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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 1, 1999, 19(17):7342-7355
Junctional versus Extrajunctional Glycine and GABAA
Receptor-Mediated IPSCs in Identified Lamina I Neurons of the Adult Rat
Spinal Cord
Nadège
Chéry and
Yves
De Koninck
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University,
Montréal, Québec, H3G 1Y6 Canada
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ABSTRACT |
Colocalization of GABA and glycine in synaptic terminals of the
superficial dorsal horn raises the question of their relative contribution to inhibition of different classes of neurons in this
area. To address this issue, miniature IPSCs (mIPSCs) mediated via GABAA receptors (GABAARs) and glycine
receptors (GlyRs) were recorded from identified laminae I-II neurons in
adult rat spinal cord slices. GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs had
similar amplitude and rise times, but significantly slower decay
kinetics than GlyR-mediated mIPSCs. Lamina I neurons appeared to
receive almost exclusively GlyR-mediated mIPSCs, even after application
of hypertonic solutions. Yet, all neurons responded to exogenous
applications of both GABA and glycine, indicating that they expressed
both GABAARs and GlyRs. Given that virtually all
glycinergic interneurons also contain GABA, the possibility was
examined that GABAARs may be located extrasynaptically in
lamina I neurons. A slow GABAAR-mediated component was
revealed in large, but not minimally evoked monosynaptic IPSCs.
Administration of the benzodiazepine flunitrazepam unmasked a
GABAAR component to most mIPSCs , suggesting that
both transmitters were released from the same vesicle. The isolated
GABAAR component of these mIPSCs had rising kinetics 10 times slower than that of the GlyR component (or of GABAAR
mIPSCs in lamina II). The slow GABAAR components were
prolonged by GABA uptake blockers.
It is concluded that, whereas GABA and glycine are likely released from
the same vesicle of transmitter in lamina I, GABAARs appear
to be located extrasynaptically. Thus, glycine mediates most of the
tonic inhibition at these synapses. This differential distribution of
GABAARs and GlyRs confers distinct functional properties to
inhibition mediated by these two transmitters in lamina I.
Key words:
dorsal horn; substantia gelatinosa; nociception; miniature IPSCs; slice; inhibition
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INTRODUCTION |
The superficial laminae I and II of
the dorsal horn play a pivotal role in the integration and relay of
pain-related information (Perl, 1984 ; Willis, 1985 ; Light, 1992 ; Craig,
1996 ), and thus elucidating the nature of inhibitory control in this
area is crucial for our understanding of nociceptive processing. Both
GABA and glycine function as inhibitory neurotransmitters in the
mammalian spinal cord (for review, see Todd and Spike, 1993 ), and
blocking either of these control mechanisms produces a hypersensitivity characteristic of neuropathic pain syndromes (Yaksh, 1989 ; Sivilotti and Woolf, 1994 ; Sherman and Loomis, 1996 ; Sorkin and Puig, 1996 ). Previous studies report the coexistence of GABA and glycine as well as
their respective receptors at many synapses in the superficial dorsal
horn of the rat spinal cord (van den Pol and Gorcs, 1988 ; Bohlhalter et
al., 1994 , 1996 ; Todd et al., 1995 , 1996 ), and it appears that nearly
all glycine-immunoreactive cells in this area are also
GABA-immunoreactive (although only half of GABAergic cells contain
glycine) (Todd and Sullivan, 1990 ; Mitchell et al., 1993 ). Recent
evidence indicates the possible co-storage of GABA and glycine within
the same vesicles at some synapses (Burger et al., 1991 ; Christensen
and Fonnum, 1991 ; Chaudhry et al., 1998 ; Jonas et al., 1998 ). These
findings raise the question of whether both transmitters are contained
within the same synaptic vesicles, co-released, and act together at the
same synaptic junction in the superficial dorsal horn, and therefore
whether they play distinct roles in inhibition of laminae I and II neurons.
Previous studies focused on GABAA and glycine
receptor-mediated inhibition in lamina II of the spinal dorsal horn
(Yoshimura and Nishi, 1995 ) or trigeminal medulla (Grudt and Williams,
1994 ). They did not directly address the question of co-release from the same vesicles, nor whether inhibition mediated by GABA and glycine
differed among identified classes of neurons, in part because they did
not identify lamina I neurons. Thus, data are lacking on this layer
that represents one of the main spinal nociceptive output pathways
(Willis, 1989 ; Light, 1992 ; Craig, 1994 ).
Recordings from lamina I in slices have remained limited by the
difficulty to maintain and delineate this thin layer in conventional preparations. To overcome this, we used a parasagittal slice of adult
rat spinal cords that respects the natural rostrocaudal orientation of
marginal layer neurons (Light et al., 1979 ; Woolf and Fitzgerald, 1983 ;
Lima and Coimbra, 1986 ; De Koninck et al., 1992 ), thus allowing visual
identification of lamina I (Chéry and De Koninck, 1997 ; De
Koninck and Chéry, 1998 ) while still providing visual access to
deeper layers. Using this approach, we performed whole-cell patch-clamp
recordings in identified spinal laminae I-II neurons to study
spontaneously occurring miniature (action potential-independent) IPSCs
(mIPSCs) that are thought to reflect transmitter release from single vesicles.
An important initial finding was that lamina I neurons were almost
exclusively bombarded by glycine receptor (GlyR)-mediated mIPSCs even
though all cells appeared to express both GABAA
receptors (GABAARs) and GlyRs, suggesting that
perhaps GABAARs were not located at synaptic
junctions in this layer. To test this hypothesis more directly, we
manipulated release, receptor sensitivity, and uptake system using
electrical stimulation, benzodiazepines, and GABA uptake inhibitors.
The results are consistent with the interpretation that
GABAARs are likely located at extrasynaptic sites
in lamina I.
Some of these results have been reported in preliminary form
(Chéry and De Koninck, 1997 ; Chéry and De Koninck,
1998 ).
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Slice preparation. Adult male Sprague Dawley rats
(30- to 60-d-old) were anesthetized with
Na+ pentobarbital (30 mg/kg) and perfused
intracardially for 15-20 sec with ice-cold oxygenated (95%
O2 and 5% CO2)
sucrose-substituted ACSF (S-ACSF) containing (in mM): 252 sucrose, 2.5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 10 glucose, 26 NaHCO3, 1.25 NaH2PO4, and 5 kynurenic acid, pH 7.35; 340-350 mOsm. The rats were then rapidly decapitated, and the spinal cord was immediately removed by hydraulic extrusion and
immersed in ice-cold S-ACSF for 1-2 min. In some cases, a laminectomy
was performed before the perfusion for subsequent surgical extraction
of the cord rather than by hydraulic extrusion. Lumbar and cervical
segments (2-cm-long) were isolated and glued, lateral side down, on a
brass platform with cyanoacrylate cement, in a chamber filled with
oxygenated ice-cold S-ACSF, and 400-µm-thick parasagittal sections
were cut. The slices were then incubated in S-ACSF at room temperature
(23-28°C) for 30 min and subsequently transferred to a storage
chamber filled with oxygenated normal ACSF (126 mM NaCl
instead of sucrose, 300-310 mOsm) at room temperature. After a minimum
incubation of 1 hr, the slices were transferred to a recording chamber
under a Zeiss Axioscope equipped with infrared differential
interference contrast (IR-DIC) and water immersion-objectives for
visualization of neurons in thick live tissue. The slices were perfused
at ~2 ml/min with oxygenated ACSF containing the glutamate receptor
antagonists 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX, 10 µM; Tocris Cookson, Bristol, UK), and
D-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (D-AP-5; 40 µM; Tocris Cookson). All recordings were performed at
room temperature.
Labeling and reconstruction of neurons. All neurons were
labeled during the recordings by including Lucifer yellow (dipotassium salt, 0.5-1%; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in the recording pipette. Simple
diffusion of the dye from the pipette into the cell during the course
of the recording was sufficient to obtain complete labeling.
Immediately after the end of the recording, the slice was placed
between wet filter paper to prevent wrinkling and fixed by immersion in
4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer. Subsequently, the slices were cryoprotected by infiltration with 30%
sucrose in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, overnight at 4°C, and
processed later for confocal light microscopy. The slices were examined under a Zeiss LSM 410 inverted laser scanning microscope equipped with
argon/krypton and helium/neon lasers. From 40-60 serial optical sections (1 µm apart) of the Lucifer yellow-labeled cell were obtained. With this approach, it was possible to reconstruct the entire
dendritic tree and perform three-dimensional rotations in different
planes for full morphological identification of each neuron.
