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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 2001, 21(1):10-17
The Cerebellum-Specific Munc13 Isoform Munc13-3 Regulates
Cerebellar Synaptic Transmission and Motor Learning in Mice
Iris
Augustin1,
Stefan
Korte2, 3,
Michael
Rickmann4,
Hans A.
Kretzschmar2, 3,
Thomas C.
Südhof5,
Jochen W.
Herms2, 3, and
Nils
Brose1
1 AG Molekulare Neurobiologie, Max-Planck-Institut
für experimentelle Medizin, D-37075 Göttingen, Germany,
2 Institut für Neuropathologie,
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, D-37075
Göttingen, Germany, 3 Institut für
Neuropathologie, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München,
D-81377 München, Germany, 4 Zentrum Anatomie,
Abteilung Neuroanatomie, Georg-August-Universität
Göttingen, D-37075 Göttingen, Germany, and
5 Center for Basic Neuroscience, Department of Molecular
Genetics, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235
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ABSTRACT |
Munc13 proteins form a family of three, primarily brain-specific
phorbol ester receptors (Munc13-1/2/3) in mammals. Munc13-1 is a
component of presynaptic active zones in which it acts as an essential
synaptic vesicle priming protein. In contrast to Munc13-1, which is
present in most neurons throughout the rat and mouse CNS,
Munc13-3 is almost exclusively expressed in the cerebellum. Munc13-3
mRNA is present in granule and Purkinje cells but absent from glia
cells. Munc13-3 protein is localized to the synaptic neuropil of the
cerebellar molecular layer but is not found in Purkinje cell dendrites,
suggesting that Munc13-3, like Munc13-1, is a presynaptic protein at
parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses. To examine the role of Munc13-3
in cerebellar physiology, we generated Munc13-3-deficient mutant mice.
Munc13-3 deletion mutants exhibit increased paired-pulse facilitation
at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses. In addition, mutant mice
display normal spontaneous motor activity but have an impaired ability to learn complex motor tasks. Our data demonstrate that Munc13-3 regulates synaptic transmission at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses. We propose that Munc13-3 acts at a similar step of the synaptic vesicle cycle as does Munc13-1, albeit with less efficiency. In view of the present data and the well established vesicle priming function of Munc13-1, it is likely that Munc13-3-loss leads to a
reduction in release probability at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell
synapses by interfering with vesicle priming. This, in turn, would lead
to increases in paired-pulse facilitation and could contribute to the
observed deficit in motor learning.
Key words:
exocytosis; secretion; synaptic vesicle; priming; phorbol
ester; unc-13
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INTRODUCTION |
Synaptic vesicles are the key
organelles in neurotransmitter release at synapses. In the presynaptic
terminal of a nerve cell, synaptic vesicles pass through a complex
cycle of membrane fusion and fission reactions that govern the release
process (Südhof, 1995 ). Vesicles are probably generated by
budding from early endosomes. They are loaded with transmitter,
translocate to the plasma membrane, and dock at the active zone, an
electron-dense presynaptic membrane region to which the release process
is restricted. Docked vesicles have to be primed to a fusion-competent
state before a rise in the intracellular calcium concentration can
trigger fusion and secretion of the transmitter content (Zucker, 1996 ).
After fusion, vesicular membrane and protein components are retrieved
by clathrin-mediated endocytosis and recycled directly or via early
endosomes (Cremona and De Camilli, 1997 ; Klingauf et al., 1998 ; Murthy
and Stevens, 1998 ).
Munc13 proteins constitute a family of brain-specific
molecules (Munc13-1, Munc13-2, and Munc13-3) with homology to
Caenorhabditis elegans Unc-13 (Brose et al., 1995 ). A splice
variant of Munc13-2 is also expressed outside of the CNS (Song et al.,
1998 ) (A. Betz and N. Brose, GenBank accession number AF159706). Munc13
proteins contain a phorbol ester-binding C1
domain and two C2 domains (Brose et al., 1995 ).
The most abundant isoform in rat brain, Munc13-1, is specifically
targeted to presynaptic active zones (Betz et al., 1998 ). It binds to
syntaxin, a component of the synaptic vesicle fusion apparatus (Betz et
al., 1997 ), to DOC2 (Orita et al., 1997 ), as well as to several other
synaptic proteins (for review, see Brose et al., 2000 ), and acts as a
phorbol ester-dependent enhancer of neurotransmitter secretion when
overexpressed in Xenopus neuromuscular junctions (Betz et
al., 1998 ). Loss of Munc13-1 in deletion mutant mice leads to early
postnatal death because of an arrest of the synaptic vesicle
cycle of neurons in the CNS. A detailed analysis of primary hippocampal
neurons from Munc13-1-deficient mice demonstrated that synaptic
vesicles in mutant synapses cannot acquire fusion competence, resulting
in a depletion of readily releasable vesicles and a functional shutdown
of synaptic activity. Mutant synapses contain normal numbers of docked
vesicles that are unable to fuse in response to physiological stimuli
(Augustin et al., 1999b ), demonstrating that Munc13-1 is an essential
synaptic vesicle priming protein in neurons. Interestingly, this
Munc13-1 mutant phenotype is restricted to excitatory-glutamatergic
neurons, whereas inhibitory-GABAergic nerve cells are unaffected by
the Munc13-1 deficiency (Augustin et al., 1999b ). Moreover, only 90% of synapses of any given excitatory-glutamatergic neuron appear to be
dependent on Munc13-1, whereas the remaining 10% function normally and
are apparently independent of Munc13-1-mediated vesicle maturation
(Augustin et al., 1999b ). Complementing observations on
Munc13-1-deficient mice and further supporting the conclusion that
Munc13-1 is a secretory vesicle priming protein, overexpression of
Munc13-1 in adrenal chromaffin cells leads to a dramatic increase in
priming of chromaffin granules (Ashery et al., 2000 ).
