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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 1999, 19(8):3073-3093
Spatiotemporal Patterns of Activity in an Intact Mammalian
Network with Single-Cell Resolution: Optical Studies of Nicotinic
Activity in an Enteric Plexus
Ana Lía
Obaid1, 2,
Takeshi
Koyano1,
Jon
Lindstrom1,
Tetsuro
Sakai1, and
B. M.
Salzberg1, 2
Departments of 1 Neuroscience and
2 Physiology, University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6074
 |
ABSTRACT |
Multiple Site Optical Recording of Transmembrane Voltage (MSORTV)
has been used to measure, continuously and simultaneously, the
spontaneous electrical activity from all of the neurons in individual
ganglia or up to five interconnected ganglia of the submucous plexus of
the guinea pig small intestine. These are the first optical recordings
of electrical activity with single-cell resolution from a mammalian
nervous system. They are used to investigate the effects of acute and
chronic application of nicotine on the firing patterns of this neural
network containing important cholinergic components. After washout of
acutely applied nicotine, the firing rates of selected neurons were
dramatically elevated. These results suggest that nAChRs that
reversibly desensitize after exposure to nicotine may be responsible
for the enhancement of activity that is observed after a brief
application of this agonist. In addition, immunostaining with
monoclonal antibodies was used to localize
3/
5,
7, and
2
nAChR subunits, and the results demonstrate the prevalence of
3/
5. It is this
3-containing nAChR subtype that probably
accounts for most of the excess activity elicited by nicotine application.
Key words:
optical recording; enteric nervous system; submucous
plexus; nicotinic ACh receptors; voltage-sensitive dye; di-8-ANEPPS; phototoxicity
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Understanding behavior at the
cellular level demands detailed knowledge of the network of neurons
that mediate it. In the mammalian CNS, the three-dimensional
structure of the brain, the dispersal of different neuronal subtypes
into widely separated nuclei, and the often remote location of the
relevant effector organs, make it virtually impossible to isolate the
whole neural circuit for an entire behavior. However, one part of the
mammalian nervous system, capable of mediating complex behaviors, can
be isolated; this is the enteric nervous system (ENS) (Furness and Costa, 1987
; Furness et al., 1994
; Wood, 1994
). Enteric neurons are
clustered in ganglia that interconnect to form distinct plexuses in the
gut wall. The myenteric plexus can be found between the longitudinal
and circular muscle layers, and the submucous plexus between the
circular muscle layer and the mucosa. The behavior of the effector
systems in the gut (transporting epithelium, neuroendocrine cells,
immune elements, blood vessels, and smooth muscle) is controlled by
both of these networks acting in concert. Therefore, a detailed knowledge of synaptic interactions within and between ganglia, and of
communication between the plexuses, is essential for a complete
understanding of normal gastrointestinal function (Furness and Costa,
1987
; Furness et al., 1994
).
Cholinergic transmission within the ENS has been established by
functional and electrophysiological studies (Kosterlitz and Lees, 1964
;
Cooke, 1984
; Furness and Costa, 1987
; Johnson et al., 1996
; Kadowaki et
al., 1996
) and by immunocytochemical characterization of the
distribution of choline acetyltransferase (Schemann et al.,
1993
; Porter et al., 1996
). Because ~50% of the enteric neurons are
cholinergic, and a considerable fraction of the fast excitatory transmission is sensitive to hexamethonium, a nicotinic antagonist, it
was expected that acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in the gut must
include members of the family of nicotinic AChRs (nAChRs) that have
been studied extensively in the CNS, peripheral ganglia, and
neuromuscular junctions (Lindstrom, 1997
). Indeed, Kirchgessner and Liu
(1998)
have reported immunoreactivity for mAb35, a monoclonal antibody
that recognizes
1,
3, and
5 subunits of nAChRs (Tzartos et
al., 1981
; Wang et al., 1996
).
In addition, a complex relationship between smoking and inflammatory
bowel disease has been demonstrated epidemiologically (Osborne and
Stansby, 1994
). Smokers are known to have a lower risk of ulcerative
colitis, patients with ulcerative colitis who restart smoking tend to
improve their symptoms, and nicotine enemas are therapeutic (Green et
al., 1997a
,b
). In contrast, people who smoke have a higher risk of
Crohn's disease, and patients with Crohn's disease who smoke have
more symptoms, hospitalizations, and surgeries than do nonsmoking
patients with this condition. An obvious candidate for the causative
agent in the effects of tobacco on these diseases is nicotine, and its
molecular targets must be presumed to be the family of neuronal nAChRs
in the enteric nervous system (Kirchgessner and Liu, 1998
).
We report here the use of Multiple Site Optical Recording of
Transmembrane Voltage (MSORTV) (Salzberg et al., 1977
; Salzberg, 1983
; Grinvald et al., 1988
; Rohr and Salzberg, 1994
) to measure, continuously and simultaneously, the spontaneous and nicotine-induced activity from all of the individual neurons in rings of up to five
interconnected ganglia of the submucous plexus of the guinea pig small
intestine. These are the first optical recordings of electrical
activity with single-cell resolution from a mammalian nervous system.
Our recordings demonstrate that exposure to nicotine can dramatically
alter the patterns of electrical activity in submucosal networks and
provide the basis for future investigation of the role or roles of
nAChRs in the enteric nervous system.
Preliminary reports of this work have appeared in abstract form (Obaid
et al., 1992
, 1994
, 1996b
; Obaid and Salzberg, 1997
).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Tissue preparation. The isolated submucous
plexuses were obtained from the small intestine of 150-200 gm Hartley
guinea pigs (Charles River Laboratories, Wilmington, MA) that had been
anesthetized by halothane inhalation and decapitated. These procedures
were in accordance with institutional guidelines. The methods of
dissection were essentially those of Hirst and McKirdy (1975)
. With the
goal of reducing background fluorescence from dye-bound to residual smooth muscle and connective tissue, the isolated plexus was incubated for 2 hr at room temperature in a Ringer's solution containing 50 U/ml
collagenase VII (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and 0.5 mg/ml protease IX
(Sigma). After this treatment, the preparation was washed with and
maintained in Medium 199 (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD)
containing 10% fetal horse serum (Sigma) and antibiotics
(penicillin, 100 U/ml; streptomycin, 100 µg/ml) (Life Technologies)
for 12-24 hr, at room temperature. For all of the experiments reported
here, the incubations and maintenance took place in a chamber saturated with 95% O2 and 5% CO2. The resulting
preparation, ~4 × 7 mm, consisted of a network of 80-100
ganglia, each containing an average of 8-12 neurons, embedded in a
muscle-free gossamer of connective tissue ~30-µm-thick, containing
the submucous neurons with their interconnecting nerve fibers and the
submucosal vasculature. This preparation is virtually free of
mechanical artifacts, an important consideration for optical recording.