Drug application. Bicuculline methiodide (10 µM; Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA), SR-95531 (3 µM; Research Biochemicals) and strychnine hydrochloride
(100 nM to 1 µM; Research Biochemicals) were
added to the ACSF from frozen, aliquoted stock solutions. For recording
of action potential-independent mIPSCs, 1 µM tetrodotoxin (TTX; Research Biochemicals) was added to the bathing solution. GABA
and glycine were prepared similarly and dissolved in ACSF containing 10 mM HEPES in replacement for the bicarbonate buffer, to reach a concentration of 1 mM. These amino acids were
applied locally onto lamina I-II dorsal horn neurons by pressure
ejection through glass micropipettes. Two pipettes, connected to a
two-channel Picospritzer, were positioned close to the cells and
contained GABA and glycine, respectively, except in control experiments in which one of the pipettes contained only vehicle solution. In
some cases, GABA and glycine were bath-applied. In experiments aimed at
forcing additional vesicle release, pressure-application of hypertonic
ACSF onto the recorded neurons was used (sucrose was added to
HEPES-buffered ACSF to obtain an osmolarity of 590-610 mOsm). In some
experiments, to potentiate possible subliminal GABAAR-mediated events, the benzodiazepine
flunitrazepam (Hoffman-La Roche, Basel, Switzerland) was bath-applied
(1 µM). The GABA uptake blockers tiagabine (25-50
µM; Abbott Labs, Irving, TX) and
1-(2-(((Diphenylmethylene)imino)oxy)ethyl)-1,2,5,6-tetrahydro-3-pyridine-caboxylic acid hydrochloride (NO-711; 10-30 µM; Research
Biochemicals) were also used to study accumulation of synaptically
released GABA.
Whole-cell recording and data acquisition. For whole-cell
voltage-clamp recordings, patch pipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass capillaries (with an inner filament, WPI) using a two-stage vertical puller (PP-83; Narishige, Tokyo, Japan). The pipettes were
filled with an intracellular solution composed of (in mM): 140 CsCl, 10 HEPES, 2 MgCl2, and 0.5% Lucifer
yellow (Sigma). The pH was adjusted to 7.2 with CsOH, and the
osmolarity ranged from 260-280 mOsm (pipette resistance, 3 M ). In
>80% of the recordings, we added 2 mM ATP, 0.4 mM GTP, 11 mM BAPTA (all from Sigma), and 1 mM CaCl2 to the intracellular
solution. Recordings were obtained by lowering the patch electrode onto
the surface of visually identified neurons in lamina I or II. Neurons
with a healthy appearance presented a smooth surface, and the cell body
and parts of the dendrites could be clearly seen. These neurons also
had fusiform or oval cell bodies (usually 10-20 µm in length).
Neurons with round, swollen cell bodies were avoided because recording
from them revealed low resting membrane potential and poor membrane
integrity. While monitoring current responses to 5 mV pulses, a brief
suction was applied to form >1G seals. An Axopatch 200B
amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) with >80% series
resistance compensation was used for the recording. The access
resistance was monitored throughout each experiment. Only recordings
with access resistance between 7 and 20 M (average 14 ± 1 M ; mean ± SEM) were considered acceptable for analysis of
IPSCs, and only recording with stable access throughout the entire
administration of antagonists were used for classification of
GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated IPSCs. Traces were
low-pass filtered at 10 kHz and stored on a videotape, using a digital
data recorder (VR-10B, Instrutech Corp.). Off-line, the recordings were
low-pass filtered at 2-3 kHz and sampled at 10-20 kHz, on an Intel
Pentium-based computer using the Strathclyde Electrophysiology software
(CDR; by J. Dempster, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology,
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK).
Eliciting monosynaptic IPSCs and detection of spontaneous
IPSCs. Monosynaptic GABAAR- and
GlyR-mediated IPSCs were evoked by electrical stimulation via either
bipolar tungsten electrodes for large intensity stimuli, or a patch
micropipette for focal stimulations. Square-wave constant pulses
(200-300 µsec duration) were applied at a frequency of 0.3 Hz. The
electrode was placed within 20-50 µm of the neuron cell body (for
proximal stimuli) or within 20-50 µm of a distal branch of a
dendrite at 150-300 µm away from the soma (for distal stimulation)
along the bipolar axis of the dendritic tree of lamina I neurons.
Individual spontaneously occurring IPSCs (sIPSCs and mIPSCs )
were detected off-line using a software trigger as previously described
(De Koninck and Mody, 1994 ). For each experiment, the detected events
were examined; any noise that spuriously met the trigger specifications
was rejected. For analysis of the decay phase of sIPSCs or mIPSCs, the
events were selected on the basis of the following criteria: (1) traces containing multiple events were discarded and (2) only events that had
stable baselines before the rise and after the end of the decay were
kept for analysis. Rise times were determined between 10 and 90% of
the peak amplitude of the IPSCs. For averaging of IPSCs, the events
were software aligned by their initial rising phase. All software for
analysis was designed by Y. De Koninck.
Statistical analysis and curve fitting. Peak amplitudes,
rise times, and decay time constants were calculated for each of several hundreds of sIPSCs or mIPSCs per cell, using an automated algorithm (De Koninck and Mody, 1994 , 1996 ). Averages of several hundred mIPSC were also superimposed for comparison. Decay time constants were fitted using a least square method based on a simplex algorithm as previously described (De Koninck and Mody, 1994 ). The
goodness of fit was evaluated on the basis of fitting subsets of points
drawn from the whole set of data points as well as from evaluation of
the reduced 2:
v2 = 2/v, where the factor
= N n is the number of degrees
of freedom left after fitting N data points to the
n parameters. The necessity to introduce additional
exponential components to the fits was judged first on the basis of
visual inspection of the fitted curves superimposed onto the data. When
the merit of additional components was not obvious, an F
test was used to assess how the additional component improved the value
of the reduced 2:
F =  2/ v2
(df1 = 1 and df2 = ).
The critical value for the merit of additional components was set at a
low level (p < 0.01) to favor parsimony of the
fitted function. When focusing on comparisons of the late component of
mIPSCs, fits were started at a fixed interval after the peak of the
event to allow for nonequivocal monoexponential fits that provide an
easier and fairer reference when dealing with nonaveraged, individual
traces (De Koninck and Mody, 1994 ; Williams et al., 1998 ). This also
avoided contamination of the values of decay time constants with
variable weighting factors. Membrane time constants were estimated in
voltage-clamp mode from analysis of current transients following 5 mV,
200-msec-long voltage pulses (Rall, 1969 ; Jackson, 1992 ; Spruston and
Johnston, 1992 ).
Student t tests, were used to analyze the differences
between parameters of the GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated IPSCs.
ANOVA was used to determine the differences in rise times of proximally versus distally evoked IPSCs, and post hoc tests were
obtained with Bonferroni or Tukey corrections. To evaluate the
relationship between different parameters, we used the Pearson
correlation matrix, and the significance of the r value was
determined with an ANOVA followed by at t test using a
Bonferroni correction. 2 tests for
contingency tables were performed to determine the correlation between
the laminar location of the cells and the presence of
GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated sIPSCs. The critical
value for statistical significance was set at p < 0.05. All the data are expressed as mean ± SEM, unless otherwise indicated.
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RESULTS |
Recordings from identified laminae I and II neurons
With our slice preparation, laminae I and II were easily
identified. Lamina I neurons had a distinct rostrocaudal orientation (Light et al., 1979 ; Woolf and Fitzgerald, 1983 ; Lima and Coimbra, 1986 ; De Koninck et al., 1992 ; Ma et al., 1996 ; Zhang et al., 1996 ;
Zhang and Craig, 1997 ) and appeared densely packed (Fig. 1). Most of the cells in lamina I had a
bipolar morphology in the parasagittal plane, with rostrocaudal
dendritic arborization (Fig. 1), but a few neurons with dendrites
extending dorsally and/or ventrally could also be clearly identified.
The cell bodies in lamina I were usually small (5-20 µm in length,
in the longitudinal axis). Lamina II neurons, in contrast, had larger
cell bodies (20-50 µm in length). Consistent with previous reports,
the thickness of lamina I ranged from 15 to 50 µm (Ribeiro-da-Silva,
1995 ; Todd et al., 1998 ), being closer to 20 µm in the medial slices,
whereas the more lateral sections had thicker lamina I because of the curving of the superficial layers at the lateral border of the dorsal
horn (Fig. 1). The recorded lamina I neurons were at an average
distance of 10 ± 2 µm from the dorsal border between the gray
and white matter, indicating that these neurons clearly belonged to the
marginal layer (Fig. 1). In contrast, the recorded lamina II neurons
were located at an average distance of 67 ± 9 µm from the
dorsal border of the gray matter to ensure a clear distinction between
the sample of cells belonging to these two laminae.

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Figure 1.