Munc13-1 is expressed in all regions of the rat CNS (Augustin et al.,
1999a ). In contrast, Munc13-2 and Munc13-3 exhibit strikingly differential expression patterns in which Munc13-2 is only present in
rostral brain regions, including cerebral cortex and CA regions of the
hippocampus, whereas Munc13-3 expression is restricted to the
cerebellum (Augustin et al., 1999a ). Thus, neurons in the rat brain
coexpress Munc13-1 with either Munc13-2 or Munc13-3, depending on the
brain region under examination. In view of this differential expression
pattern, it is possible that the restriction of the Munc13-1 mutant
phenotype to a subpopulation of cells or synapses is caused by the fact
that one of the other Munc13 isoforms compensates for the Munc13-1 loss
in Munc13-1-independent synapses.
Evidently, Munc13-1 is essential for normal function of most excitatory
synapses in the CNS. To determine whether other Munc13 isoforms perform
comparably important roles, we generated deletion mutant mice that lack
the cerebellar presynaptic Munc13-3 protein. A detailed analysis showed
that, despite normal cerebellar morphology, synaptic transmission at
parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses is impaired in mutant mice. This
physiological deficit is paralleled by compromised motor learning. We
conclude that Munc13-3 regulates synaptic transmission at parallel
fiber-Purkinje cell synapses in the cerebellum. The impairment in
synaptic transmission at these synapses after Munc13-3 loss likely
contributes to the observed motor learning deficits in Munc13-3 mutants.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Munc13-3 deletion mutant mice. For the
generation of a Munc13-3 targeting vector, we used genomic clones
pMunc13-3/13 and pMunc13-3/14 (isolated from a 129SVJ mouse genomic
library in FIX II; Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), which contain multiple
exons of the murine Munc13-3 gene. In the targeting
vector, two of these exons representing bp 3108-3265 of the rat
Munc13-3 cDNA (GenBank accession number U24072) were replaced by a
neomycin resistance cassette. The vector also contained two copies of
the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene. Upon homologous
recombination of the targeting vector with the Munc13-3 gene, the
insertion of the neomycin resistance cassette results in a deletion
that represents amino acid residues 1014-1066 (upstream of the
C1 domain) and a shift in the open reading frame
in the mature mRNA. The linearized targeting vector was electroporated
into embryonic stem cells (E14; gift of Dr. K. Rajewski,
Köln, Germany). Southern blotting analysis of 70 clones resistant
to neomycin and
1-(2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro- -D-arabinofuranosyl)-5-iodouracil revealed two positive clones that were injected into blastocysts (Biological Research Laboratories, Füllinsdorf,
Switzerland). One clone generated highly chimeric mice that transmitted
the mutation through the germ line. Homozygous mutants were obtained by
interbreeding of animals heterozygous for the Munc13-3 mutation. After
germ line transmission of the mutation had been verified by Southern
blotting, offspring of heterozygous interbreedings were routinely
genotyped by PCR. Homozygous mutations were confirmed by immunoblotting
with an antibody against the N terminus of Munc13-3 (Augustin et al.,
1999a ). The mutation was outbred into C57BL/6 background for more than
seven generations. For all experiments, Munc13-3-deficient mice were
obtained by interbreeding of animals heterozygous for the Munc13-3
mutation. Only wild-type littermates were used as controls in all experiments.
Histological analysis and quantitative Western blotting. In
situ hybridization was done as described previously (Augustin et
al., 1999a ). For that purpose, the following oligonucleotide was chosen
from the exon sequences of the murine Munc13-3 gene (corresponding to
bp 1731-1772 of rat Munc13-3 cDNA):
AGGAAAGGAGGGAGCTCCCATTAGTTCGACAGAAAAACTGGC. For immunocytochemistry, 10 µm cryosections were prepared from unfixed mouse brains and
immunostained according to Rickmann and Wolff (1995) using
affinity-purified antibodies to Munc13-3 (Augustin et al., 1999a ) at
0.5-1 µg/ml. Histological sections of paraffin-embedded brains (3 µm) were stained with cresyl violet. Quantitative Western blotting of
wild-type and mutant cerebella was performed with 125I-labeled secondary antibodies
according to published procedures (Augustin et al., 1999b ).
Whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings of cerebellar Purkinje
cells. Patch-clamp experiments were performed on Purkinje cells in
thin slices of the cerebellum following standard procedures (Hamill et
al., 1981 ; Edwards et al., 1989 ). Sagittal slices of cerebellum (150 µm) were prepared from 10- to 11-d-old mice (for the measurement of
spontaneous IPSCs) or from 18- to 21-d-old mice (for the
measurement of EPSCs) as described previously (Edwards et al., 1989 ).