In addition, the somata in the submucous ganglia of the guinea pig are
arranged in a quasi-two-dimensional array, so that the
individual neurons and the ganglia they constitute lie in a single
optical section (Fig. 1) with no
occlusion of their separate images.

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Figure 1.
Confocal image of a typical ganglion from the
submucous plexus of the guinea pig. The ganglion was photographed
through a 100× planapochromat (1.4 NA) objective in a laser-scanning
microscope (Carl Zeiss) after staining with the potentiometric probe
di-8-ANEPPS. The section thickness was 0.5 µm. Here, brightness is
directly proportional to fluorescence intensity, with no pseudo-gray
scale used.
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|
Optical apparatus. The MSORTV system is based on a 464 element silicon photodiode array located in the image plane of an
inverted microscope (Zeiss IM35; Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany)
equipped for epifluorescence, which moves independently of a stage that is rigidly fixed to the 500 kg top of a vibration isolation table (Newport Research, Irvine, CA) (Parsons et al., 1991
; Rohr and Salzberg, 1994
). The entire measuring system is mounted on a large motorized, digitally encoded, and computer controlled X-Y positioner (Motion Master 2000 controller; Newport, Irvine, CA). Epi-illumination is provided by a 150 W xenon short arc lamp powered by an
ultra-low-ripple, feedback-stabilized power supply (Opti-Quip, Highland
Mills, NY). The incident light is made quasi-monochromatic using a heat
filter (KG-1; Schott, Duryea, PA) and a high-Q interference filter
(530 ± 25 nm), and its intensity is adjusted using neutral
density filters. Transillumination, for bright-field or phase-contrast viewing of the preparation, is provided by a 12 V, 100 W
tungsten-halogen lamp powered by an ATE 75-15 power supply
(Kepco, Flushing, NY). The experimental preparation is held flat
against a number 0 coverslip in a recording chamber attached to the
fixed stage. A real image of the preparation is projected onto the 464 element array of silicon photodiodes (Centronics, Newbury Park, CA)
that is positioned on a trinocular tube in the image plane of the
objective. Photocurrents generated in each pixel of the array are
converted to voltages, amplified in two stages, and then processed in
two parallel acquisition systems (Fig.
2). In the first, the 464 high-level
voltage signals are multiplexed and digitized using a pair of 5 µsec,
16-bit analog-to-digital (A/D) converters (Department of Cellular and
Molecular Physiology Electronics Shop, Yale University School of
Medicine, New Haven, CT) operating synchronously, to achieve a 400 kHz
throughput to a Motorola 68030 computer and an effective frame rate of
~900 Hz. In addition, the second stage amplifiers are AC-coupled,
resulting in a gray scale resolution of ~22 bits. In the second
acquisition system, all 464 analog signals are available at pin
connectors on an octagonal patchboard matrix whose geometry mimics that
of the array itself. Thirty-two plug-in cables allow the selection of
an arbitrary subset of 32 detectors for high-speed acquisition at 330 kHz (Computer Boards, Mansfield, MA), permitting a frame rate of up to
10 kHz for this 32-pixel frame. In the experiments reported here, the
32-channel data were acquired at a frame rate of 2 kHz and were later
analyzed using appropriate software (Data-Pac II; Run Technologies,
Laguna Hills, CA).

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Figure 2.
Schematic diagram of the system for MSORTV. On the
left is an inverted microscope (IM-35; Carl Zeiss),
mounted on a motorized digitally encoded and computer-controlled
(Motion Master 2000 controller, Newport Research) X-Y positioner that
moves independently of a fixed stage that is rigidly attached to a
large (500 kg) vibration isolation table. A 464-element array of
silicon photodiodes (Centronics, Newbury Park, CA) is positioned on the
trinocular tube in the image plane of the objective. A specially
designed beamsplitter couples the photodiode array to a CCD camera,
through a projection lens, so that an image of the preparation can be
superimposed on an image of the array itself, captured by a frame
grabber, and viewed on a video monitor. Photocurrents generated by each
pixel of the photodiode array are converted to voltages, amplified in
two stages (with AC coupling between them), and then processed by the
two parallel acquisition systems shown on the right. In
the first (464 channel multiplexer), the 464 high-level voltage signals
are multiplexed and digitized using a pair of 5 µsec, 16-bit A/D
converters operating synchronously to achieve a 400 kHz throughput to a
Motorola 68030 computer. In the second acquisition system (32 channel
multiplexer), all 464 high-level analog signals are available at pin
connectors on an octagonal patchboard matrix having the same geometry
as the photodiode array. Thirty-two plug-in cables allow the selection
of an arbitrary subset of 32 detectors for high-speed acquisition at
330 kHz, permitting a frame rate of up to 10 kHz for this 32-pixel
frame. LH, Lamp house; SH, shutter; EF, emission filter; Di, direct
illumination; DM, dichroic mirror; BF, barrier filter; PDA, photodiode
array; VD, video camera.
|
|
Spatial resolution. In the optical system used here, a 100×
objective permits recording reliably the electrical activity of cells
as small as 7.5 µm in diameter, but the field of view is restricted
to a single ganglion. To record from rings of interconnected ganglia,
we used a 40× objective. In this way, single-cell resolution is
retained, although every detector averages the electrical activity over
a square region ~18 µm on a side in the object plane. In this
apparatus, a specially designed beam splitter can be moved into and out
of the light path. This device exploits the high reflectivity of the
silicon photodiode array. When combined with a projection lens, it
relays an image of the preparation that is reflected by the photodiode
array onto a small CCD camera connected to a frame grabber. In this
way, the registration of the individual photodetector elements with the
neurons in the image plane can be defined and preserved.
Optical recording. For the optical experiments, the
preparation was mounted as indicated above in the recording chamber
attached to the fixed stage of the inverted microscope. The tissue
was then stained for at least 10 min with 50 µg/ml of the
styryl dye (1-(3-sulfonatopropyl)-4-[
[2-(di-n-octylamino)-6-naphthyl]vinyl]pyridinium betaine) (di-8-ANEPPS) (Bedlack et al., 1992
) in a
Ringer's solution containing 0.47% DMSO and 0.16% Pluronic F-127
plus 2.5 U/ml glucose oxidase (Sigma) and 875 U/ml catalase (Sigma). In
some of the experiments, the staining solution also contained 10 µM astaxanthin (González and Tsien, 1997
). The dye
solution was kept in the chamber throughout the experiment, unless
specified. All of the experiments were performed at room temperature
(22-25°C). Optical recordings of electrical activity with
single-cell resolution were obtained from in vitro submucous
plexus preparations using a 40× objective (DApo 40 UV, 1.3 NA,
Olympus Optical, Tokyo, Japan). In an area 4 × 7 mm,
80-100 ganglia could be examined for spontaneous or evoked activity.