Visualization of the dorsal horn and
delineation of laminae I and II in parasagittal 400-µm-thick slices
of the spinal cord. The low-power micrograph at the top
(left) illustrates a portion of the slice with dorsal
rootlets attached. Note the clear band (arrows)
corresponding to the substantia gelatinosa (lamina II).
On the right side is a schematic drawing of the
parasagittal plane of slicing, illustrating the lateral, intermediate,
and medial slices that can be obtained. The micrograph at the bottom
(left) is a high-power image of the superficial layers
viewed with infrared differential interference contrast (IR-DIC) under
a Zeiss Axioscope. Arrows point to distinctive lamina I
neurons. Note the distinctive striated appearance of lamina I, which
allows us to delineate it from lamina II. The micrograph on the
right side shows a higher power image of lamina I on
which is superimposed a confocal reconstruction of a lamina I neuron
that was filled with Lucifer yellow during the recording. Note the
typical rostrocaudal orientation of the dendritic tree of these neurons
with their dendrites mainly confined to lamina I (rostral is
up, caudal is down).
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Differential distribution of GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated
mIPSCs in laminae I-II neurons
Spontaneous mIPSCs were observed in 322 of 387 recorded laminae
I-II neurons of the dorsal horn, in the presence of 10 µM CNQX, 40 µM APV and 1 µM TTX, with a
recording time varying from 2 to 90 min. To determine whether these
miniature events were mediated by activation of
GABAARs or GlyRs, we used the selective GABAAR antagonists bicuculline (10 µM) or SR-95531 (3 µM) and the GlyR
antagonist strychnine (100 nM; Fig.
2). For a comparison of the distribution
of GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs, only data
from 51 neurons (31 in lamina I and 20 in lamina II) were retained,
because (1) the recordings were of sufficient duration, (2) the access
resistance was stable throughout the testing of antagonists, and (3) it
was possible to test the effects of both bicuculline (or SR-95531) and
strychnine. Almost all lamina I neurons (30 of 31) displayed mIPSCs
that could be entirely, selectively, and reversibly abolished by 100 nM strychnine, indicating that they were mediated by
glycine (Table 1). In contrast, 11 of the 20 neurons in lamina II received exclusively SR-95531- or
bicuculline-sensitive mIPSCs, suggesting that they were mediated via
activation of GABAARs (Fig.
2B); the remaining neurons in lamina II displayed
exclusively strychnine-sensitive mIPSCs, indicating their mediation by
glycine (Fig. 2A, Table 1). None of the cells tested
in laminae I and II displayed both GlyR- and
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs together. In cells with
GlyR-mediated mIPSCs (that were selectively blocked by 100 nM strychnine; Fig. 2A)
administration of 10 µM bicuculline or 3 µM SR-95531 did not decrease the frequency of
events (Fig. 2A) or affect their amplitude, rise
times, and decay kinetics (n = 34; p > 0.2; paired comparisons; Fig. 2C). To test for the possibility that, in these cases, bicuculline might have decreased the
frequency of the events by an undetectable amount (i.e., a very small
proportion of the events might have been GABAergic), in some
experiments we added 100 nM strychnine first, and
in all cases it completely blocked all of the mIPSCs (n = 5). Conversely, in cells with GABAergic mIPSCs, the synaptic events
were selectively abolished by 10 µM bicuculline
(Fig. 2B), although up to 1 µM strychnine failed to affect these synaptic
events or decrease their frequency (n = 12;
p > 0.2; Fig. 2B). These findings
indicate that mIPSCs have distinct distributions in laminae I-II
neurons.

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Figure 2.
GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs occur
in distinct populations of neurons in the superficial laminae. The
top micrographs in A and B
illustrate confocal reconstructions of these lamina II neurons in the
parasagittal plane (dorsal is up, rostral is to the
right). Note the more stellar orientation of the
dendritic tree of these cells in contrast to the lamina I neuron
illustrated in Figure 1. A, GlyR-mediated mIPSCs are
selectively blocked by strychnine. The raw traces are representative
examples of GlyR-mediated mIPSCs taken at points indicated on the time
histogram at the bottom (bin width, 10 sec). The mean frequency was not
significantly altered after bath application of 10 µM
bicuculline (0.74 sec 1 vs 0.65 sec 1), but 100 nM strychnine
completely blocked all the events. B,
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs are selectively blocked by
bicuculline. Representative traces are examples of
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs taken at points indicated
on the time histogram at the bottom (bin width, 10 sec).
C, The amplitude and kinetics parameters of the
GlyR-mediated mIPSCs recorded in A were not altered
after bath application of 10 µM bicuculline. The
cumulative probability plots show the lack of change in the
distributions of amplitude, 10-90% rise time, and decay time constant
( Decay) after bicuculline administration (mean
amplitude, 110 ± 13 pA vs 130 ± 14 pA;
p > 0.1; mean rise time, 0.27 vs 0.24 msec;
p > 0.5; mean decay time constant
( D), 2.24 vs 2.21 msec; p > 0.5). The inset on the left shows
superimposed averages of 228 and 289 consecutive mIPSCs before and
after addition of bicuculline, respectively. Similarly for
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs, they were not affected by up to 1 µM strychnine (data not shown; mean amplitude, 79 ± 12 pA vs 69 ± 15 pA; p > 0.1; mean rise
time, 0.71 vs 0.84 msec; p > 0.1; mean decay time
constant, 11.19 vs 12.33 msec; p > 0.5). Thus,
GABA and glycine mediate separate mIPSCs in laminae I-II neurons. The
holding membrane potential was 65 mV.
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Table 1.
Differential distribution of GABAAR- and
GlyR-mediated spontaneous IPSCs (pooled sIPSCs with mIPSCs) in laminae
I and II neurons of the dorsal horn
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Additional experiments were performed in the absence of TTX to record
spontaneous IPSCs (sIPSCs; n = 9). As for mIPSCs,
virtually all of these sIPSCs were also completely blocked by
strychnine in lamina I. Thus, results with sIPSCs were pooled with
those from mIPSCs (Table 1).
Using our recording technique, no apparent run down of either type of
mIPSCs was observed, even with recordings lasting >2 hr as we
previously reported in other tissues in absence of ATP or additional
calcium buffers in the recording pipettes (De Koninck and Mody, 1994 ,
1996 ; Otis et al., 1994 ). Nevertheless, because of the possibility that
some GABAAR-mediated currents may be more sensitive to the lack of ATP and calcium buffering (Chen et al., 1990 ;
however, see De Koninck and Mody, 1996 ), after the initial recordings,
we always added 2 mM ATP, 0.4 mM GTP, 11 mM BAPTA, and 1 mM CaCl2
to the intracellular solution for all subsequent recordings. We found
no difference in the recordings obtained with the two different
intracellular solutions; thus all the data were pooled.
Distinct kinetic properties of GABAAR- and
GlyR-mediated mIPSCs
Miniature IPSCs mediated by GlyRs in lamina I had amplitude and
kinetic properties that were not different from those in lamina II and
therefore were pooled for comparison with properties of GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs recorded in lamina II.
A number of parameters were similar for both GlyR- and
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs. Their frequency was
variable with an average of 1.0 ± 0.2 Hz (range, 0.1-5.0 Hz;
n = 19) for GlyR mIPSCs, and an average frequency of
0.6 ± 0.2 Hz (range, 0.1-1.8 Hz; n = 17) for
GABAAR mIPSCs. The difference in frequency was
not significant between these two populations of mIPSCs
(p > 0.05; Table
2). In all cases, the mIPSCs amplitude
distribution was skewed. The mean amplitude of GlyR-mediated events was
87.5 ± 6.1 pA (n = 30). The
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs had a mean amplitude of
72.9 ± 10.3 pA (n = 11), not significantly
different from that of GlyR-mediated mIPSCs (Fig.
3, Table 2). Similarly, the average
10-90% rise time for GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs was
comparable to that of GlyR-mediated events (455 ± 64 µsec vs
403 ± 36 µsec, respectively; p > 0.5).
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Table 2.
Summary of the properties of GABAAR- and
GlyR-mediated mIPSCs recorded in laminae I-II neurons of the dorsal
horn (expressed as mean ± SEM)
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Figure 3.
Distinct properties of
GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs in laminae I-II neurons.
Comparison of the peak amplitudes and kinetic properties of GlyR
(A) and GABAAR-mediated
(B) mIPSCs in two different cells. Amplitude
distribution of GlyR-mediated (Aa) and
GABAAR-mediated (Ba) mIPSCs (empty
bars, bin width 5 pA) and corresponding noise distribution
(black bars, bin width 0.5 pA); in both cells the mIPSCs
amplitude distributions are skewed. The insets are
superimposed representative traces of GlyR mIPSCs (Aa)
and GABAAR mIPSCs (Ba) recorded at 65 mV.