Slices were maintained at 37°C in a continuously bubbled (95%
O2, 5% CO2) solution (in
mM: 125 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 26 NaHCO3, 2 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, and 25 glucose). After 60 min recovery,
slices were placed in the recording chamber and superfused with the
above solution at room temperature. Recordings were performed in the
presence of 15 µM bicuculline (to block inhibitory synapses during the measurement of EPSCs) or in the presence
of 10 µM
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (to block excitatory
synapses during the measurement of spontaneous IPSCs). TTX (1 µM) was present during all measurements of
spontaneous postsynaptic currents. Purkinje cells were selected using
an upright microscope (Axioscope; Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) with a
63× water-immersion lens (Zeiss). Electrodes were pulled from
borosilicate glass capillaries and filled with a solution containing
(in mM):145 CsCl, 10 HEPES, 10 EGTA, 1 CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 4 Na2-ATP, and 0.4 Na3-GTP,
adjusted to pH 7.3 with CsOH. All experiments were performed using the
whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique with borosilicate
pipettes (resistance of 2.5-4 M when filled with an intracellular
solution; see above). Ionic currents were recorded with an EPC-9
patch-clamp amplifier (Heka Elecktronik, Lambrecht, Germany). The
pipette access resistance was compensated. All cells were studied at a
holding potential of 70 mV. Stimulation and on-line data acquisition
were performed using the PULSE program (version 8.11; Heka Elektronik)
on a Macintosh computer (Apple Computers, Cupertino, CA). For
stimulation of parallel fibers, a glass pipette with 5-10 µm tip
diameter filled with standard saline was used. Square pulses (duration,
0.2 msec; amplitude, 1-10 V) were applied for focal stimulation. All
experiments were performed at room temperature.
Ultrastructural analysis. Mice were anesthetized with ether
and perfused transcardially with 30 ml of PBS, followed by 50 ml of
fixative containing 2% paraformaldehyde-2.5% glutaraldehyde in PBS.
The brain was removed, and the cerebellum was cut into pieces not
larger than 2 mm3. The tissue blocks were
osmicated for 90 min using 1% osmium tetroxide in water, rinsed in
water, dehydrated in an ascending gradient of alcohols followed by
propylene oxide, and left for 12 hr in propylene oxide/Epon (1:1).
After polymerization in Epon 812 for 48 hr at 60°C, ultrathin
sections were cut and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate. The
sections were examined on a Zeiss EM109 electron microscope at
20,000-fold magnification. Randomly chosen areas of the cerebellar
molecular layer from two +/+ and two / animals were photographed
and analyzed. To determine synapse densities, 42 photographs (124 synapses) from two independent +/+ cerebella (79 and 45 synapses per
animal), and 47 photographs (142 synapses) from two independent /
cerebella (80 and 62 synapses per animal) were examined. For the
ultrastructural comparison, 24 synapses from two independent +/+
cerebella (13 and 11 synapses per animal) and 25 synapses from two
independent / cerebella (14 and 11 synapses per animal) were
analyzed. Synapses for ultrastructural analysis were selected randomly.
However, images of suboptimal quality with respect to staining,
contrast, ultrastructural detail, or photo reproduction were excluded.
Behavioral analysis. A rotating rod apparatus (TSE-Systems,
Bad Homburg, Germany) was used to measure the ability of mice to
improve motor performance during repeated exposure to the apparatus (Pekhletski et al., 1996 ). Before the first training session, all mice
were habituated to the apparatus by placing them on the rod rotating at
5 rpm (three times for 2 min sessions). The training consisted
of 22 sessions: three sessions per day with a 90 min intersession
interval and three trials per session with 5 sec intertrial interval.
The rotation speed was set initially at 5 rpm, and the length of each
trial was 30 sec (i.e., the maximum cumulative training duration in a
session was 90 sec). If a mouse stayed on the rotating rod for a total
cumulative duration of at least 60 sec during the three trial session,
the speed was increased by 3 rpm for the next session. If a mouse
accumulated <60 sec on the rod during the three trial session but >30
sec, no speed increase was given. If a mouse could not accumulate 30 sec of on-rod time, the speed was decreased by 3 rpm at the next session. The rotation speed the mice were able to master according to
these definitions (learning to criterion) was recorded and analyzed via
a two-way repeated-measure ANOVA with factors genotype and session (the
repeated factor). The genotype groups were compared with post
hoc Tukey's honestly significant difference (HSD) tests by
sessions. An additional group of untrained mice that had never been
exposed to the apparatus was also tested on the rotating rod at 40 rpm
to analyze whether naïve mutant mice had a preexisting performance deficit that could be detected only at higher rotation speeds or in more demanding tasks.
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RESULTS |
Deletion mutations in the Munc13-3 gene were generated
by homologous recombination in mouse embryonic stem cells (Fig.
1A,B). Recombinant stem cells were injected into blastocysts. These were used
to produce chimeric mice that transmitted the mutated gene through the
germ line. Munc13-3-deficient mice were obtained at the predicted
Mendelian frequency by interbreeding of animals heterozygous for the
Munc13-3 mutation (38 +/+, 71 +/ , and 37 / in 146 analyzed
animals). Although mutant mice did not express Munc13-3 protein (Figs.
