the cultures were
morphologically indistinguishable from the untreated controls.
Furthermore, this depolarizing stimulus was effective in inducing a
significant increase in sEPSC frequency that persisted for at least
1-3 hr after treatment (Fig. 11D). This increase was
blocked when Co2+ was present during the
depolarizing stimulus (Fig. 11C,D). These data demonstrate
that a series of brief depolarizations can induce a persistent
calcium-dependent increase in transmission at excitatory cholinergic synapses.
 |
DISCUSSION |
A number of classic neurotransmitters and receptors, including
acetylcholine, glutamate, and GABA, are expressed in the
Drosophila CNS (Restifo and White, 1990 ). However, in the
absence of a preparation in which to monitor the functional properties
of transmission at central synapses, their role in mediating fast
synaptic transmission remained obscure. This study provides the first
direct demonstration that both nAChRs and GABA receptors mediate fast
transmission between Drosophila neurons. In conjunction with
previous studies documenting widespread expression of both
acetylcholine and AChRs in the Drosophila CNS (Salvaterra
and McCaman, 1985 ; Schuster et al., 1993 ; Yasuyama et al., 1995 ), our
finding that the predominant form of fast excitatory transmission in
cultured neurons is mediated by nAChRs is consistent with the
hypothesis that acetylcholine is the major excitatory neurotransmitter
in the fly CNS.
Spontaneous APs contribute to release of ACh in cultured
Drosophila neurons
The presence of an evoked component in the sEPSCs in the majority
of neurons examined, indicated by the decrease in mean frequency and
amplitude of the synaptic currents after bath application of TTX,
suggests that many of the cultured neurons are capable of spontaneously
firing sodium-dependent APs. Current-clamp recordings also directly
demonstrated that cultured wild-type neurons fire spontaneous action
potentials. Interestingly, the resting potentials of the cultured
neurons were relatively depolarized ( 37 mV, n = 6),
and spontaneous APs were rarely observed when hyperpolarizing current
was used to hold the cells below 50 mV. We believe that the
properties governing spontaneous firing in these cultured neurons are
likely to mirror those occurring in vivo based on the recent
recordings obtained from embryonic Drosophila neurons in an
intact nerve cord preparation. In these cells, spontaneously occurring
regenerative inward sodium currents were observed at 40 mV but were
absent when the cells were held at more hyperpolarized potentials
(Baines and Bate, 1998 ). In future studies paired recordings will be
conducted to clearly define the properties of evoked release at
cholinergic synapses formed between cultured embryonic neurons.
Synaptic currents of variable amplitude are induced by release of
single quanta of ACh
Action potential-independent release of acetylcholine at
peripheral cholinergic synapses in vertebrates results in mEPSCs that
show little variation in amplitude, each event representing the current
induced by release of a single quantum (del Castillo and Katz, 1954 ;
Katz, 1966 ) or integer numbers of quanta (Martin and Pilar, 1964 ;
Bornstein, 1974 ). In contrast, we observed a relatively high variance
in the amplitude of the cholinergic mEPSCs in the Drosophila
neurons in which the amplitude histogram was broad and positively
skewed without distinct modes. Although the events recorded from a
single cell are likely to represent currents generated at multiple
release sites, we found no evidence that large events were kinetically
faster than the small events, as would be expected if electrotonic
filtering were contributing to the large variance in mEPSC amplitude.
In light of these data, our finding that the mEPSC amplitude was
independent of release probability suggests that the variance
represents differential responses to single quanta of neurotransmitter
at these interneuronal cholinergic synapses.
A similar broad, skewed amplitude distribution of mPSCs has been
described at glutamatergic (Bekkers and Stevens, 1989 ; Jonas et al.,
1993 ; Wyllie et al., 1994 ) and GABAergic (Edwards et al., 1990 ; Otis
and Mody, 1992 ) synapses in the vertebrate CNS. It has been suggested
that differences in postsynaptic receptor number or distribution at
specific release sites (De Konick and Mody, 1994 ; Nusser et al., 1997 )
and/or variations in vesicle size or number of neurotransmitter
molecules/vesicle (Bekkers et al., 1990 ; Frerking et al., 1995 ) may
contribute to the large variance in mEPSC amplitudes. A recent report
suggests that increased variability in mEPSCs may also be a
characteristic of immature central synapses in mammals (Wall and
Usowizc, 1998 ). Additional studies in Drosophila will be
needed to determine the cellular features underlying the broad mEPSC
amplitude distribution at central cholinergic synapses.
The release probability of ACh influenced by
Ca2+ flux through voltage-gated channels at rest and
by depolarization
Although in most preparations the mean amplitude of mEPSCs is
independent of extracellular calcium concentrations, the frequency (probability of release) appears to be variably influenced by calcium
at different synapses. For example, blockade of voltage-gated calcium
channels with Cd2+ does not alter the frequency or
amplitude of either mEPSCs or mIPSCs in CA3 pyramidal cells in
hippocampal slice cultures (Scanziani et al., 1992 ; Capogna et al.,
1995 ). However, at many peripheral and central synapses in both
vertebrates and invertebrates, the mEPSC frequency is influenced by
extracellular Ca2+ concentration (Katz, 1969 ; Hori
et al., 1992 ; Broadie et al., 1997 ; Wall and Usowizc, 1998 ). Our data
demonstrate that at rest, external calcium concentrations strongly
influence the mEPSC frequency in cultured Drosophila
neurons. This is mediated by an influx of calcium through voltage-gated
ion channels. In addition, mEPSC frequency is dramatically increased in
response to KCl-induced depolarization in the presence of TTX. This
suggests that the probability of release of ACh from the presynaptic
terminals, responsible for the mEPSCs, is influenced by influx of
calcium through voltage-gated calcium channels both at resting membrane potentials and during depolarization. This is consistent with our
observations that these neurons express voltage-gated calcium channels
that can open at voltages near the average resting potential and are
further activated at more depolarized voltages (O'Dowd, 1995 ).