The GlyR mIPSCs were specifically blocked by 0.1 µM
strychnine and not affected by 10 µM bicuculline (data
not shown), whereas 1 µM strychnine did not affect the
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs, which were selectively blocked by
10 µM bicuculline (data not shown). The mean amplitude of
the GlyR-mediated mIPSCs in this cell was 111 pA, occurring at a
frequency of 5.1 Hz, whereas the mean amplitude of
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs in the other cell
(B) was 70 pA with a frequency of 1.8 Hz.
Ab, Bb, Distribution of the decay time
constant of GlyR- and GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs, respectively.
In both cells, the decays of the mIPSCs were normally distributed (bin
width, 1 msec). Ac, Bc, The mean 10-90%
rise time of GlyR-mediated mIPSCs was 560 µsec, against 630 µsec
for the GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs (bin width, 100 µsec). The
main difference between these two types of mIPSCs was their decay time
course.
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The decay time course of GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs
was however significantly slower than that of GlyR-mediated mIPSCs
(Fig. 3, Table 2). For quantitative comparison, the decay phase of
individual mIPSCs were fit by a monoexponential function (De Koninck
and Mody, 1994 , 1996 ; Williams et al., 1998 ). Figures 3Ab
and 3Bb illustrate the difference in kinetics of the two
populations of mIPSCs. The mean decay time constant
( D) of GlyR-mediated mIPSCs was 5.8 ± 0.3 msec versus 10.5 ± 0.6 msec for
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs (p < 0.001). The average D at +40 mV were
19.4 ± 1.0 msec for the GlyR-mediated mIPSCs against 25.9 ± 2.4 msec for GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs , respectively (p < 0.05). Figure 3 illustrates
representative distributions of the rise time, decay time constant, and
amplitude of GlyR- and GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs,
respectively. The average access resistances during the recordings of
GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated inhibitory events were
equivalent (14.0 ± 1.8 M vs 13.9 ± 1.1 M ,
respectively). No correlation was found between the access resistance
and the rise times for each type of mIPSC (r = 0.236; p > 0.2). In addition, the input resistance of the
neurons displaying GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs was not
different from that of cells showing GlyR-mediated mIPSCs (544 ± 240 M vs 422 ± 69 M ; respectively, p > 0.5). Finally, we found no correlation between the rise time and decay
values of miniature GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated
events (r = 0.335; p > 0.4),
indicating that the differences in decay time constants could not be
accounted for by differences in electrotonic distance from the soma for
these two types of mIPSCs (i.e., GABAAR- mediated
mIPSCs are unlikely to occur at synapses further away from the soma
than GlyR-mediated mIPSCs).
Co-occurrence of both GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs
in deeper neurons
Because miniature synaptic currents are thought to reflect release
from single vesicles of transmitters, they can serve as a useful tool
to test whether GABA and glycine are contained within the same vesicle.
For example, if individual mIPSCs included both a
GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated component, it could
indicate co-packaging of GABA and glycine. In the neurons tested in
laminae I and II, the mIPSCs were completely blocked by either
strychnine or bicuculline/SR-95531. This cannot rule out the
possibility of co-packaging because it may be a consequence of
selective expression of one of the two respective receptors in these
cells. Because there is clearer evidence that the same cell in lamina
III expressed GABAAR and GlyRs (many dendrites in
lamina I-II do not belong to laminae I-II cells) (Todd et al., 1996 ),
we recorded mIPSCs in deeper (lamina III) dorsal horn neurons
(n = 5; Fig. 4). In these
cells, two populations of mIPSCs were identified on the basis of their decay kinetics (distribution of decay time constants best fitted by two
Gaussians; Fig. 4B). After administration of
strychnine or bicuculline, only one of the two Gaussian populations of
decay time constant remained; for example, in Figure 4, the faster
mIPSCs were blocked by application of strychnine. No mIPSC with the
combined fast and slow kinetics were found, indicating that separate
populations of GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs
were found within the same cell. This indicated that, for these cells,
either GABA and glycine were likely released from separate vesicles of
transmitter or that GABAARs and GlyRs were
clustered at separate synaptic junctions.

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Figure 4.
Separate GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated
mIPSCs within the same deep dorsal horn neuron. The trace in
A is a continuous record showing the occurrence of
spontaneous mIPSCs over 40 min of recording. Note the periodical
testing of the access resistance to the cell (upward and downward dark
areas) to ensure that changes in mIPSC amplitude or kinetics is not
caused by an increase in series resistance. Strychnine (100 nM) and bicuculline (10 µM) were added to the
bathing solution as indicated by the horizontal bars
above the trace. Although strychnine did not appear to block the mIPSCs
on this time scale, bicuculline reversibly blocked the large, slow
mIPSCs (see expanded traces below). In B, closer
inspection of the mIPSC kinetics revealed a heterogeneous population of
decays, which were best fitted by the sum of two Gaussians. The group
of faster decays disappeared after administration of strychnine,
indicating the presence of two populations of mIPSCs in this neuron:
GlyR-mediated mIPSCs and slower GABAAR-mediated
mIPSCs . The traces in C represent averages of
25 mIPSCs automatically selected by computer for decay time constants
of <20 msec (left) or >20 msec (right),
thus illustrating the difference in kinetics of the two populations of
mIPSCs. The rise times of each group of mIPSCs were not significantly
different (0.8 ± 0.2 vs 0.9 ± 0.5 msec, respectively).
Thus, GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs can be found within
the same cell, but with distinct kinetics.
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Responses to exogenous applications of GABA and glycine
To determine whether the fact that GABA- and glycine-mediated
mIPSCs were never observed jointly within the same cell was caused by a
differential expression of their respective postsynaptic receptors
among laminae I-II neurons, GABA and glycine were locally applied by
pressure ejection to 27 cells. Interestingly, all neurons tested
responded to both GABA and glycine (1 mM) regardless of the
type of mIPSCs they displayed. Figure 5
illustrates examples of responses induced by application of GABA and
glycine in cells showing either exclusively GlyR- or exclusively
GABAAR mIPSCs. GABA- and glycine-induced currents could be
blocked by bicuculline/SR-95531 or strychnine, respectively (Fig.
5B-D), indicating that the responses to these agonists
involved receptors similar to those mediating the mIPSCs.

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Figure 5.
All laminae I-II neurons respond to exogenous
application of both GABA and glycine. A, A lamina I
neuron displaying only GlyR-mediated mIPSCs (Aa) because
they were all selectively blocked by 100 nM strychnine
(Ab; recovery in 10 µM bicuculline;
Ac). Yet application of both GABA (1 mM) and
glycine (1 mM) induced an inward current in this cell
(Ad). Each of the agonists was applied by pressure
ejection for 30 sec, using a micropipette positioned near the recorded
cell. The holding potential is 65 mV. B, Both
GABA-induced response and GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs are
blocked by bicuculline. a, The traces illustrate
spontaneous mIPSCs recorded from a lamina II neuron. b,
Bath-application of 10 µM bicuculline blocked all the
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs. c, Puff-application
of 1 mM GABA for 3 sec induced an inward current in this
cell. d, The response to 1 mM GABA was
blocked by 10 µM bicuculline. C, In this
lamina II cell, the GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs
(a) are not affected by bath application of 1 µM strychnine (b), but selectively
blocked by 3 µM SR-95531 (c); in
the same cell, bath-applied 1 mM glycine induced an inward
current, which is not affected by 3 µM SR-95531, but
abolished by 1 µM strychnine (d).
D, GlyR-mediated mIPSCs (a) in
this lamina I neuron are not affected by bath-applied 3 µM SR 95531 (b), but selectively
blocked by 100 nM strychnine (c); in
this lamina I neuron, bath-applied 1 mM GABA induced an
inward current, which was abolished by 3 µM SR-95531, but
not affected by 1 µM strychnine
(d).
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Hypertonic solution-induced release of
inhibitory neurotransmitters
To test whether the lack of detection of either
GABAAR- or GlyR-mediated mIPSCs reflected a
low-frequency of release of one of the two transmitter, in some
experiments we applied hypertonic ACSF (590-610 mOsm, adjusted with
sucrose) onto laminae I-II neurons (n = 14). The
hypertonic stress appears to provoke exocytosis of the releasable pool
of vesicles and thus substitutes for the calcium-induced release
following action potential invasion (Rosenmund and Stevens, 1996 ). Yet,
as the frequency of the synaptic events was increased but remained
nonsynchronized, it was still possible to continue recording
spontaneous action potential-independent IPSCs and thus compare the
results with those from the control conditions. A 25-fold increase in
frequency of mIPSCs was observed on average (range, 17- to 33-fold
increase). In all cases, the mIPSCs were blocked either exclusively by
bicuculline (or SR-95531) or by strychnine (Fig.