1C, 2E),
they exhibited no obvious physical or behavioral abnormalities and had
a normal life expectancy under our laboratory conditions. Both male and
female Munc13-3 mutants were fertile and had normal reproductive
capabilities. Litter sizes resulting from interbreeding of homozygous
Munc13-3-deficient animals were indistinguishable from those obtained
with wild-type controls. The obvious lack of a pronounced phenotypic
change in Munc13-3-deficient mice is in contrast to deletion mutations
in the Munc13-1 gene that result in an almost complete arrest of transmitter release from glutamatergic neurons and early postnatal lethality (Augustin et al., 1999b ).

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Figure 1.
Targeting strategy and
identification of the Munc13-3 deletion mutation in mice.
A, Structure of the targeted region of the murine
Munc13-1 gene, targeting vector, and mutated gene resulting from
homologous recombination. Exons are indicated by black
boxes (numbers give corresponding base pairs in
the rat Munc13-3 cDNA), and the location of the probe used for Southern
analysis of genomic DNA digested with BamHI is indicated
by a hatched bar. The location of the neomycin
resistance gene (Neo) and two copies of the HMV
thymidine kinase gene (TK) in the targeting
vector are indicated by gray boxes.
BglII/BamHI indicates fused site. The
positions of the BamHI sites upstream of the
Probe and at the very 3' end of the gene representation
are not part of genomic clones used for the construction of the
targeting vector and were not mapped. B, Southern
analysis of genomic DNA from different Munc13-3 genotypes. DNA was
digested with BamHI, separated electrophoretically,
blotted onto nylon filters, and probed with the probe shown
above. Bands representing the wild-type (WT) and
knock-out (KO) allele are indicated. C,
Western blot analysis of cerebellum homogenates from different Munc13-3
genotypes. Brain homogenates were separated by SDS-PAGE, blotted onto
nitrocellulose filters, and probed with an antibody directed against
the N terminus of Munc13-3 (Augustin et al., 1999b ). Note the complete
absence of Munc13-3 in knock-out brain
(arrowhead).
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Figure 2.
Normal cytoarchitecture in
Munc13-3-deficient mice. A, In situ
hybridization for Munc13-3 in mouse brain. Like in rat, Munc13-3 mRNA
expression is almost exclusively restricted to the cerebellum in mouse
brain. B, C, Cresyl violet stainings of
paraffin sections through wild-type and Munc13-3-deficient cerebellum.
Note the normal cytoarchitecture and cell density in Munc13-3-deficient
cerebellum. D, Frozen section through wild-type
cerebellum stained with an antibody specific to Munc13-3 (Augustin et
al., 1999b ). Munc13-3 is localized to the molecular layer of the
cerebellum, which mainly contains synaptic neuropil with parallel
fiber-Purkinje cell synapses. E, Frozen section through
Munc13-3 mutant cerebellum, demonstrating the complete absence of
Munc13-3 protein and thus the specificity of the immunostaining
procedure. F, Staining for Munc13-1 protein in rat
cerebellum using a specific monoclonal antibody according to published
procedures (Betz et al., 1998 ). wm, White matter;
gcl, granule cell layer; ml, molecular
layer. Scale bar: A, 2 mm; B-E, 100 µm; F, 75 µm.
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In mouse, Munc13-3 is specifically expressed in the cerebellum (Fig.
2A) (for corresponding data on rat, see Augustin et
al., 1999a ). Within the cerebellum, Munc13-3 mRNA is most abundant in
the granule cell layer (Fig. 2A) (for corresponding
data on rat, see Augustin et al., 1999a ). Accordingly, Munc13-3 protein is almost exclusively present in the molecular layer in which the
parallel fiber axons of granule cells terminate on dendrites of
Purkinje neurons (Fig. 2D,E) (for
corresponding data on rat, see Augustin et al., 1999a ). The
localization of Munc13-3 protein coincides exactly with that of
Munc13-1 in cerebellum (Fig. 2F). In view of this
highly specific localization of Munc13-3, we concentrated our analyses
on the protein composition, structure, and function of the cerebellum.
Quantitative analyses of synaptic protein expression levels in
cerebella from Munc13-3-deficient mice revealed no obvious abnormalities. Homozygous mutant cerebella were devoid of Munc13-3 protein (Figs. 1C, 2D,E;
Table 1). In contrast, Munc13-3
expression in heterozygous mutants was indistinguishable from wild-type
controls (Table 1). Moreover, expression levels of other Munc13
isoforms and 29 selected synaptic proteins were not significantly
different from wild-type controls (Table 1).
Anatomical and morphological analyses of adult offspring from
heterozygous interbreedings revealed no overt abnormalities in
Munc13-3-deficient animals. In particular, the overall structure of the
cerebellum, and that of other brain regions, was indistinguishable from
wild-type controls, and paraffin sections of cerebella from adult
wild-type and mutant mice stained with cresyl violet showed a
distribution and density of nerve cells that is typical for this age
(Fig. 2B,C).
Electrophysiological analyses of synaptic transmission in
Munc13-3-deficient mice were performed in cerebellar slices from postnatal days 18-21. Because Munc13-3 is mainly expressed in cerebellar granule cells that target the protein to their presynaptic parallel fiber axon terminals (Fig.