Phototoxicity. The phototoxicity associated with some of the
most sensitive potentiometric dyes results from the production of
reactive singlet oxygen by the excited state of the dye molecule (Pooler, 1972
; Oxford et al., 1977
; Kalyanaraman et al., 1987
). We
found that we could lower the steady-state oxygen tension in an open
bath, to levels that preserve normal physiology but significantly reduce photodynamic damage, by incorporating a mixture of glucose oxidase and catalase in the glucose containing Ringer's solution. In
addition, we found that the animal carotenoid pigment astaxanthin (Di
Mascio et al., 1990
; González and Tsien, 1997
) was helpful in
reducing phototoxicity further when used in conjunction with glucose
oxidase and catalase but was ineffective when used alone. The
combination of these measures has permitted us to record continuously for up to 5 min with single-cell resolution from this intact mammalian neural network.
Processing of optical data. Despite the organization of
guinea pig submucous ganglia as quasi-two-dimensional ensembles, the restricted spatial resolution of the 464-element photodiode array determines that the signals from one cell may be present on more than
one photodiode channel, and that one channel may detect the signals
from more than one cell (Salzberg et al., 1977
). Sorting the raw data
recorded by multiple photodiodes, therefore, requires user-driven
procedures developed to identify and isolate the spike trains of the
individual cells. The procedures used in this work used software
modules from Data-Pac II (Run Technologies). Figure 3 illustrates this process.

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Figure 3.
The processing of raw optical data.
A, Image of a submucous plexus ganglion stained with
di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of the central region of the photodiode
array superimposed. A 40× objective (DApo 40 UV, 1.3 NA, Olympus)
results in each detector monitoring a square region of the ganglion 18 µm on a side. The numbers identify 30 of the 32 selected
detectors whose outputs were recorded by the 32 channel recording
system. Here, the gray scale has been inverted for clarity, so that
increasing fluorescence intensity is represented by darker shades of
gray. B, Digital outputs of photodetectors numbered 12 and 13, over a 1 sec period. Top, Raw data.
Bottom, Digitally filtered data. AC coupling time
constant, 110 msec. C, Digitally filtered outputs
of the 16 photodetectors positioned over the image of the ganglion,
over a 5 sec period. D, Raster plot that summarizes the
spike trains of the eight individual active neurons that were
identified by spike-sorting analysis of the data shown in
C. E, Visual identification of the eight
neurons whose spike activity is depicted in D.
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|
Figure 3A shows the image of a ganglion stained with
di-8-ANEPPS, captured by a video frame grabber, with the image
(enhanced) of the central region of the 464-element photodiode array
superimposed. Because this experiment used a 40× objective (DApo 40 UV, 1.3 NA, Olympus), each photodetector monitored a square region of the preparation ~18 µm on a side. The numbers identify 30 of the 32 selected photodetectors positioned over the area of interest, whose
outputs were recorded at a 2 kHz frame rate by the PC-based acquisition
system. In this and subsequent images, the gray scale has been inverted
for clarity so that increasing fluorescence intensity from membranes
stained with di-8-ANEPPS is represented by darker gray levels.
Figure 3B shows the electrical activity, represented as
fluorescence changes (
F, in arbitrary units), over a 1 sec period,
recorded by photodiodes numbered 12 and 13. Figure 3B,
top, shows the raw optical data (
F). Figure
3B, bottom, shows the same records after digital
filtering using a 20 Hz high-pass filter, followed by three 1 msec
smoothing windows. Figure 3C shows the filtered outputs of
the 16 channels that monitored the ganglion over a 5 sec period. Spike
assignment to individual neurons in the image of the submucous ganglion
(spike sorting) was accomplished by examining the distribution of all
action potentials across the 32 photodiode channels and using the
spatial relationship between the photodiode array elements and the
images of the cells together with coincidence information. The actual
extraction of spike times was done with a simple voltage threshold
followed by location of the zero-crossing of the differentiated optical data. Thus, the final spike times that were assigned to the cells were
the peak times of the action potentials. This process was largely
automated, but the operator retained sufficient control to exclude
spurious events. Spike-sorting analysis of the neuronal activity shown
in Figure 3C revealed that the activity recorded by these 16 active channels was confined to eight active neurons, labeled from
A to H, whose spike trains are shown in Figure
3D. Figure 3E identifies those neurons within the
ganglion. Tables containing the peak times of the spike trains for each
active neuron within the field of view were stored as files. Therefore, in addition to their use in generating the raster diagrams that allow
direct, visual comparison of the firing patterns of the neurons (Fig.
3D), they also were used as input to software that creates
an animated image of the ganglia, flashing each neuron in time with its
individual action potentials. The animation files associated with
selected figures can be accessed at the authors' website
(http://loco1.med.upenn.edu/~animation).
The experiment in Figure 3 demonstrates several important points: (1)
at 40× magnification, single-cell resolution was preserved; (2) simple
spike-sorting protocols accomplished the reduction of complex
patterns of activity (Fig. 3C) into simple spike trains associated with individual neurons (Fig. 3D); and (3) the
patterns of spontaneous activity that emerge were associated with a
relatively small number of neurons within each ganglion.
Immunocytochemical identification of nAChR subunits.