6).

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Figure 6.
Hypertonic solution-induced increase in vesicular
release failed to reveal a heterogeneous population of mIPSCs in
laminae I-II. Pressure-application of hyperosmotic (610 mOsm) ACSF
(middle traces) induced a 33-fold increase in the
frequency of mIPSCs in this lamina I neuron. The mIPSCs were not
affected by bath-application of 3 µM SR-95531, but
selectively blocked by 100 nM strychnine. The superimposed
averages in the inset show the lack of change in mIPSC
kinetics in sucrose to further confirm that no new class of mIPSC was
revealed by the hyperosmotic solution.
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Large evoked IPSCs in lamina I
The observation that lamina I neurons displayed only GlyR-mediated
mIPSCs, yet appeared to express both GlyRs and
GABAARs, together with the finding that virtually
all glycine-immunoreactive interneurons in the superficial dorsal horn
also express GABA (Todd and Sullivan, 1990 ), suggests that
GABAARs may not be located at synaptic junctions
in lamina I neurons. By recruiting more synaptic input synchronously,
accumulation of transmitter may lead to sufficient spillover from
synapses to activate distant receptors (Isaacson et al., 1993 ). To test
this possibility, we recorded monosynaptic evoked IPSCs in lamina I by
placing a bipolar tungsten electrode within 20-50 µm of the recorded
neurons. Large intensity stimulation (200-500 µA; 200-300 µsec
duration) were used at a frequency of 0.3 Hz. The evoked IPSCs
(eIPSCs) were only partially attenuated by 1-2 µM
strychnine; the remaining component was blocked by 20 µM
bicuculline (n = 5; Fig.
7A). Thus, in lamina I, there
was a GABAAR-mediated component of large eIPSCs. The rise time of the GABAAR-mediated component of
these eIPSCs was significantly slower than that of the GlyR-mediated
component (6.2 ± 0.5 msec vs 2.8 ± 0.6 msec, respectively;
p < 0.005, Fig. 7A). The decay time course
of the GlyR-mediated component (17.1 ± 3.2 msec), was also
significantly faster than that of the GABAAR component (80.4 ± 30.3 msec; p < 0.05).

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Figure 7.
Large stimulus-evoked IPSCs in lamina I reveal a
GABAAR-mediated component. A, Average of 48 IPSCs elicited by placing a tungsten electrode within 300 µm from the
cell body of the recorded neuron (Combined). The
membrane potential was held at +40 mV to avoid activation of
voltage-sensitive Na+ currents. After the
application of 2 µM strychnine, a component remained
(GABA) that could be blocked by 20 µM
bicuculline. The GlyR-mediated component (Glycine) was
obtained by subtraction of the GABA trace from the
Combined trace. The inset shows the time
course of block of evoked GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated IPSCs
(quantified by the area under the curve, i.e., charge).
Ba, Superimposed minimally evoked IPSCs (meIPSCs)
obtained by focal stimuli applied within 20 µm from the cell body
using a patch micropipette. These meIPSCs were completely blocked by
1-2 µM strychnine (b, average of 25 traces). c, A sixfold increase in stimulus intensity
elicited GABAAR-mediated IPSCs that could be blocked by
addition of 10-20 µM bicuculline (d,
average of 15 traces). The inset illustrates the
GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated components scaled to the same
amplitude; note the slower rising and decay phases of the
GABAAR component.
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Minimal versus large evoked IPSCs in lamina I
To investigate whether the differences in rise times of the evoked
GlyR- and GABAAR-mediated IPSCs could reflect a
difference in the location of their respective receptors, we used
minimal stimuli (producing all-or-none IPSCs), using patch
micropipettes placed either close to the soma (within 20-50 µm) or
close to a dendrite at a distance from the cell body (150-300 µm).
Because most of the neurons in lamina I have a bipolar morphology in
the parasagittal plane (Light et al., 1979 ; Woolf and Fitzgerald, 1983 ;
Lima and Coimbra, 1986 ; Ma et al., 1996 ), the positioning of the
stimulating electrode could be achieved to reach specifically one
portion of the dendrite of the recorded neuron (Fig.
8, diagram). In all cases
tested, minimally evoked IPSCs (meIPSCs) obtained from stimulations
within 20 µm from the cell body were completely blocked by 1 µM strychnine (n = 12; Figs.
7B, 8). After complete block by strychnine and after a 5- to
10-fold increase in the stimulus intensity, a slower IPSC could be
evoked that was blocked by 10-20 µM
bicuculline (Figs. 7B, 8). The rise time of the
GABAAR-mediated IPSCs was 2.2 ± 1.2 msec,
significantly slower that that of GlyR-mediated meIPSCs (0.9 ± 0.5 msec; Fig. 7B, inset).

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Figure 8.
Comparable latencies, rise times, and amplitudes
of proximal and distal GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated meIPSCs.
The diagram at the top illustrates how the micropipettes
were positioned for focal stimulation along the bipolar axis of lamina
I neurons. Focal stimuli were applied within 20 µm from the cell body
(proximal), and within 20-70 µm of a
distal dendrite located at 150-300 µm distance from the soma
(distal). Top traces, Superimposed
GlyR-mediated meIPSCs elicited in the presence of 10 µM
bicuculline. Bottom traces, In the presence of 1 µM strychnine, GABAAR-mediated IPSCs with
slower kinetics could be evoked. Note the slightly longer latencies for
both the distal GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated evoked IPSCs, but
the very similar rise times and amplitudes. The only slight increase in
latency of the distally evoked IPSCs account for an approximately
twofold conduction distance and thus indicated that these IPSCs still
originated at a significant distance from the soma. In any case, the
distally evoked GABAAR-mediated events did not have a
shorter latency then their GlyR counterparts, arguing against the
possibility that GABAAR IPSCs are only occurring at distal
points from the soma. Moreover, the only slight slowing of the rising
phase of the distal GlyR-mediated meIPSCs indicate little space clamp
limitations in these cells and thus ruling out the possibility that
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs may exist that could not be detected
by somatic recording.
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The GABAAR-evoked IPSCs may have had slower rise
times because they systematically originated at a more distant site
from the soma than the GlyR-evoked IPSCs. For this to be the case, the
GABAAR evoked IPSCs resulting from stimulation
proximal to the soma would have to have a significantly longer latency
than GlyR-evoked IPSCs (i.e., proximal stimuli producing
GABAAR IPSCs would have to activate fibers that
travel a longer distance to reach distal portions of the postsynaptic
cell). We thus compared the latencies of the different components with
each type of stimuli.
The latency of both GlyR and GABAAR-mediated
components was comparable (1.2 ± 0.2 vs 1.7 ± 0.4 msec;
p > 0.1). Similarly, the latency of GlyR-mediated
meIPSCs elicited by stimulation close to the soma versus that in the
vicinity of a distal portion of a dendrite were not significantly
different (1.2 ± 0.2 vs 1.7 ± 0.6 msec, respectively).
Moreover, stimulation at a >100 µm distance from the soma but also
away from the vicinity of a dendrite always failed to produce IPSCs.
Evoked GABAAR-mediated IPSCs (using larger
stimulus intensities) at these same proximal and distal sites of
stimulation had also comparable latencies (1.7 ± 0.4 vs 2.1 ± 0.9 msec, respectively). Finally, a comparison of the rise time of
GlyR-mediated meIPSCs originating at a site proximal or distal to the
soma revealed little prolongation (0.7 ± 0.6 vs 0.9 ± 0.5 msec, respectively; Fig. 8A), consistent with the short membrane time constant of these cells (15.2 ± 6.8 msec; range, 2.5-45.3 msec). Proximal and distal
GABAAR-mediated IPSCs also had comparable rise
times (2.2 ± 1.2 vs 2.3 ± 1.1 msec, respectively; Fig.
8B). The decay time constant of the GlyR and
GABAAR components evoked by these focal
stimulations were 10.8 ± 1.7 msec versus 42.7 ± 6.0 msec, respectively.
Thus, it appeared that both GABAAR- and
GlyR-mediated IPSCs could originate at similar electrotonic distance
from the soma. Eliciting GABAAR-mediated IPSCs,
however, always required stronger stimulus intensities that produced
synaptic events with significantly slower rising and decaying kinetics
than their GlyR-mediated counterpart. Taken together, these results
indicated that the slower rising phase of evoked
GABAAR-mediated IPSCs appeared not to be caused by a more distant site of origin but rather a slower, likely diffuse or
distant activation of GABAAR after sufficient
accumulation of released GABA.