2D,E) (Augustin et al., 1999a ), we
analyzed parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses. For that purpose, we
stimulated parallel fibers with an extracellular stimulation electrode
and made simultaneous patch-clamp recordings of evoked excitatory
postsynaptic responses from Purkinje cells in the whole-cell configuration. To detect subtle changes in synaptic transmitter release
after Munc13-3 loss, we used a paired-pulse facilitation paradigm. The
degree of paired-pulse facilitation can be used as an indirect measure
for changes in presynaptic transmitter release (Zucker, 1989 ). Apart
from a superexcitability period of parallel fiber axons at short
interstimulus intervals, paired-pulse facilitation reflects the fact
that, at synapses with rather low release probability, transmitter
release in response to two immediately subsequent stimuli differs in
size, with the second response being larger than the first. Decreases
in release probability result in a concomitant increase in paired-pulse
facilitation. Paired-pulse facilitation was examined in cerebellar
Purkinje cells from mutant and wild-type mice at 10 different
interstimulus intervals, ranging from 50 to 400 msec (Fig.
3A,B).
At interstimulus intervals of up to 200 msec, a significant enhancement
of the mean paired-pulse facilitation ratio was detected in cerebellar
slices lacking Munc13-3 (Fig.
3A,B), suggesting a reduction in
release probability from mutant synapses compared with wild-type
controls. In contrast, frequency and amplitude of spontaneous
excitatory postsynaptic responses of Purkinje cells were not affected
by the Munc13-3 mutation (data not shown). In several deletion mutants
of presynaptic proteins, short-term plasticity during high-frequency
stimulation is altered. For example, in the case of Rab3A mutants,
repetitive stimulation of Rab3A-deficient hippocampal synapses at 14 Hz
leads to an accelerated rundown of synaptic transmission (Geppert et al., 1994 ). To examine whether similar changes in high-frequency synaptic transmission are caused at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses by Munc13-3 loss, we stimulated these synapses at 14 Hz.
Unlike hippocampal neurons, we found that neither wild-type nor mutant
Purkinje cells show synaptic depression at this stimulation frequency
(Fig. 3C).

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Figure 3.
Increased paired-pulse facilitation in parallel
fiber-Purkinje cell synapses in Munc13-3-deficient mice.
A, Sample synaptic responses taken from wild-type (+/+)
and Munc13-3-deficient ( / ) Purkinje cells after paired stimulation
(75 msec interval) of parallel fibers. Note the increase in
paired-pulse facilitation in mutant cells. B, Magnitude
of the paired-pulse facilitation as a function of interstimulus
intervals. Ratios of the second to first EPSC amplitude (mean ± SEM) from wild-type (open circles; 8 animals, 17 cells)
and mutant (filled circles; 9 animals, 19 cells)
mice are plotted as a function of interstimulus interval. Note
significant increases in the paired-pulse facilitation ratio in
Munc13-3-deficient Purkinje cells (p < 0.05) for intervals up to 200 msec. C, Amplitudes of
successive EPSCs plotted as a function of stimulus number during
repetitive stimulation at 14 Hz from wild-type (open
circles; 9 animals, 9 cells) and mutant (filled
circles; 10 animals, 10 cells) animals. No depression is
observed in mutant or wild-type cells. Error bars indicate SE.
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Our electrophysiological analysis of synaptic transmission at parallel
fiber-Purkinje cell synapses clearly demonstrated that Munc13-3
modulates synaptic transmission at these glutamatergic synapses. The
finding that synaptic vesicle priming by Munc13-1 is essential only for
excitatory-glutamatergic synapses in hippocampal primary neurons led
to the idea that other Munc13 isoforms (e.g., Munc13-3) might play
similarly essential roles in inhibitory-GABAergic synapses (Augustin
et al., 1999b ). In principle, the mild phenotypic changes in
Munc13-3-deficient mice (see also our behavioral analysis described
below) excludes the possibility that Munc13-3 is essential for
inhibitory-GABAergic neurotransmission in the cerebellum. We
substantiated this conclusion by analyzing spontaneous miniature inhibitory postsynaptic responses of Purkinje cells in cerebellar slices from 10- to 11-d-old mice. We found that frequency, amplitude, and rise time of spontaneous miniature inhibitory postsynaptic responses were indistinguishable between Munc13-3-deficient and wild-type Purkinje cells. This is in contrast to glutamatergic transmission in Munc13-1 deletion mutants in which an arrest at the
vesicle priming step leads to a strong decrease in the frequency of
spontaneous excitatory miniature postsynaptic responses (Augustin et
al., 1999b ). Our data suggest that synaptic vesicle priming at
GABAergic synapses terminating on Purkinje cells is not strongly affected by Munc13-3 loss (Fig. 4).

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Figure 4.
Unaltered spontaneous inhibitory
neurotransmission in Purkinje cells from Munc13-3-deficient cerebellum.