Immunofluorescence experiments were performed on whole mounts of fixed submucous plexus. The preparations, obtained as indicated above, were
washed with PBS to eliminate any residual fetal horse serum and
fixed in 10% buffered formalin (Fisher Scientific, Houston, TX) for 24 hr at 4°C. Nonspecific binding was reduced by using 4% (v/v) normal
goat serum (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA), with or without
Triton X-100 (0.5%), in PBS containing 10 mM
NaN3 (PBS-NaN3), for 2 hr at room
temperature. The preparations were then exposed for 24-48 hr to
monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) raised against specific nAChR subunits
(Table 1), all of which have previously
been described (Tzartos et al., 1981
, 1987
; Whiting and Lindstrom,
1988
; Schoepfer et al., 1990
; Lindstrom, 1996
). These antibodies were
diluted in PBS-NaN3 containing 4% normal goat serum, to a
final concentration of 5-30 nM. For double-labeling experiments, antibodies raised in rabbit against porcine neuropeptide Y
(
NPY) and porcine vasoactive intestinal peptide (
VIP) (Incstar Corporation, Stillwater, MN), were used in conjunction with nAChR antibodies (raised against rat or mouse). Affinity-purified, goat anti-rat, goat anti-mouse, and goat anti-rabbit secondary antibodies conjugated with indocarbocyanine, fluorescein, or Texas Red,
were obtained from Jackson ImmunoResearch and used at 1:1000 dilution in PBS-NaN3 containing 4% normal goat serum. For double
staining, two secondary antibodies, tagged with different labels, were
applied simultaneously. Staining with these secondary antibodies
(24-48 hr) was performed at 4°C. Rinsing steps lasted 30 min (three
times for 10 min each) in PBS-NaN3, at room
temperature. The tissue was mounted in Pro-Long (Molecular Probes,
Eugene, OR) and kept at 4°C until examined. Every experiment included
parallel controls, in which whole mounts were incubated with
PBS-NaN3 containing 4% normal goat serum in the absence
of primary antibodies and subsequently stained with the secondary
antibodies.
Immunofluorescence was visualized using a Leica TCS-NT
laser-scanning confocal microscope, equipped with either a 40× (Leica, 1.25 NA, oil PL APO) or a 100× (Leica UV, 1.4 NA oil, PL APO) objective. Usually, 12-32 optical sections were taken at 0.5-1.0 µm
intervals. Images acquired at 1024 × 1024 pixel resolution were
processed using Adobe Photoshop 5.0 (Adobe Systems, Mountain View, CA).
 |
RESULTS |
Optical recording from rings of interconnected ganglia with
maintenance of single-cell resolution
Recording from multiple interconnected ganglia is preferable to
recording from single ganglia, despite the circumstance that each of
these ganglia typically contains sensory, intermediate, and motor
neurons. Although numerous electrophysiological studies using the
submucous plexus have included intracellular recordings from pairs of
neurons within single ganglia, the effort to identify synaptically
coupled pairs has been frustrating. A possible explanation is that the
functional units of the submucous plexus are supraganglionic networks
that share neuronal pools, rather than anatomically defined ganglia. Simultaneous optical recording of electrical activity from
rings of interconnected ganglia with single-cell resolution, combined
with appropriate analytical tools (Gerstein and Aertsen, 1985
;
Gerstein et al., 1985
; Maldonado and Gerstein, 1996
), should permit
us to examine whether sets of functionally connected neurons are found
primarily within single ganglia or are distributed among several ganglia.
Figure 4 illustrates the analysis of
electrical activity in a ring of interconnected ganglia monitored
optically. Figure 4A shows the image of the ring of
ganglia, after staining with di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of the
photodiode array superimposed. Figure 4B illustrates
the visual identification of individual neurons within the ring, whose
firing patterns are depicted in Figure 4C. This panel shows
the raster plot that summarizes the firing patterns of the eight active
neurons identified by spike sorting in this 180 sec recording. In this
experiment, phototoxicity was minimized by using glucose oxidase and
catalase in the staining solution (see Materials and Methods).

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Figure 4.
Optical recording of electrical activity from
individual neurons in a ring of interconnected ganglia.
A, The image of the ring of ganglia, after staining with
di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of the central region of the photodiode
array superimposed. A 40× objective (DApo 40 UV, 1.3 NA, Olympus)
results in each detector monitoring a square region of the ganglion 18 µm on a side. The gray scale has been inverted so that increasing
fluorescence intensity is represented by darker shades of gray.
B, Visual identification of individual neurons whose
firing pattern is summarized in C. C,
Raster plot depicting the spike activity of the eight neurons that were
spontaneously active during the 3 min recording period (see Table 2,
control, preparation 1, 1R). The associated animation can be accessed
at the authors' website
(http://loco1.med.upenn.edu/~animation).
|
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In this record, complex patterns of multineuronal activity begin to
emerge. Figure 4C, for example, hints at the presence of
shared inputs that appear to modulate synchronously (at t
~25 sec and at t ~90 sec) the firing rates of cells from
different ganglia (neurons B, C, and H
at t ~25 sec). This characteristic behavior strongly
suggests the existence of a supraganglionic organization to the network
(Obaid et al., 1996a
,b
).
Although the activity illustrated in Figure 4 is a typical example of
spontaneous behavior in rings of submucosal ganglia, it is extremely
difficult to compare quantitatively the spatiotemporal patterns of
firing of one preparation with those of another. This is because, in
addition to the variability from cell to cell and ganglion to ganglion,
there is a temporal organization intrinsic to the bursts that defies
easy description. As a first step toward capturing the average behavior
of these networks, we have tabulated (Table
2,
control) the average firing frequency of all of the active cells from
14 different recording sessions, from six different preparations that
were treated identically. These were calculated by dividing the number
of action potentials in each spike train by the duration of the
recording. Pooling of the data, although simplistic, is justified by
the apparent similarity in the firing behavior of active neurons from
different ganglia and from different preparations. It should be noted
that this procedure, by including the silent periods, severely
underestimates the intraburst firing frequency of the active cells
[more sophisticated analyses, such as the random walk models of
Gerstein and Mandelbrot (1964)
do not seem justified at present because
the size of the data set is not yet sufficient to permit statistically
significant interpretation of the relevant parameters]. This
average behavior is also illustrated graphically in Figure
5 (control). Although
average frequencies vary widely, frequencies exceeding 1 Hz are
exceptional. The same data are also displayed as a discrete probability
distribution in Figure 6
(control). This shows the percentage of the total number of active neurons (ordinate) exhibiting a given range (abscissa) of average spike frequencies.

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Figure 5.
Bar graphs of the average firing frequencies of
individual neurons in single ganglia (G) and
rings of interconnected ganglia (R). Along the
abscissa, the prefixed integers represent different
preparations, numerical subscripts represent sequential
individual recordings from a given preparation, and the capital
letters represent individual neurons. Top,
Control. Middle, Acute application of nicotine (a 20 µl bolus of 100 µM solution added to bath for ~30 min
followed by 30-60 min washout). In preparation 4 (R1) (Fig. 7), this wash was performed in steps
of 1:10 to 1:20 dilutions from 2 µM average concentration
in the chamber, to a final concentration of 10 nM, over a
period of ~60 min. In preparation 4 (G2) (Fig.
9), these progressive dilutions were followed by a 30 min wash with
normal Ringer's solution. Bottom, Chronic exposure
(20-24 hr) to 0.2 µM nicotine.