Effect of flunitrazepam on miniature IPSCs in lamina I
The results from mIPSCs and stimulus-evoked IPSCs suggested that
either different threshold for glycine and GABA release or subthreshold
activation of GABAARs by single vesicles of GABA. To distinguish between these two possibilities, we aimed at raising the
sensitivity of GABAARs with the benzodiazepine
flunitrazepam, to potentiate possible subliminal responses to GABA
released by single vesicles of transmitter. In the presence of 1 µM flunitrazepam, the rise time of mIPSCs was
significantly prolonged to 2.4 ± 0.3 msec, and the decay time
constant increased to 27 ± 4.2 msec (vs 0.6 ± 0.1 and
6.0 ± 0.3 msec in control; n = 7; Fig.
9). Close examination of the distribution
of rise times and decay time constants (Fig. 9B-D)
indicates that the large majority of mIPSCs had their kinetics
prolonged by flunitrazepam. Addition of 100 nM
strychnine to the bath solution containing flunitrazepam revealed
mIPSCs with very slow rise time (4.1 ± 0.9 msec); 10 times more
prolonged than that of GlyR mIPSCs in lamina I neurons and of
GABAAR mIPSCs in neurons of deeper laminae.
Similarly, the decay kinetics (52.8 ± 8.9 msec) were ~10×
slower than that of the GlyR mIPSCs in lamina I neurons and 5× slower
that of GABAAR mIPSCs in lamina II. Addition of
10 µM bicuculline completely abolished all of
these remaining slow mIPSCs, indicating that they were
GABAAR-mediated. The frequency of mIPSCs in
flunitrazepam was slightly increased (20-30%) over that in control
conditions, most likely because, at some junctions, no synaptic glycine
receptors were present. Importantly however, the frequency of the very
slow GABAAR mIPSCs that persisted in the presence
of strychnine and flunitrazepam was always >75% of that of the number
of events in control conditions and more than twice the increase in
frequency observed in the presence of flunitrazepam alone (Fig.
9B,C). There was also <11% overlap in areas between the
distributions of decay time constants in control versus flunitrazepam (Fig. 9D). This therefore indicated that the majority of
individual mIPSCs had a dual GlyR and GABAAR
component. Given the fact that mIPSCs are likely reflecting responses
to single vesicles of transmitter, these results indicate co-storage of
GABA and glycine in the same synaptic vesicles.

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Figure 9.
The benzodiazepine flunitrazepam unmasks
a slow GABAAR-mediated component to mIPSC recorded in
lamina I neurons. The traces in A are representative
superimposed mIPSCs used to compile the histograms below each trace
(B, C). The inset at the
right top corner is a superimposition of the events
scaled to the same amplitude to emphasize their difference in rising
and decaying kinetics. The histograms in B and
C illustrate the distributions of 10-90% rise times
and decay time constants for all the events detected in each condition
during a 7 min window. Thus, the number of events in each histogram
provides an estimate of the frequency of events in each condition. The
curve in D illustrates the area overlap between the
Gaussian curves fit to the histograms above. The overlap
(gray area) was <11% of the area under the
curve for the control histogram. The very small overlap between the
distributions or rise times and decay time constants between control
conditions and in the presence of flunitrazepam indicates that the
majority of individual mIPSCs had their kinetics altered. Consistent
with this observation, the number of events remaining in the presence
of flunitrazepam and strychnine is greater than the difference between
the number of events detected in flunitrazepam versus control. Addition
of 10 µM bicuculline completely abolished all
mIPSCs that remained in the presence of 100 nM
strychnine. The graphs on the right are cumulative
histograms illustrating the intermediate distribution of kinetics
observed between control, flunitrazepam (Flu), and
flunitrazepam plus 100 nM strychnine (Flu + strych) conditions.
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Effects of GABA uptake inhibitors on IPSCs in lamina I
Because GABA uptake inhibitors do not affect the amplitude or the
time course of mIPSCs, it is thought that clearance of GABA from the
synaptic cleft is not a limiting factor determining the decay time
course of mIPSCs (Thompson and Gahwiler, 1992 ; Isaacson et al., 1993 ).
On the other hand, the uptake blockers prolong large evoked
GABAAR-mediated IPSCs. If the GABA released by
single vesicles at lamina I synapse is insufficient to activate distant GABAARs, blocking uptake should not significantly
affect mIPSCs. On the other hand, with "spillover" of GABA from
several neighboring synapses activated synchronously, blocking uptake
may favor temporal summation of extracellular GABA originating from
adjacent sources (Isaacson et al., 1993 ). We first tested the effects
of tiagabine (25-50 µM) and NO-711 (10-30
µM) of normal mIPSCs in lamina I (n = 7).
Neither uptake blocker had a detectable effect on these mIPSCs (Fig.
10).
After tiagabine or NO-711 administration, eIPSCs had significantly
reduced peak amplitude, and their decay time courses were prolonged
(n = 5; mean increase in decay of the late component of
44 ± 3 msec; p < 0.01; Fig. 10).

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Figure 10.
GABA uptake blockers do not significantly affect
GlyR-mediated mIPSCs in lamina I but prolong the decay time course of
evoked IPSCs and of GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs revealed by
flunitrazepam. The traces at the top are averages of 89 consecutive mIPSCs in control solution and 100 mIPSCs after 30 min of
bathing in 30 µM NO-711. The traces in the
middle are averages of 23 mIPSCs recorded in the
presence of 1 µM flunitrazepam and 100 nM
strychnine before and after addition of 30 µM NO-711
(scaled averages). The traces at the bottom are averages
of 42 stimulus-evoked IPSCs in control solution and 57 evoked IPSCs
after 20 min of bathing in 10 µM NO-711 (10 M
QX-314 was added to the pipette solution to block voltage-sensitive Na
channels).
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Figure 11.
Proposed summary of glycine versus
GABAA receptor-mediated inhibition in lamina I. During
normal basal activity, both glycine and GABA may be released, but only
glycine receptors that are clustered at synapses will mediate the
mIPSCs, whereas extrasynaptic GABAARs may require
accumulation of GABA "spillover". Thus, in lamina I, glycine
appears to mediate tonic inhibition from spontaneous vesicular release.
In contrast, GABAAR-mediated inhibition may be effective to
control larger, synchronous (evoked) input.
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Uptake may be important in limiting the extent of extrasynaptic
receptor activation (Isaacson et al., 1993 ; Asztely et al., 1997 ). Yet,
failure to detect an effect of the uptake inhibitor on miniature events
may simply reflect that the amount of "spillover" during a
miniature event is subliminal for activation of these receptors. At
glutamate synapses for example, spillover of transmitter after release
of a single vesicle appears to be relevant only for NMDA receptors
because they have a much higher affinity for the transmitter than AMPA
receptors. It may be expected, therefore, that raising the affinity of
extrasynaptic GABAA receptors with a
benzodiazepine could reveal a significant effect of the uptake blocker
on mIPSCs. To test this, we recorded pure GABAAR
mIPSCs in lamina I revealed in the presence of 1 µM
flunitrazepam and 100 nM strychnine to test for the effect
of the uptake inhibitors. Tiagabine and NO-711 administration decreased
the frequency of mIPSCs and significantly prolonged their decay time
course (from 62.3 ± 8.7 to 106.7 ± 10.2 msec;
p < 0.05; n = 5; Fig. 10). In all
cases, subsequent addition of 10 µM bicuculline
or 3 µM SR-95531 abolished all of these mIPSCs.
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DISCUSSION |
Our results indicate that GABA and glycine mediate separate
miniature IPSCs with distinct kinetics in superficial dorsal horn neurons of the rat spinal cord, and these cells are usually bombarded by one type of mIPSC only. Even in cells with both types of mIPSCs present, these synaptic events represent separate populations. The
differences in kinetics of the GlyR- versus
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs are consistent with
previous findings in the dorsal horn (Takahashi and Momiyama, 1991 ;
Takahashi et al., 1992 ; Baba et al., 1994 ; Yoshimura and Nishi, 1993 ,
1995 ) and in medullary neurons (Lewis and Faber, 1996 ; Grudt and
Henderson, 1998 ), in contrast with retinal ganglion cells in which
GABAAR-mediated IPSCs have a faster decay than
GlyR-mediated ones (Protti et al., 1997 ).
Immunocytochemical studies by Todd and Sullivan (1990) demonstrated
that the proportion of glycine-immunoreactive neurons in laminae I, II,
and III were 9, 14, and 30%, respectively. The proportions of
GABA-immunoreactive neurons in laminae I, II, and III were higher: 28, 31, and 46%, respectively. They also reported that virtually all of
the glycine-immunoreactive cells in this area were also
GABA-immunoreactive, but many GABA-immunoreactive cells do not show
immunoreactivity to glycine. Thus, while recording from laminae I-II,
one would expect that the neurons displaying GlyR-mediated mIPSCs would
also show GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs. On the
contrary, we found namely that lamina I neurons were bombarded exclusively by GlyR-mediated mIPSCs in normal conditions. Thus, glycine
appears to be solely responsible for tonic inhibition of second order
neurons in this layer.