General features of miniature inhibitory synaptic currents of
Munc13-3-deficient Purkinje cells. A, Examples for
inhibitory synaptic responses in mutant (right) and
control (left) cells. Experimental recordings consisted
of six sweeps per cell, each with 10 sec length. B,
Isolated single events from A. The thick gray
lines show the averaged miniature IPSCs. C-E,
Frequency, amplitude, and rise time of miniature IPSCs remain
unimpaired in Munc13-3-deficient mice. Four-hundred eighty single
events from six cells (wild-type) and 540 single events from seven
cells (mutant), respectively, were used to compile these histograms.
Error bars indicate SEM.
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To determine whether the observed changes in synaptic transmission at
parallel fiber axon terminals is paralleled by changes in synaptic
morphology, we performed a detailed ultrastructural analysis of
wild-type and Munc13-3-deficient cerebella. We found that the density
and ultrastructure of synapses in the molecular layer of mutant
cerebella was indistinguishable from that of wild-type controls. In
particular, the number of synapses per squared micrometer of
section, the number of vesicles per synapse, the size of active zones,
and the number of docked vesicles per micrometer active zone were not
affected by the Munc13-3 mutation (Fig.
5).

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Figure 5.
Normal ultrastructure of synapses in
Munc13-3-deficient cerebellum. Two brains per genotype were analyzed.
For the determination of synapse densities, 42 photographs (124 synapses; 79 and 45 synapses per animal, respectively) from +/+,
and 47 photographs (142 synapses; 80 and 62 synapses per animal,
respectively) from / cerebella were examined. For the
ultrastructural comparison, 24 +/+ (13 and 11 synapses per animal,
respectively) and 25 / (14 and 11 synapses per animal,
respectively) synapses were analyzed. Error bars indicate SEM.
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As mentioned above, Munc13-3-deficient mice were indistinguishable from
their wild-type littermates in terms of gross cage behavior. In
addition, mutant mice reproduced normally and were perfectly able to
care for their offspring. To determine in more detail whether the
observed functional changes in synaptic transmission at parallel
fiber-Purkinje cell synapses cause a detectable alteration of motor
learning in mutant mice, we studied motor performance and learning of
mutant mice on a rotating rod. In initial experiments, we examined the
falling latency of naïve, untrained mice at a rotating speed of
40 rpm. We found no significant differences between wild-type and
Munc13-3-deficient mice (Fig.
6A), suggesting that no
preexisting motor or sensory defects are present in these mutants.
Rather, homozygous mutants performed slightly better than their
wild-type littermates. However, a detailed analysis of motor learning
using a 22 session training paradigm during which mice were required to
cope with an increasingly difficult motor task revealed a significant
motor learning deficit in Munc13-3 mutant mice (Fig.
6B). Repeated-measure ANOVA demonstrated a
significant genotype × session interaction
(F(21,210) = 15.12; p < 0.0001). Tukey's HSD multiple comparison tests showed that, after
the 11th trial, motor learning of mutant mice was impaired
significantly compared with wild-type controls
(p < 0.05). In contrast, learning curves of
mutant mice and wild-type controls were virtually identical during the
first seven trials and not significantly different in trials 8-11.
Thus, all mice improved similarly with training at lower rotation
speeds, but Munc13-3-deficient animals exhibited significant deficits
in motor learning at higher rotation speeds. This demonstrates that the
deficiency of synaptic transmission at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell
synapses of Munc13-3-deficient mice is paralleled by (or even causing)
a deficiency in motor learning.

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Figure 6.
Deficits in motor learning in
Munc13-3-deficient mice. A, Falling latency of
naïve wild-type and mutant mice measured with the rotating rod
apparatus at 40 rpm. Note that falling latency was not significantly
affected by the lack of Munc13-3. Mean values are given
(n = 11). Error bars indicate SEM.
B, Behavioral analysis of wild-type (+/+) and mutant
( / ) mice in the rotating rod motor learning task.
Points represent the mean of the rotation speed learned
to criterion (n = 11). Error bars indicate SEM.
Note that wild-type mice achieved a significantly
(p < 0.05) higher rotation speed than
mutants compared from the 11th session onward.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Deletion mutations in the murine Munc13-1 gene cause a perinatally
lethal phenotype (Augustin et al., 1999b ). The analysis of mutant mice
resulted in the identification of Munc13-1 as an essential synaptic
vesicle maturation protein. One of the most striking features of the
Munc13-1-deficient phenotype was that this essential role of Munc13-1
appeared to be restricted to excitatory-glutamatergic neurons, whereas
inhibitory-GABAergic neurons remained unaffected by Munc13-1 loss.
One possible explanation for the surprising transmitter specificity of
the Munc13-1 priming function was that other Munc13 isoforms (Munc13-2
or Munc13-3) substitute for Munc13-1 in Munc13-1-independent synapses
(Augustin et al., 1999b ). The present study suggests that Munc13-3, the
only Munc13 isoform that is coexpressed with Munc13-1 in the cerebellum
(Augustin et al., 1999a ), is not essential for inhibitory-GABAergic
neurotransmission-vesicle priming in the cerebellum. First, the
overall mild phenotype of mice lacking Munc13-3 is not compatible with
an essential role of Munc13-3 in inhibitory-GABAergic
neurotransmission in the cerebellum because a much more pronounced
phenotype would be expected if inhibitory neurotransmission was blocked
in these mice to the extent observed in Munc13-1-deficient
glutamatergic hippocampal neurons. Second, amplitude, rise time, and
frequency of spontaneous inhibitory postsynaptic responses in Purkinje
cells are normal in Munc13-3-deficient mice (Fig. 4). This indicates
that synaptic vesicle priming at inhibitory synapses terminating on
Purkinje cells is not strongly affected by Munc13-3 loss and certainly
not to the same extent observed in Munc13-1-deficient glutamatergic
neurons in which vesicle priming is completely arrested and, as a
consequence, the frequency of spontaneous release events is reduced by
90% (Augustin et al., 1999b ). However, based on the present data, we
cannot exclude more subtle effects of Munc13-3 loss on GABAergic transmission.