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Figure 6.
Discrete probability distributions showing the
percentage of active neurons exhibiting average firing frequencies
(ordinate) within 0.1 Hz ranges (abscissa). Top,
Control. Middle, Acute application of nicotine.
Bottom, Chronic exposure (20-24 hr) to 0.2 µM nicotine.
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Effects of nicotine on the spontaneous patterns of activity of the
submucosal network
Perturbation of a complex system is a useful approach to
understanding its behavior. This is particularly true for the study of
neuronal networks. Because a vast physiological and pharmacological literature implicates ACh as an essential neurotransmitter in gastrointestinal function (Kosterlitz and Lees, 1964
; Cooke, 1984
; Furness and Costa, 1987
; Johnson et al., 1996
; Kadowaki et al., 1996
),
and several nAChR subtypes are abundant in the submucous plexus [see
immunohistological studies to follow and Kirchgessner and Liu (1998)
],
nicotine itself seems an obvious choice for perturbing the functional
connectivity of the submucous network. It has been shown (Lindstrom et
al., 1996
; Lindstrom, 1997
; Olale et al., 1997
) that nAChR subtypes
desensitize to different degrees, and with different kinetics,
depending on agonist concentration and exposure time. This is reflected
in substantially different EC50 values for activation by
nicotine, for reversible desensitization, and for irreversible
desensitization (Table 3). Because of
this, we expected to observe different patterns of activity with acute and chronic exposure to nicotine. Here, the effect of nicotine is
examined under two different conditions: (1) acute application of a
high concentration of nicotine (e.g., a 20 µl bolus of 100 µM nicotine added to a 1 ml chamber filled with Ringer's
solution), followed by washout within 30-60 min), or (2) chronic
exposure (20-24 hr) to a low-nicotine concentration (0.2 µM) followed by washout. This low concentration of
nicotine simulates the level of the drug found in the blood of heavy
smokers.
Acute applications of nicotine and the concomitant washout induce
dramatic changes in network connectivity
When the dissection of the plexus is performed carefully, and the
submucous network connectivity is well preserved, the optical recordings erupt with waves of spontaneous activity rushing across the
plexus. This spontaneous activity (Figs. 3, 4) varies from sporadic
spikes in some neurons, to bursts that last tens of seconds in others,
rarely exhibiting an average firing frequency higher than 1 Hz. The
character of this spontaneous activity, however, can be drastically
affected by a brief exposure to a high concentration of nicotine.
Optical recordings, after washout of the agonist, were obtained not
earlier than 30-60 min after application of the agonist. This
apparently awkward experimental protocol was designed to circumvent
technical limitations. It was not possible to record pharmacological
effects during the application itself, because mechanical disturbance
after the bolus usually obscured the early activation of the nAChRs. In
addition, rapid desensitization of the nAChRs during the period of the
mechanical disturbance resulted in complete cessation of detectable
activity that could only be reversed by extensive washout.
Figure 7 provides an example of the
response of a ring of interconnected ganglia to a brief exposure to
nicotine (a 20 µl bolus of 100 µM agonist added to a 1 ml chamber) recorded optically. Figure 7A shows the image of
the ring of ganglia, after staining with di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of
the photodiode array superimposed. This composite image was recorded
using the 40× objective (Olympus, 1.4 NA). Figure 7B
illustrates the visual identification of individual neurons within the
ring, whose firing patterns are depicted in Figure 7C. This
panel shows the raster plot that summarizes the firing patterns of the
ten active neurons identified by spike sorting in this relatively brief
(40 sec) recording.

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Figure 7.
Optical recording of the response of a ring of
interconnected submucous ganglia to a brief exposure to nicotine.
A, The image of the ring of ganglia, after staining with
di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of the central region of the photodiode
array superimposed. The numbers identify the individual
detector elements whose signals were recorded at 2 kHz. A 40×
objective (DApo 40 UV, 1.3 NA, Olympus) results in each detector
monitoring a square region of the ganglion 18 µm on a side. The gray
scale has been inverted so that increasing fluorescence intensity is
represented by darker shades of gray. B, Visual
identification of the individual neurons whose spike activity is
depicted in C. C, Raster plot depicting
the spike activity of the 10 neurons that were active during the 40 sec
recording period. In this experiment, phototoxicity was minimized by
using astaxanthin (González and Tsien, 1997 ) in the incubation
medium and glucose oxidase and catalase in the staining solution (see
Table 2, acute nicotine, preparation 4, 1R). In this particular
experiment, the wash was performed in steps of 1:10 to 1:20 dilutions
from 2 µM average concentration in the chamber, to a
final concentration of 10 nM, over a period of ~60 min.
The associated animation can be accessed at the authors' website
(http://loco1.med.upenn.edu/~animation).
|
|
Figure 8 illustrates a particularly
robust burst of activity that developed in a submucous neuron when the
nicotine, added acutely 45-60 min earlier (a 20 µl bolus of 100 µM agonist added to a 1 ml chamber), was washed from the
chamber. Firing frequency data from this ganglion and five additional
ganglia from a total of four preparations are summarized in Table 2
(acute nicotine) and displayed graphically in Figures 5 and 6.
Notice in Figure 5 (acute nicotine) the dramatically
increased incidence of firing rates in excess of 2 Hz [the difference
seen here between control and acute nicotine is statistically
significant by the Mann-Whitney U test with an asymptotic
significance (two-tailed) of p = 0.002]. This is also
reflected in Figure 6 (acute nicotine), the frequency distribution graph, in which ~25% of all the active cells fire in
the high-frequency range.

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Figure 8.
Optical recording of a burst of activity in a
single ganglion in response to the washout of an acute application of
nicotine. A, The image of the ganglion, after staining
with di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of the central region of the
photodiode array superimposed. The numbers identify the
individual detector elements whose signals were recorded at 2 kHz. A
40× objective (DApo 40 UV, 1.3 NA, Olympus) results in each detector
monitoring a square region of the ganglion 18 µm on a side. The gray
scale has been inverted so that increasing fluorescence intensity is
represented by darker shades of gray. B, Visual
identification of the five individual neurons whose spike activity is
depicted in C. C, Raster plot depicting
the spike activity of the five neurons that were active during the 3 min recording period. Note, in neuron E, the initial 2 min burst having an average spike frequency of 4-5 Hz (see Table 2,
acute nicotine, preparation 1, 1G). The record was obtained 45-60 min
after washout of the bolus of nicotine from the chamber. The
associated animation can be accessed at the authors' website
(http://loco1.med.upenn.edu/~animation).
|
|
Figure 8A shows the image of a single ganglion, after
staining with di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of the photodiode array
superimposed. Figure 8B illustrates the visual
identification of individual neurons within the ganglion, whose spike
activity is displayed in the raster plot in Figure 8C.