Co-release of glycine and GABA from the same vesicle
Unmasking of a very slow rising and decaying
GABAA component of mIPSCs in lamina I with
flunitrazepam provided an ideal tool to address the issue of co-storage
of GABA and glycine in the same vesicles. Importantly, the whole
distribution of rise times and decay time constants was shifted in the
presence of the benzodiazepine with little overlap with the control
distribution, indicating that the majority of the events were affected.
Accordingly, the increase in frequency of events observed in the
presence of the benzodiazepine was much lower than the number of
GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs remaining in the presence
of strychnine. Thus, it can be concluded that the majority of
mIPSCs had a dual GlyR- and
GABAAR-mediated component. Because mIPSCs appear
to reflect postsynaptic responses to the release of single vesicles of
transmitter, the data strongly indicated the co-storage of glycine and
GABA in the same vesicles. This is consistent with similar recent
evidence at the immature motoneuron synapse (Jonas et al., 1998 ) as
well as with the observation that both transmitters can be carried by
the same vesicular transporter (Christensen and Fonnum, 1991 ; Burger et
al., 1991 ) present at both glycinergic and GABAergic synapses (Chaudhry
et al., 1998 ; Dumoulin et al., 1999 ). Whereas the evidence presented by
Jonas et al. (1998) relied on template fits of the decay phase of
mIPSCs, our evidence has the added advantage that the rising kinetics of the GABAA component was also dramatically
slower than that of the GlyR component and that the events were
sufficiently altered after the benzodiazepine administration that it
was possible to quantify the degree of overlap between the
distributions of events for each kinetic parameter, providing an even
more compelling argument for the co-storage of GABA and glycine.
Extrajunctional GABAAR activation in lamina I
Several pieces of evidence converge to indicate that, in contrast
to GlyRs, GABAARs are likely located
extrasynaptically in lamina I: (1) the absence of
GABAAR-mediated spontaneous and miniature IPSCs
while the cells received GlyR-mediated mIPSC and all responded to
exogenous application of GABA in a bicuculline-dependent matter; (2)
activation of several inhibitory synapses synchronously (large evoked
IPSCs) revealed a GABAA component; (3) the evoked
GABAAR component had a similar latency, yet
slower rising kinetics than the GlyR component; (4) benzodiazepines can
unmask a GABAA component to individual
mIPSCs , and this component has extremely slow rising kinetics
(10× slower than GlyR mIPSCs in lamina I or
GABAAR mIPSCs in deeper laminae); (5)
specific blockers of GABA uptake did not affect normal mIPSCs in lamina
I but significantly prolonged the decay kinetics of evoked IPSCs that
involve synchronous activation of neighboring synapses as well as of
GABAAR mIPSCs unmasked by flunitrazepam (in the
presence of strychnine).
The slow kinetics of GABAAR-mediated IPSCs in
lamina I could suggest that they specifically originate at distant
sites from the soma [therefore subject to greater space clamp
attenuation (Spruston et al., 1994 )]. However, the short time constant
of lamina I neurons and the lack of difference in the kinetics of proximally versus distally evoked IPSCs argues against this
possibility. More importantly, the dual-component mIPSCs in
flunitrazepam clearly show that the slow GABAA
components originated from the same release sites as the fast-rising
GlyR components.
Extrasynaptic distribution of GABAA receptor
subunits have often been described in the spinal cord and other brain
regions (Somogyi et al., 1989 ; Soltesz et al., 1990 ; Bohlhalter et al., 1994 ; Nusser et al., 1998 ). In the dorsal horn,
2/ 3 subunit immunoreactivity, possibly the most widely expressed subunits in the
spinal cord, appeared often extrasynaptically (Alvarez et al., 1996 ).
It may be however difficult to draw definitive conclusions from studies
on the subcellular distribution of GABAARs with
pre-embedding approaches because of the limited access of some
antigenic sites (Nusser et al., 1995 ). Nevertheless, even with
pre-embedding approaches, antibodies directed against an intracellular
loop of the receptor may have better access to postsynaptic densities
(active zones) (Todd et al., 1996 ). Interestingly, whereas Todd et al.
(1996) found punctate staining for the 3
subunit in deeper laminae, the labeling often extended beyond active
sites in laminae I-II. In fact, it was often difficult to localize
precisely the 3 staining in these laminae
(A. J. Todd, personal communication). For this reason, they
refrained from further quantifying 3 versus gephyrin immunoreactivity in lamina I. Thus, although
immunocytochemical evidence may be consistent with the possibility of a
prominent extrasynaptic distribution of GABAARs
in lamina I, no direct data are available.
Evidence with benzodiazepines rules out the possibility of a
specifically higher threshold for activation of interneurons releasing
GABA. The very slow rise time of GABAAR-mediated
mIPSCs revealed by flunitrazepam suggests that either very little GABA is contained in glycine-containing synaptic vesicles or that the GABAARs are located at a distance from the site
of release. No evidence is available, however, to indicate that a very
low level of GABA in synaptic vesicles may occur. In fact, all
available evidence suggest the opposite (Mody et al., 1994 ).
Furthermore, this possibility would appear highly unlikely in the
present case, because the vesicular transporter has a greater affinity
for GABA than glycine (Burger et al., 1991 ; Christensen and Fonnum,
1991 ) and because substantial levels of immunoreactivity for GABA is detected in these cells (Todd and Sullivan, 1990 ) and their terminals (Todd et al., 1996 ). Finally, whereas results from rapid applications of GABA to excised membrane patches would tend to link slow rise times
with low agonist concentration (Maconochie et al., 1994 ), it is
interesting to note that with very brief transients of transmitter [as
seems to be the case in the cleft (Destexhe and Sejnowski, 1995 ;
Clements, 1996 )], even very low concentrations of GABA generate currents with fast rise times (Galarreta and Hestrin, 1997 ). Low concentration of GABA is also not expected to generate longer decay
time courses (Maconochie et al., 1994 ; Galarreta and Hestrin, 1997 )
that could not account for the much slower decay of the GABAAR components in lamina I versus those
recorded in lamina II [see also discussion in (Rossi and Hamann,
1998 )]. Thus, the most plausible explanation for our results is that
GABAARs are located at a distance from the
vesicle release site, suggesting a prominent perisynaptic distribution
of functional GABAARs at these synapses (Fig.
11).
Functional significance of the difference in GABAAR-
and GlyR-mediated inhibition in lamina I
Symptoms very similar to those observed in neuropathic pain models
involving peripheral nerve constriction can also be obtained with
intrathecal administration of subconvulsant doses of strychnine or
bicuculline (Yaksh, 1989 ; Sivilotti and Woolf, 1994 ). Importantly, strychnine-induced hypersensitivity is selective to non-noxious input
(allodynia) and is morphine-insensitive (Sherman and Loomis, 1994 ,
1995 , 1996 ; Sorkin and Puig, 1996 ). Moreover, the sensitization produced does not only affect spinal segmental nociceptive reflexes, but also ascending nociceptive pathways (Sherman et al., 1997a ,b ). Thus
GABAA and glycine receptor-mediated inhibition
appear to play an important role in the regulation of excitability in
specific nociceptive sensory pathways in the dorsal horn, and blockade of this control appears to unveil subliminal innocuous input to neurons
in these pathways.
The present finding of the differential distribution of
GABAA and glycine receptor-mediated mIPSCs among
cell types and especially the finding that only glycine is responsible
for the tonic inhibition of lamina I neurons suggests separate roles
for these two inhibitory systems. The selective tonic inhibition
exerted by glycine on lamina I neurons may be contrasted to evoked
inhibition mediated by GABA acting on GABAA
receptors. Blockade of either type of control may differentially affect
nociceptive integration. For example, the difference in kinetics of the
GABAergic versus glycinergic IPSCs and the type of activity that
recruit them may match the nature of excitatory input they control.
