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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 15, 2001, 21(14):5182-5190
Long-Lasting Enhancement of Glutamatergic Synaptic Transmission
by Acetylcholine Contrasts with Response Adaptation after Exposure to
Low-Level Nicotine
Romain
Girod and
Lorna W.
Role
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Center for Neurobiology and
Behavior, Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New
York, New York 10032
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ABSTRACT |
Attempts to mimic synaptic delivery of acetylcholine (ACh) with
brief, repetitive pulses of high concentration ACh at synapses of
medial habenula (MHN) and interpeduncular nucleus (IPN) neurons in vitro elicited temporally distinct facilitation and
inhibition of glutamate secretion via nicotinic and muscarinic ACh
receptor-mediated pathways, respectively. ACh-induced nicotinic
facilitation was sustained for up to 2 hr, whereas muscarinic
inhibition was transient. Prolonged exposure to nicotine inactivated
nicotinic receptors selectively, thus decreasing the relative
contribution of the facilitatory versus inhibitory influences of ACh.
The net effect of ACh in modulating glutamatergic transmission at
MHN-IPN synapses may be determined by pre-exposure to nicotine,
because the drug appears to switch the balance between the facilitatory
and inhibitory actions of ACh.
Key words:
neuromodulation; glutamate; acetylcholine; nicotine; presynaptic; nicotinic acetylcholine receptors; medial habenula; interpeduncular nucleus
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INTRODUCTION |
The cholinergic system in the brain
has been implicated in a variety of behavioral and cognitive functions,
such as working memory, aspects of learning, attention, and arousal.
These actions underlie the interaction of the endogenous
neurotransmitter ACh with a variety of receptors that modulate neuronal
excitability in networks that receive cholinergic afferents (Wainer et
al., 1993 ; Sarter and Bruno, 1997 ). However, the cellular mechanisms underlying this neuromodulation are poorly understood. Although muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) are renowned for their effects in cortical regions affected in Alzheimer's disease, nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) may also contribute to cholinergic signaling in the normal and aging brain. Nicotine alters a variety of
cognitive and behavioral functions through its specific interaction with nAChRs found within the diffuse terminal fields of central cholinergic projections (Woolf, 1991 ; Levin, 1992 ). Activation of nAChRs in circuits related to behavioral reinforcement may underlie
the renowned effects of nicotine as an addictive drug (Stolerman and
Shoaib, 1991 ; Schelling, 1992 ; Stolerman and Jarvis, 1995 ; Rose and
Corrigall, 1997 ; Mansvelder and McGehee, 2000 ).
Nicotinic receptors are found in the cell bodies, dendrites, and within
the presynaptic domains of neurons. Recent electrophysiological studies
have provided direct evidence that nAChRs mediate synaptic transmission
at central synapses (for review, see Jones et al., 1999 ). In addition,
nAChRs are targeted to synaptic terminal and preterminal domains,
consistent with demonstrated effects of ACh and nicotine on the release
of a wide variety of neurotransmitters (Rapier et al., 1990 ; Grady et
al., 1992 ; McGehee et al., 1995 ; Dani and Heinemann, 1996 ; Gray et al.,
1996 ; McGehee and Role, 1996 ; Role and Berg, 1996 ; Wonnacott, 1997 ;
MacDermott et al., 1999 ).
Nicotine interaction with nAChRs facilitates the induction of long-term
potentiation of glutamatergic neurotransmission in the hippocampus
(Fujii et al., 1999 ), as well as in the ventral tegmental area
(Mansvelder and McGehee, 2000 ). Whether similar mechanisms involving
the activation of nicotinic receptors underlie the CNS effects of the
endogenous ligand ACh remains to be determined. In addition, little is
known of how prolonged exposure to nicotine might alter the net effect
of ACh at central synapses in which transmission normally involves
activation of both nicotinic- and muscarinic receptor-mediated pathways.
In this study we investigated the modulation of glutamate secretion by
ACh and nicotine at synapses between medial habenula (MHN) and
interpeduncular nucleus (IPN) neurons in vitro. The MHN-IPN
pathway is part of the limbic system thought to be involved in arousal
and reinforcement (Wilson et al., 1972 ; Wirtshafter, 1981 ). Glutamate
serves as the excitatory transmitter at MHN-IPN synapses (Brown et
al., 1983 ; McGehee et al., 1995 ). We used different patterns of
nicotinic receptor agonist delivery in an attempt to mimic the
modulation of cholinoceptive MHN-IPN synapses in the brain. Our
results suggest that nicotine obtained from tobacco and ACh released at
synaptic sites evoke distinct forms of neuromodulation of glutamate
release that differ in both duration and magnitude. Furthermore,
prolonged exposure to nicotine that mimicked habitual smoking
inactivated nAChRs, thus profoundly altering the neuromodulatory effects of the endogenous transmitter.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cocultures. MHN and IPN were dissected from embryonic
day 11 (E11) to E13 chicken embryos. Dispersed IPN neurons were
cocultured with same-age MHN microexplants. Methods were as described
previously (Role, 1988 ; Gardette et al., 1991 ; Brussaard et al., 1994 ),
except that the MHN microexplants were plated 24 hr before the IPN neurons.