Notice the burst of activity lasting >2 min that was induced in neuron
E of this submucous ganglion. Most probably, this remarkably high tonic
firing rate (4-5 Hz for 2 full minutes; 3.02 Hz average frequency over
the whole length of the record) reflects the recovery from
desensitization of nAChRs that followed the bolus of nicotine (see Discussion).
Figure 9 illustrates another example of
activity after a brief exposure to a high concentration of nicotine. In
this ganglion, 10 cells are active, with four cells (neurons
E, G, H, and I) exhibiting higher than average firing rates. In particular, neuron H
sustained a 10 Hz burst for >20 sec. Several neurons (e.g., neurons
C and G) that were active during this recording
exhibited, in addition to the action potentials, some optical signals
that were clearly distinguishable from the spikes by their longer
duration and characteristic humped shape. Samples of these, labeled
with asterisks, are illustrated in the 200 msec segments recorded by 10 different detectors in Figure 10. These
events, having a duration between 10 and 20 msec, seem to represent
fast EPSPs, most probably cholinergic in origin. It should be
noted that, because the MSORTV system used for this experiment has an
AC coupling time constant of 110 msec, fast synaptic potentials are the
only synaptic potentials that can be detected by this optical recording
system. If the signals in Figure 10 are, indeed, fast EPSPs, they would
represent the first optical recordings of synaptic potentials from
mammalian neurons, with single-cell resolution; however, their further
characterization must await additional experiments. The optical signals
that appear to represent synaptic potentials are comparable in size to
those that represent action potentials. This is deceptive.
Potentiometric optical signals are proportional not only to membrane
voltage, but also to membrane area as well as amount of dye bound.
Thus, no significance can be attached to relative amplitudes of signals recorded from different membranes (Salzberg et al., 1977
).

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Figure 9.
Another optical recording of the increased
electrical activity that follows the washout of acutely applied
nicotine. A, The image of the ganglion, after staining
with di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of the central region of the
photodiode array superimposed. The numbers identify the
individual detector elements whose signals were recorded at 2 kHz, 40×
objective (DApo 40 UV, 1.3 NA, Olympus), inverted gray scale.
B, Visual identification of the 10 individual neurons
whose spike activity is depicted in C. C,
Raster plot showing the spike activity of the 10 neurons that were
active during the 50 sec recording period (see Table 2, acute nicotine,
preparation 4, 2G). The record was obtained ~30 min after washout of
nicotine from the chamber. Because this record was obtained from the
same preparation as the record shown in Figure 7, the washout followed
progressive dilutions from 2 µM average concentration in
the chamber, to a final concentration of 1 nM, over a
period of 60-90 min. The associated animation can be accessed at the
authors' website (http://loco1.med.upenn.edu/~animation).
|
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Figure 10.
Putative EPSPs recorded optically from a
submucous plexus ganglion after the washout of acutely applied
nicotine. Segments (200 msec) from the raw data corresponding to the
experiment in Figure 9, showing two different types of optical signals.
Interspersed with the action potentials (marked by Os),
are longer lasting signals, marked by asterisks, that
last 10-20 msec, have a humped shape, and may represent EPSPs. Note
that no significance can be attached to the relative amplitudes of
signals recorded from different membranes (see Results and Table 2,
acute nicotine, preparation 4, 2G). The AC coupling time constant was
110 msec.
|
|
Chronic exposure to a low concentration of nicotine followed by
washout has little effect on the spontaneous rate of firing of
submucous neurons
In contrast to acute application of nicotine, chronic exposure to
a low concentration (0.2 µM) of this agonist produces
little or no change in the behavior of the submucosal network. Figure 11 illustrates the pattern of activity
of a ganglion from a submucous plexus segment that had been incubated
in a medium containing 0.2 µM nicotine. Here, two
neurons, A and B, exhibit prolonged tonic bursts,
sustaining an average firing rate of ~1 Hz for 130 sec during a
record that was 200 sec long. This activity was recorded ~1 hr after
the preparation had been transferred to a nicotine-free Ringer's
solution. Table 2 (chronic nicotine) summarizes data from this
(preparation 4, 1G) and 14 additional recordings, from a total of five
preparations, and all of these data are displayed graphically in
Figures 5 and 6 (chronic nicotine). The difference seen here between control and chronic nicotine is only marginal by the
Mann-Whitney U test, with an asymptotic significance
(two-tailed) of p = 0.059. Thus, either the
concentration was too low to affect the nAChR subtype involved (e.g.,
3
2 nAChRs), or despite substantial inactivation there was no
effect. Because there was a significant effect (Figs. 5, 6, acute
nicotine) after washout of a high concentration of nicotine
at a time (~30 min) when we would expect most
3 but not
4 or
7 to have recovered from desensitization, that "acute" response
might reflect loss of the inhibition that was modulated by presynaptic
4 or
7 nAChRs and mediated by
3 nAChRs or others. Because the
early effect of acute exposure to nicotine was the cessation of
activity, rather than the increase that would be expected if most of
the activity reflected postsynaptic
3 nAChRs, these results are
puzzling. Clearly, a prerequisite for any elucidation of the complex
nicotine results must be the characterization and localization of all
of the nAChR subtypes present in the submucous plexus.

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Figure 11.
A typical pattern of electrical activity from a
submucous plexus segment that had been exposed chronically to 0.2 µM nicotine. A, The image of the ganglion,
after staining with di-8-ANEPPS, with the image of the central region
of the photodiode array superimposed. The numbers
identify the individual detector elements whose signals were recorded
at 2 kHz. A 40× objective (DApo 40 UV, 1.3 NA, Olympus) results in
each detector monitoring a square region of the ganglion 18 µm on a
side; inverted gray scale. B, Visual identification of
the three individual neurons whose spike activity is depicted in
C. C, Raster plot depicting the spike
activity of the three neurons that were active during the 3.5 min
recording period (see Table 2, chronic nicotine, preparation 1, 1G).