Interestingly, metabotropic receptor antagonists attenuate
bicuculline-induced allodynia but are not effective against
strychnine-induced allodynia (Onaka et al., 1996 ). Metabotropic
glutamate receptors appear to be mainly located at extrasynaptic sites
(Baude et al., 1993 ) and may therefore be activated selectively after
release of a sufficient concentration of glutamate that can spill over
the synapses (Rusakov and Kullmann, 1998 ). This property may match that
guiding activation of GABAARs in lamina I (also
because of their perisynaptic distribution). Thus, subcellular
segregation of GABAARs and GlyRs confers distinct functional roles to inhibition mediated by these two transmitters in
lamina I.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 8, 1999; revised June 21, 1999; accepted June 22, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institute for Neurological
Disorders and Stroke Grant NS 34022 and by Canadian Medical Research
Council (MRC) Grant MT 12170 to Y.D.K. Y.D.K. is a Scholar of the
Canadian MRC. N.C. was the recipient of a Faculty of Medicine Graduate Award and an Eileen Peters McGill Major Fellowship. We thank
Drs. R. apek, M. W. Salter, and A. J. Todd for helpful comments on this manuscript and Ms. A. Constantin for expert technical assistance. We thank Hoffman-La Roche for the generous donation of
flunitrazepam and Abbott Labs for tiagabine.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Yves De Koninck, Department
of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University, 3655 Drummond,
#1317, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 1Y6 Canada.
 |
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M. Cordero-Erausquin, J. A. M. Coull, D. Boudreau, M. Rolland, and Y. D. Koninck
Differential Maturation of GABA Action and Anion Reversal Potential in Spinal Lamina I Neurons: Impact of Chloride Extrusion Capacity
J. Neurosci.,
October 19, 2005;
25(42):
9613 - 9623.
[Abstract]
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N. Lozovaya, N. Yatsenko, A. Beketov, T. Tsintsadze, and N. Burnashev
Glycine Receptors in CNS Neurons as a Target for Nonretrograde Action of Cannabinoids
J. Neurosci.,
August 17, 2005;
25(33):
7499 - 7506.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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A. Dahlhaus, R. Ruscheweyh, and J. Sandkuhler
Synaptic input of rat spinal lamina I projection and unidentified neurones in vitro
J. Physiol.,
July 15, 2005;
566(2):
355 - 368.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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G. P. Dugue, A. Dumoulin, A. Triller, and S. Dieudonne
Target-Dependent Use of Coreleased Inhibitory Transmitters at Central Synapses
J. Neurosci.,
July 13, 2005;
25(28):
6490 - 6498.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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S. A. Prescott and Y. De Koninck
Integration Time in a Subset of Spinal Lamina I Neurons Is Lengthened by Sodium and Calcium Currents Acting Synergistically to Prolong Subthreshold Depolarization
J. Neurosci.,
May 11, 2005;
25(19):
4743 - 4754.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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D. Gonzalez-Forero and F. J. Alvarez
Differential Postnatal Maturation of GABAA, Glycine Receptor, and Mixed Synaptic Currents in Renshaw Cells and Ventral Spinal Interneurons
J. Neurosci.,
February 23, 2005;
25(8):
2010 - 2023.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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T. D. Moran, W. F. Colmers, and P. A. Smith
Opioid-Like Actions of Neuropeptide Y in Rat Substantia Gelatinosa: Y1 Suppression of Inhibition and Y2 Suppression of Excitation
J Neurophysiol,
December 1, 2004;
92(6):
3266 - 3275.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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A. Bradaia, R. Schlichter, and J. Trouslard
Role of glial and neuronal glycine transporters in the control of glycinergic and glutamatergic synaptic transmission in lamina X of the rat spinal cord
J. Physiol.,
August 15, 2004;
559(1):
169 - 186.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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J. Ahrens, G. Haeseler, M. Leuwer, B. Mohammadi, K. Krampfl, R. Dengler, and J. Bufler
2,6 Di-tert-butylphenol, a Nonanesthetic Propofol Analog, Modulates {alpha}1{beta} Glycine Receptor Function in a Manner Distinct from Propofol
Anesth. Analg.,
July 1, 2004;
99(1):
91 - 96.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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E. F. Ekman and L. A. Koman
Acute Pain Following Musculoskeletal Injuries and Orthopaedic Surgery. Mechanisms and Management
J. Bone Joint Surg. Am.,
June 1, 2004;
86(6):
1316 - 1327.
[Full Text]
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A. F. Keller, J.-D. Breton, R. Schlichter, and P. Poisbeau
Production of 5{alpha}-Reduced Neurosteroids Is Developmentally Regulated and Shapes GABAA Miniature IPSCs in Lamina II of the Spinal Cord
J. Neurosci.,
January 28, 2004;
24(4):
907 - 915.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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B A Graham, P R Schofield, P Sah, and R J Callister
Altered inhibitory synaptic transmission in superficial dorsal horn neurones in spastic and oscillator mice
J. Physiol.,
September 15, 2003;
551(3):
905 - 916.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. Yamauchi, S. G. Shimada, H. Sekiyama, and J. G. Collins
Neither Spinal {gamma}-Aminobutyric Acid-A nor Strychnine-Sensitive Glycine Receptor Systems Are the Sole Mediators of Halothane Depression of Spinal Dorsal Horn Sensory Neurons
Anesth. Analg.,
August 1, 2003;
97(2):
417 - 423.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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C.-R. Lin, L.-C. Yang, H.-L. You, C.-T. Lee, M.-H. Tai, P.-H. Tan, M.-W. Lin, and J.-T. Cheng
Antinociceptive Potentiation and Attenuation of Tolerance by Intrathecal Electric Stimulation in Rats
Anesth. Analg.,
June 1, 2003;
96(6):
1711 - 1716.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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M. Russier, I. L Kopysova, N. Ankri, N. Ferrand, and D. Debanne
GABA and glycine co-release optimizes functional inhibition in rat brainstem motoneurons in vitro
J. Physiol.,
May 15, 2002;
541(1):
123 - 137.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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S. A Prescott and Y. D. Koninck
Four cell types with distinctive membrane properties and morphologies in lamina I of the spinal dorsal horn of the adult rat
J. Physiol.,
March 15, 2002;
539(3):
817 - 836.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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S. C. Chattipakorn and L. L. McMahon
Pharmacological Characterization of Glycine-Gated Chloride Currents Recorded in Rat Hippocampal Slices
J Neurophysiol,
March 1, 2002;
87(3):
1515 - 1525.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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A. F. Keller, J. A. M. Coull, N. Chery, P. Poisbeau, and Y. De Koninck
Region-Specific Developmental Specialization of GABA-Glycine Cosynapses in Laminas I-II of the Rat Spinal Dorsal Horn
J. Neurosci.,
October 15, 2001;
21(20):
7871 - 7880.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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R. J. Schwartzman, J. Grothusen, T. R. Kiefer, and P. Rohr
Neuropathic Central Pain: Epidemiology, Etiology, and Treatment Options
Arch Neurol,
October 1, 2001;
58(10):
1547 - 1550.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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A. Dumoulin, A. Triller, and S. Dieudonne
IPSC Kinetics at Identified GABAergic and Mixed GABAergic and Glycinergic Synapses onto Cerebellar Golgi Cells
J. Neurosci.,
August 15, 2001;
21(16):
6045 - 6057.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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B.-X. Gao, C. Stricker, and L. Ziskind-Conhaim
Transition From GABAergic to Glycinergic Synaptic Transmission in Newly Formed Spinal Networks
J Neurophysiol,
July 1, 2001;
86(1):
492 - 502.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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R. Donato and A. Nistri
Relative Contribution by GABA or Glycine to Cl--Mediated Synaptic Transmission on Rat Hypoglossal Motoneurons In Vitro
J Neurophysiol,
December 1, 2000;
84(6):
2715 - 2724.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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T. P. Wong, G. Marchese, M. A. Casu, A. Ribeiro-da-Silva, A. C. Cuello, and Y. De Koninck
Loss of Presynaptic and Postsynaptic Structures Is Accompanied by Compensatory Increase in Action Potential-Dependent Synaptic Input to Layer V Neocortical Pyramidal Neurons in Aged Rats
J. Neurosci.,
November 15, 2000;
20(22):
8596 - 8606.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. Lorez, D. Benke, B. Luscher, H. Mohler, and J. A Benson
Single-channel properties of neuronal GABAA receptors from mice lacking the {gamma}2 subunit
J. Physiol.,
August 15, 2000;
527(1):
11 - 31.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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N. Chery and Y. De Koninck
GABAB Receptors Are the First Target of Released GABA at Lamina I Inhibitory Synapses in the Adult Rat Spinal Cord
J Neurophysiol,
August 1, 2000;
84(2):
1006 - 1011.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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C. J. Woolf and M. W. Salter
Neuronal Plasticity: Increasing the Gain in Pain
Science,
June 9, 2000;
288(5472):
1765 - 1768.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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J. C. Jorge-Rivera, K. L. McIntyre, and L. P. Henderson
Anabolic Steroids Induce Region- and Subunit-Specific Rapid Modulation of GABAA Receptor-Mediated Currents in the Rat Forebrain
J Neurophysiol,
June 1, 2000;
83(6):
3299 - 3309.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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L. Saint-Amant and P. Drapeau
Motoneuron Activity Patterns Related to the Earliest Behavior of the Zebrafish Embryo
J. Neurosci.,
June 1, 2000;
20(11):
3964 - 3972.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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