Although Munc13-3 alone is not an essential vesicle priming
protein, it is still possible that a more complex compensatory interaction between Munc13 isoforms is responsible for the striking transmitter specificity of phenotypic changes after deletion of the
Munc13-1 gene. Essentially, neurons in the brain, including GABAergic
cells in the cerebellum, coexpress Munc13-1 with either Munc13-2 or
Munc13-3 (Augustin et al., 1999a ) (I. Augustin and N. Brose,
unpublished observations). Thus, the redundant expression of Munc13-2
in hippocampus (which is devoid of Munc13-3) may be able to compensate
for Munc13-1 loss specifically in GABAergic cells but not in
glutamatergic cells of this brain region. In cerebellum, Munc13-1 may
be able to primarily compensate loss of Munc13-3, the only other
isoform expressed here. Alternatively, multiple and partly
transmitter-specific synaptic vesicle maturation mechanisms may be in
effect. One of these may be dependent on Munc13 isoforms and restricted
to excitatory-glutamatergic neurons, whereas others are mediated by as
yet unidentified proteins. To ultimately resolve the problem of
transmitter specificity of Munc13 action in future studies, it will be
necessary to examine inhibitory GABAergic cells in double mutants.
Here, the ideal system would be the hippocampus of Munc13-1/Munc13-2
double mutants, which will be available soon. Unfortunately, the
problem cannot be addressed in Munc13-1/Munc13-3 double mutants because
the cerebellum, which is the only brain region in which the two
proteins are coexpressed, is not developed at the time when such
mutants die (i.e., at birth).
The present data demonstrate that Munc13-3 is an important regulator of
synaptic transmission at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses. In our
electrophysiological analysis of Munc13-3 mutants, we observed a
significant increase in paired-pulse facilitation at parallel
fiber-Purkinje cell synapses (Fig. 3) with normal synapse morphology
(Fig. 5). This phenotype may reflect a decreased release probability in
mutant synapses and therefore represent a mild variant of the phenotype
observed in Munc13-1. In Munc13-1 mutants, vesicle maturation in
Munc13-1-dependent synapses is completely arrested, leading to total
depletion of the pool of readily releasable vesicles and, as a result,
to a complete block of transmitter release (Augustin et al., 1999b ). In
contrast, vesicle maturation in Munc13-3 mutants may be inhibited only
partially. This may then lead to small reductions of the readily
releasable vesicle pool and the synaptic release probability, resulting
in the observed increase in paired-pulse facilitation. Essentially, this hypothesis implies that Munc13-3 acts at a similar step of the
synaptic vesicle pathway as does Munc13-1, albeit with much less
efficiency. This view is supported by the facts that the two proteins
are colocalized to parallel fiber axon terminals in the cerebellum
(Fig. 2) (Augustin et al., 1999a ) and that Munc13-3 is much less
abundant than Munc13-1 in rat cerebellum (Brose et al., 1995 ; Augustin
et al., 1999a ) (N. Brose and I. Augustin, unpublished observations). An
additional argument in favor of a common priming role of Munc13-1 and
Munc13-3 is the observation that the two proteins are structurally
highly conserved in their C-terminal two-thirds, the so-called R-region
(Augustin et al., 1999a ; Koch et al., 2000 ), in which they both contain
a functionally intact syntaxin binding site (Augustin et al.,
1999a ).
The cerebellum plays a crucial role in the execution of
smooth and skilled movements as well as in more complex behavioral phenomena, such as motor learning. Central to cerebellar function is a
highly ordered neuronal network in the cerebellar cortex, with Purkinje
cells projecting to deep cerebellar nuclei as the only output neurons.
Purkinje cells are thought to have an integrative function in the
control of motor coordination and learning. They have two major sources
of afferent information: (1) climbing fibers originating from the
inferior olive, and (2) parallel fibers originating from cerebellar
granule cells, which receive their inputs from several nuclei of the
brainstem and neurons of the spinocerebellar tract. Numerous studies on
spontaneous and induced mutations in mice demonstrate that an intact
cerebellar network is essential for normal motor coordination. For
example, migration defects or cell loss observed in the cerebella of a
number of mutants are paralleled by strong ataxia (e.g.,
reeler, staggerer, and others) (for review, see
Mullen et al., 1997 ). Also, more subtle developmental and functional
defects in Purkinje cell inputs, such as persistent multiple climbing
fiber innervation after deletion of metabotropic glutamate receptor 1 (mGluR1), G q, PKC , or phospholipase C- 4 (for review,
see Offermanns, 2000 ), may contribute to pronounced ataxia, indicating
that an extremely accurate organization and function of Purkinje cell
inputs is important for normal cerebellar function.