The associated animation can be accessed at the authors' website
(http://loco1.med.upenn.edu/~animation).
|
|
Immunocytochemical identification of nAChR subunits
MSORTV provides real-time monitoring of the electrical activity of
all active neurons but provides no information about either the
channels or receptors responsible for shaping that activity. To
understand the effects of nicotine on network behavior, therefore, it
is essential to determine which nAChR subtypes are present and to
elucidate their role. Kirchgessner and Liu (1998)
have used mAb35
(Tzartos et al., 1981
), which recognizes neuronal
-bungarotoxin (
Bgt)-insensitive
3 and
5 nAChR subunits, to locate nAChR
protein in guinea pig gut and pancreas. Their results indicated that
immunoreactivity to mAb35 was abundant in the submucous plexus and that
its distribution in terminals and axons, as well as in cell somata and
dendrites, suggested that a subset of nAChRs is presynaptic. They also
used a polyclonal antibody raised against the
Bgt-sensitive nAChR subunit
7 and found that a large subset of neurons in submucosal ganglia were
7-immunoreactive and that
7-immunoreactive nerve fibers travel along blood vessels in the submucosa.
Figure 12 shows the localization of
mAb35 (A), mAb210 (B), mAb295
(C), and mAb306 (D). These data
confirm Kirchgessner and Liu's (1998)
findings with mAb35 and
corroborate these results by showing that the distribution of nAChRs
that bind mAb35 (A) is identical to the distribution
of nAChRs that bind mAb210 (B) (Tzartos et al.,
1987
). mAb210 and mAb35 both recognize the main immunogenic region on
1 nAChRs of muscle and cross-react with neuronal nAChR
3 and
5
subunits. Furthermore, our results confirm the presence of
7 by
showing immunoreactivity with mAb306 (D) (Schoepfer
et al., 1990
), a monoclonal antibody that recognizes an intracellular
7 epitope, and also demonstrate the presence of
2 subunits by
immunoreactivity to mAb295 (C) (Whiting and Lindstrom, 1988
). Other nAChR subunits, such as
4, may well be present. Ganglionic neurons typically express a mixture of
3 nAChRs
composed of
3 in combination with
2 and/or
4, and sometimes also
5 (Conroy and Berg, 1995
; Wang et al., 1998
).
7 is also often expressed by these neurons (Conroy and Berg, 1995
).

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Figure 12.
Immunoreactivity to specific nAChR subunits in
whole mounts of submucosa. A, Confocal micrograph
showing the localization of mAb35 immunoreactivity. Section thickness,
1.7 µm; zoom, 1.25; Leica 40×, 1.0 NA. Arrowhead
points to plasma membrane. Arrows point to clusters of
receptors; nonpermeabilized tissue. B, Confocal
micrograph showing localization of mAb210 immunoreactivity. Section
thickness, 1.8 µm; zoom, 1.25; 100×, 1.4 NA.
Arrowhead points to plasma membrane.
Arrow points to cluster of receptors; nonpermeabilized
tissue. C, Confocal micrograph showing the localization
of mAb295 immunoreactivity. Section thickness, 1.4 µm; zoom, 1.0.;
100×, 1.4 NA. Arrowhead points to plasma membrane.
Arrow points to cluster of receptors; nonpermeabilized
tissue. D, Confocal micrograph showing the localization
of mAb306 immunoreactivity. Section thickness, 0.5 µm; zoom, 1.0;
100×, 1.4 NA. Arrow points to intracellular staining.
Tissue permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100.
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|
Immunoreactivity for mAb35 and mAb210 in the absence of
permeabilization (Fig. 12A,B) is
primarily associated with the plasma membrane (arrowhead)
and reveals clustering of nAChRs (arrows). Immunoreactivity
for mAb295 in nonpermeabilized tissue (Fig. 12C) is also
present in the plasma membrane (arrowhead), but its
distribution is uneven, with big clusters appearing in a few of the
cells (arrow). Permeabilization with Triton X-100 allows
cytoplasmic staining with all these monoclonal antibodies (see Fig.
12D for mAb306 (arrow) and Figure
13, A and B, for
mAb35 and mAb210), demonstrating cytoplasmic reservoirs of nAChRs and
suggesting that they are being actively synthesized. Figure
13A illustrates the relative distribution of immunoreactivity to mAb210 (green), a monoclonal
antibody that recognizes
3/
5 subunits of neuronal nAChRs, and
NPY (red), an intracellular marker that identifies
cholinergic secretomotor neurons in submucosal ganglia (Bornstein and
Furness, 1988
). The presence of nAChRs in cholinergic neurons increases
the probability that some of these nAChRs may be presynaptic. Notice
that despite the ubiquity in the distribution of
3/
5 nAChRs,
cells positioned near connectives (arrows) tend to exhibit
much lower levels of immunoreactivity. Indeed, cells pointing toward
connectives prove, very often, to be sensory neurons (Kirchgessner and
Liu, 1998
).

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Figure 13.
3/ 5 nAChR subunits can be found in
cholinergic and noncholinergic neurons. A, Confocal
micrograph showing the immunoreactivity to mAb210 receptor ( 3/ 5,
green) and NPY (red). Section thickness,
1.1 µm; zoom, 1.0; 40×, 1.25 NA. Arrows point to
neurons that exhibit very low immunoreactivity to nAChRs and are
presumably sensory. B, Confocal micrograph showing the
immunoreactivity to mAb35 receptor ( 3/ 5, green)
and VIP (red). Section thickness, 1.1 µm; zoom, 2.27;
40×, 1.25 NA. Tissue permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100.
|
|
Figure 13B illustrates the relative distribution of
immunoreactivity to mAb35 (green), a monoclonal
antibody that, together with mAb210, recognizes
3/
5 subunits of
neuronal nAChRs and
VIP (red), an intracellular marker
that identifies noncholinergic secretomotor neurons (Bornstein and
Furness, 1988
). Here, the overlap of the two markers, apparent in the
yellow cell (arrow), demonstrates that
3/
5 nAChRs can
be found in noncholinergic as well as in cholinergic neurons.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The properties of any neuronal ensemble depend not only on the
intrinsic conductances of its individual neurons and the specific properties of its many synapses, but on the complex and nonlinear dynamic interactions that result from the multiple parallel
connectivity of its component cells. Thus, simple nervous systems,
consisting of a limited number of elements (Selverston and Moulins,
1985
; Marder, 1998
), offer the best hope for understanding the dynamic electrical and chemical interactions that give rise to patterns of
effective connectivity and generate behavior in mammals. Because isolated segments of the submucous plexus contain a restricted number
of neurons, collected into small ganglia and located within a single
optical plane, these networks are uniquely amenable to analysis by
optical means. Indeed, multiple site optical recording techniques,
combined with the appropriate analytical tools, make the mammalian
submucous plexus a preparation extremely conducive to understanding the
dynamics of neuronal assemblies. The use of optical methods to study
the role of nicotine and its receptors in the behavior of the
submucosal network was motivated by the significance of cholinergic
transmission in the ENS.