nAChRs mediating mEPSCs appear kinetically homogenous
To date, three different -subunits and two -subunits of the
nAChR have been identified in Drosophila (Gundelfinger,
1992 ; Schulz et al., 1998 ). Although preliminary RT-PCR analysis
suggests that all of these are expressed in the cultured neurons (data not shown), we did not see any evidence of kinetically distinct populations of cholinergic mEPSCs. This suggests that a single subunit
combination is responsible for generation of the currents or that the
different combinations produce channels with kinetically similar
properties. The biophysical properties of receptors composed of
different subunit combinations has not yet been explored in expression
systems because they do not by themselves give rise to functional
receptors. However, coexpression of individual Drosophila -subunits in Xenopus oocytes with vertebrate -subunits
did reveal two pharmacologically distinct types of AChRs defined as
-bungarotoxin sensitive and resistant (Bertrand et al., 1994 ; Schulz
et al., 1998 ). Additional pharmacological and permeability studies, in conjunction with single-cell RT-PCR, will be necessary to determine whether there are functionally and molecularly distinct populations of
nAChRs in Drosophila neurons.
Depolarization can induce a persistent increase in transmission at
cholinergic synapses
Activity-dependent regulation of transmission at central synapses
plays a fundamental role in information processing in all animals.
Contributing to this process are long-term facilitation, long-term
potentiation, and long-term depression, examples of synapse-specific
changes in synaptic strength that persist for hours to days after
induction (Bliss and Collingridge, 1993 ; Linden and Connor, 1995 ;
Nicoll and Malenka, 1995 ; Milner et al., 1998 ). More recently, a novel
form of synaptic plasticity, regulated by global activity levels, has
been identified at excitatory glutamatergic synapses in cultured
cortical neurons (Rutherford et al., 1998 ; Turrigiano et al., 1998 ).
Although we have not yet examined whether cholinergic synapses in
Drosophila neurons exhibit synapse-specific changes in
synaptic strength, our studies demonstrate that a brief increase in
overall level of neuronal activity can induce a calcium-dependent, persistent change in cholinergic transmission. Because the depolarizing stimulus affects both presynaptic and postsynaptic neurons, future studies will be necessary to determine whether the increase in sEPSC
frequency reflects alterations in presynaptic excitability, probability
of neurotransmitter release, sensitivity of the postsynaptic receptors,
or some combination thereof. However, the ability to induce a
persistent change in transmission by a brief depolarization suggests
that, like glutamatergic synapses in the vertebrate CNS, cholinergic
synapses are potential sites of plasticity important in regulating
neuronal function in the insect CNS. In a parallel study in our
laboratory we have found that cAMP signaling also plays an important
role in regulating transmission at these synapses, and it is possible
that an increase in presynaptic activity is the physiological stimulus
that activates this signal transduction cascade (our unpublished observations).
Neuronal cultures: a model system to study functional aspects of
transmission at central synapses in Drosophila
The detailed description of cholinergic transmission in wild-type
Drosophila neurons presented in this manuscript forms the basis for comparisons, with data obtained from mutants or after biochemical manipulation, that will enable identification of specific genes or factors important in function or regulation of central cholinergic synaptic transmission. In conjunction with the well established model of synaptic transmission at the NMJ, identification of both similarities and differences in the role of specific genes in
synaptic transmission at distinct synapses (e.g., peripheral vs central
synapses, glutamatergic vs cholinergic) will contribute to our
knowledge of the fundamental rules governing synaptic function and
plasticity. Because fast excitatory transmission mediated by nAChRs has
also been reported in the mammalian hippocampus (Frazier et al., 1998 )
and cortex (Roerig et al., 1997 ), the studies in this model system may
also reveal genes that are important in regulating cholinergic
transmission in mammals.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 25, 1999; revised April 14, 1999; accepted April 22, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants NS27501
and NS01854, and a generous gift from Merck. We thank Dr. M. A. Smith for helpful comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Diane K. O'Dowd, Department of
Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of California Irvine, Irvine, CA
92697-1280.
 |
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4625 - 4634.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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J. Rohrbough and K. Broadie
Electrophysiological Analysis of Synaptic Transmission in Central Neurons of Drosophila Larvae
J Neurophysiol,
August 1, 2002;
88(2):
847 - 860.
[Abstract]
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M. Grauso, R. A. Reenan, E. Culetto, and D. B. Sattelle
Novel Putative Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Subunit Genes, D{alpha}5, D{alpha}6 and D{alpha}7, in Drosophila melanogaster Identify a New and Highly Conserved Target of Adenosine Deaminase Acting on RNA-Mediated A-to-I Pre-mRNA Editing
Genetics,
April 1, 2002;
160(4):
1519 - 1533.
[Abstract]
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A. Walcourt, R. L. Scott, and H. A. Nash
Blockage of One Class of Potassium Channel Alters the Effectiveness of Halothane in a Brain Circuit of Drosophila
Anesth. Analg.,
February 1, 2001;
92(2):
535 - 541.
[Abstract]
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D. Lee and D. K. O'Dowd
cAMP-Dependent Plasticity at Excitatory Cholinergic Synapses in Drosophila Neurons: Alterations in the Memory Mutant Dunce
J. Neurosci.,
March 15, 2000;
20(6):
2104 - 2111.
[Abstract]
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