In addition to mutants with obvious changes in cerebellar
cytoarchitecture and severe ataxia, a number of mutant mouse strains have been described that exhibit deficits in complex motor learning tasks despite normal cerebellar cytoarchitecture-ultrastructure and
normal motor coordination in the cage environment. These include GFAP
(Shibuki et al., 1996 ), adenylate cyclase 1 (AC1) (Storm et al., 1998 ),
mGluR4 (Pekhletski et al., 1996 ), calbindin (Airaksinen et al., 1997 ),
and calretinin (Schiffmann et al., 1999 ) knock-outs. In all of these
mutant strains, changes in cerebellar physiology were shown to parallel
motor learning deficits. The observed physiological changes were quite
diverse but invariably involved inputs or characteristics of Purkinje
cells, including impaired long-term depression (GFAP; Shibuki et al.,
1996 ) and long-term potentiation (AC1; Storm et al., 1998 ) at synapses
between granule and Purkinje cells, a reduction in paired-pulse
facilitation ratio at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapses (mGluR4;
Pekhletski et al., 1996 ), and changes in Purkinje cell firing behavior
(Calretinin; Schiffmann et al., 1999 ) or
Ca2+-transients (Calbindin; Airaksinen et
al., 1997 ). In all these cases, the described physiological aberrations
are likely contributors to the concomitant motor learning deficits,
although a direct causal relationship between the observed
physiological changes and the corresponding motor learning deficits was
never demonstrated (mainly because such causal interdependence between
physiology and behavior is extremely difficult to prove unequivocally).
In summary, previous analyses of cerebellar mutants with
mild physiological and behavioral aberrations suggest that many
different types of physiological changes at the level of Purkinje cells and their inputs would cause deficits in motor coordination or motor
learning. Consequently, the unique increase in paired-pulse facilitation ratio that we observed at parallel fiber-Purkinje cell
synapses of Munc13-3-deficient mice (Fig. 3) should result in a
concomitant deficit in motor coordination or learning. Indeed, we found
that the changes in synaptic transmission at parallel fiber-Purkinje
cell synapses of Munc13-3-deficient cerebella are paralleled by a
distinct motor learning deficit of mutant mice (Fig.
6B). Although this deficit is not detectable in the
normal cage environment, it becomes clearly apparent during the
behavioral analysis of complex motor learning using a rotating rod.
Here, Munc13-3-deficient mice exhibit significantly impaired motor
learning when required to adapt to high rotation speeds during a 22 session motor learning paradigm (Fig. 6B), indicating
that a learning or training phase is required to reveal the motor
deficit in Munc13-3-deficient mice. At present, we cannot completely
rule out that effects of the Munc13-3 deletion on basic motor
performance, sensory systems, habituation, or motivation contributed to
the behavioral phenotype described here and remained undetected in our
test system. However, the fact that naïve mutant mice showed
normal falling latencies at a rotation speed of 40 rpm (Fig.
6A) would indicate that the Munc13-3 deficiency does
not result in basic motor or sensory deficits. Rather, the present data
suggest that the regulation of neurotransmission, in particular
short-term plasticity, at the parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synapse by
Munc13-3 is important for the acquisition of complex motor skills.
Because our electrophysiological search was not exhaustive, it is
possible that other changes that were not detected in our analysis
(e.g., subtle alterations in inhibitory synaptic transmission) also
contribute to the motor deficit in Munc13-3 mutants. A very similar
phenotype with normal gross behavior and falling latency from the
rotating rod, but impaired paired-pulse facilitation and motor
learning, was observed in mice lacking the mGluR4 subtype of
metabotropic glutamate receptor (Pekhletski et al., 1996 ).
Interestingly, the direction of change in paired-pulse facilitation
ratios was different between Munc13-3 mutants (increase) and mGluR4
mutants (decrease), although the behavioral consequences of the
mutations were strikingly similar. Thus, together with data on other
cerebellar mutants discussed above, our observations support the view
that different types of alterations in parallel fiber-Purkinje cell
neurotransmission can contribute to motor learning defects.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 28, 2000; revised Oct. 6, 2000; accepted Oct. 11, 2000.
This work was supported by German Research Foundation Grants SFB406/A1
(to N.B.) and SFB406/A10 (to H.A.K. and J.W.H.) and by the
Max-Planck-Society (N.B.). N.B. is a Heisenberg-Fellow of the German
Research Foundation. We thank C. Rosenmund for helpful discussions and
C. Pouzat for the program for analysis of spontaneous synaptic
currents. We are particularly grateful to all members of the
Max-Planck-Institut für experimentelle Medizin Animal Facility for help with mouse colonies, L. Kolb, J. Ficner, and R. Schubert for artwork, S. Wenger for excellent technical assistance, and
F. Benseler and I. Thanhäuser for DNA synthesis and sequencing.
Drs. Augustin and Korte contributed equally to this work
Correspondence should be addressed to Nils Brose, Max-Planck-Institut
für experimentelle Medizin, AG Molekulare Neurobiologie, Hermann-Rein-Stra e 3, D-37075 Göttingen, Germany.
E-mail: brose{at}em.mpg.de.
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