Advantages and limitations of multiple-site optical recording for
studying spontaneous patterns of activity in the submucosal network
This report demonstrates the successful use of MSORTV to study the
electrical activity from all of the neurons in a ganglion or a ring of
submucosal ganglia. Activity could be recorded continuously and
simultaneously, preserving single-cell resolution, from up to 40 neurons, for ~5 min, and, under appropriate conditions, optical
signals that may represent fast synaptic events were observed (Fig.
10). Pharmacological interventions, on the other hand, although feasible, were more problematic. Time constraints caused by
phototoxicity of di-8-ANEPPS did not allow repetitive recordings from
the same optical field, precluding bracket experiments using the same
ganglia. In addition, fast desensitization of nAChRs, when nicotine was applied acutely through a pressure injector or as a bolus, did not
permit a detailed examination of the initial activation of nAChRs after
addition of the agonist. Despite these limitations, the experiments
yielded interesting results. First, a brief exposure to acute
application of nicotine, followed by washout, dramatically increased
the firing rates of a subset of submucous neurons, elevating the
average frequency of firing from <1 up to 7 Hz. Second, long exposure
(~24 hr) to 0.2 µM nicotine, the same concentration
found in the blood of heavy smokers, had little or no effect on the frequency of firing measured after washout.
Effects of nicotine at the network level
Immunocytochemical experiments using mAbs to different subunits of
the nAChR revealed the presence of subunits
3/
5,
7, and
2,
and their distribution (Kirchgessner and Liu, 1998
) supports the idea
that at least some of these nAChRs are presynaptic. Indeed, McGehee et
al. (1995)
, studying nicotine enhancement of fast excitatory synaptic
transmission in the CNS, have postulated that a predominant, if not
exclusive, role of CNS presynaptic nAChRs may be to modify excitability. This hypothesis is supported by the results of Radcliffe and Dani (1998)
, who found that a brief stimulation of nAChRs enhances
hippocampal glutamatergic synaptic transmission on two different time
scales (seconds and minutes), altering the relationship between
consecutively evoked synaptic events. They established that this
enhancement required extracellular calcium and was produced by the
activation of presynaptic
7-containing nAChRs. Although one form of
glutamatergic enhancement lasted only for seconds, another form lasted
for minutes after the nicotinic stimulation had ceased and the
nicotinic agonist had been washed away. The latter enhancement was,
thus, observed under conditions that closely resemble our protocol.
They postulated that the synaptic enhancement that lasts for minutes
results from nAChR activity, capable of originating calcium-dependent
mechanisms known to induce glutamatergic synaptic plasticity. These
findings of Radcliffe and Dani (1998)
, taken together with the
demonstration by Liu et al. (1997)
of the existence of glutamatergic
circuitry in the ENS, may explain our observations on the effects of
nicotine on the submucosal network.
Olale et al. (1997)
have demonstrated that chronic nicotine exposure
affects differentially the function of
3,
4, and
7 neuronal
nAChR subtypes. They showed that chronic exposure to submicromolar
concentrations of nicotine irreversibly inactivates many
4
2
nAChRs and
7 nAChRs, although largely sparing
3 nAChRs. These
results could explain, in part, the different behavior seen in
submucous plexus preparations after exposure to nicotine for brief
periods of time versus long exposures to very low concentrations of the agonist.
Relatively little is known about the functional role of nAChRs in
enteric neuronal networks. In the chick ciliary ganglion,
3 nAChRs
are located postsynaptically and perisynaptically,
7 nAChRs are
located perisynaptically, and
4 nAChRs are absent altogether (Horch
and Sargent, 1995
). Also, both
3 and
7 nAChRs are known to
mediate synaptic transmission in the chick ciliary ganglion (Ullian et
al., 1997
). Human nAChR subtypes have been expressed in
Xenopus oocytes (Olale et al., 1997
), and their
EC50 values for activation and inactivation by nicotine
have been determined and are shown in Table 3 (Olale et al., 1997
) (F. Olale, A. Kuryatov, and J. Lindstrom, unpublished observations).
Assuming that nAChRs in submucosal ganglia are distributed in a similar
manner to those in the chick ciliary ganglion and that they behave like
cloned human nAChRs expressed in Xenopus oocytes, then the
results obtained with the nicotine exposure regimens described here
could be predicted. Extrapolation from the human data suggests that the
percent activity expected to remain after 24 hr exposure to 0.2 µM nicotine should be 10% for
4
2, 20% for
7,
and 70-100% for
3
2
4
5. Thus, overnight exposure of
submucosal ganglia to 0.2 µM nicotine followed by washout
would be expected to have little or no effect, whereas exposure to
concentrations 2-100 µM for ~30 min followed by
washout would be expected to result in a reduction of activity, because of slight inactivation of
3 and nearly complete inactivation of
7. Instead, dramatic activation was observed. This could be explained by the loss of inhibition, modulated by nAChR-containing circuits. That is, partial inactivation of
4 or
7 nAChRs,
involved presynaptically or postsynaptically in releasing inhibitory
neurotransmitters, may then permit sustained activation of circuits
containing activatable postsynaptic nAChRs and other excitatory
receptors. The data presented here do not provide sufficient
information to determine unequivocally whether the observed effects of
nicotine on the spontaneous patterns of activity of the submucous
plexus are presynaptic or postsynaptic in origin, or both. MSORTV
cannot replace traditional electrophysiological methods for
characterizing the functional molecular details of different nAChR
subtypes or for studying specific synaptic interactions. However, these
data demonstrate the unique capability of optical methods for revealing
the far reaching and unexpectedly disproportionate consequences that a
simple pharmacological intervention may generate at the network level.
Future experiments, combining multiple site optical recording with
electrophysiological studies and further immunocytochemical
characterization of nAChRs subunits will be required to describe more
fully the role of nAChRs in the enteric networks, in health and disease.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Nov. 18, 1998; revised Feb. 1, 1999; accepted Feb. 2, 1999.
This work was supported by United States Public Health Service Grants
NS35561 (A.L.O.), NS16824 (B.M.S.), NS11323 (J.L.), and CSTR (J.L.). We
are grateful to Drs. Gregg B. Wells, Mark Nelson, Cameron Koch, and
Martin Pring for fruitful discussions, to Michael J. Biercuk for his
help with data analysis, and to Dr. Leslie Loew for his generous gift
of di-8-ANEPPS.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. A. L. Obaid, Department
of Neuroscience University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 234 Stemmler Hall Philadelphia, PA 19104-6074.
 |
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