Electrophysiology. Cells were visualized on a phase-contrast
inverted microscope (Zeiss IM 135 TV; Zeiss, Oberkochen,
Germany). The cultures were continuously suprafused with
recording medium with a four-port perfusion nozzle. The external
solution included (in mM): 145 NaCl, 2.5 KCl,
0-1 MgCl2, 2.5 CaCl2, and
10 HEPES, pH 7.4. An IPN neuron, visually confirmed to be contacted by
processes emerging from the MHN microexplants, was selected and
membrane currents were measured using the whole-cell perforated-patch
configuration (Hamill et al., 1981 ) with amphotericin-permeabilized
patches as described previously (Horn and Marty, 1988 ; Rae et al.,
1991 ). The intracellular solution included: 53 mM
KCl, 75 mM
K2SO4, 5 mM MgCl2, 10 mM HEPES, and 200 µM
amphotericin, pH 7.2. Voltage-clamp recordings were performed using a
List EPC-7 patch-clamp amplifier (Medical Systems Corp., Greenvale,
NY). The spontaneous activity was recorded in extracellular solution
supplemented with tetrodotoxin (TTX) (1 µM;
Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA) to block Na+
action potentials. Membrane currents were recorded continuously with a
videocassette recorder (Sony, Tokyo, Japan) through a PCM interface (Digidata 1200; Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). The
currents were digitized with the pClamp 7.0 software (Axon Instruments). Spontaneous synaptic currents (minis) were detected from
the digitized traces, and their amplitude, rise time, decay time, and
frequency were computed with the Mini Analysis Program (Synaptosoft
Inc., Leonia, NJ).
Drug application. The agonists and antagonists were applied
by switching the perfusion medium with a solenoid valve-activated delivery system. Control experiments were performed by switching the
regular medium to a medium diluted 10-fold with water and by measuring
the resulting change of junction potential at the tip of a patch
electrode immersed in the recording bath. It was found that complete
exchange of medium at the site of recording occurred within <0.5 sec.
Nicotine and acetylcholine were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis, MO).
Effects of prolonged exposure to nicotine were studied by adding the
drug to established synaptic cocultures of MHN-IPN (1 µM
nicotine, 1-3 d after coculture). After 24-72 hr, the treatment media
was removed, and electrophysiological recordings were performed in
control solution. Results obtained with 24 and 72 hr nicotine treatment
did not differ significantly and, as such, these data were pooled.
Recovery from prolonged exposure to nicotine examined synaptic
cocultures exposed previously to 1 µM nicotine for 48 hr,
after repeated exchange with 10 times the incubation volume by
nicotine-free culture medium. Cultures were subsequently maintained for
3-24 hr in control, MHN-IPN conditioned media (Gardette et al.,
1991 ).
Statistical assay of synaptic facilitation. Statistical
methods were used to identify synapses that manifested significant changes in transmission after application of either ACh or nicotine and
to compute the time course and magnitude of synaptic facilitation. The
mini frequency was sampled for each innervated neuron as the number of
minis occurring during sequential periods of 10 sec. The frequency bins
were normalized to the average frequency calculated from at least 5 min
of control recording time before agonist application. The average ± SEM of three or six of these frequency bins was calculated to
measure the average frequency during the initial, 1 min or longer
intervals after experimental treatment. Significance of changes in mini
frequency were compared for equal sample size and were evaluated by
Student's t test. Such analysis provided an unbiased assay
of whether a synapse was cholinoceptive, and, if so, of the time at
which mini frequency was significantly changed from baseline (delay for
onset of facilitation), as well as of the time at which the frequency
returned to the basal level (duration of facilitation).
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RESULTS |
Synaptic facilitation by nicotinic AChRs-mediated pathways
Patch-clamp recordings of IPN neurons were used to monitor
synaptic activity at MHN-IPN synapses in vitro. The
recordings were performed in the presence of TTX (1 µM), sufficient to block the occurrence of
superthreshold activity. The remaining TTX-resistant synaptic activity
was abolished by concurrent treatment with the glutamate receptor
antagonists CNQX and APV (McGehee et al., 1995 ). Thus, the synaptic
currents recorded in TTX-treated MHN-IPN preparations reflected the
spontaneous secretion of glutamate (i.e., minis). Before application of
ACh or nicotine, the basal mini frequency was approximately one to two
events per second. The average amplitude of miniature synaptic currents
was 10-20 pA (holding potential of 70 mV), with rising phases <3.0
msec and decay rates fit by single exponentials with values of
~3-6 msec. Consistent with some well established features of
spontaneous release, increasing extracellular tonicity or adjusting
extracellular K+ to 40 mM enhanced the frequency but not the amplitude
of minis recorded (data not shown).
To investigate the neuromodulatory effects of ACh and nicotine on
glutamate release, we monitored agonist-induced changes in the
frequency of minis at MHN-IPN synapses. After a period of control
recording of >5 -15 min, the natural delivery of ACh as it likely
occurs in vivo was approximated by applying short-duration, repetitive pulses of high concentrations of ACh to sites of
neuron-neuron contact (100 msec, 50-200 µM
ACh, 7 pulses at 0.2 Hz). ACh was removed between applications by
local microperfusion in <0.5 sec. In contrast, the more prolonged and
low levels of nicotine, such as those achieved in arterial blood during
smoking, were modeled by applying low concentrations of nicotine
(0.5-1 µM) continuously for 1 min (Benowitz et
al., 1989 ). Both application paradigms elicited statistically
significant modulation of synaptic transmission at a subset of MHN-IPN
synapses (cholinoceptive synapses). Phasic application of ACh elicited
a significant facilitation of TTX-resistant activity at 58% of
MHN-IPN synapses (total number of responsive synapses divided by the
total number of connections recorded), whereas significant inhibition
of transmission was recorded at ~20% of the synapses
(n = 24). In contrast, the effects of nicotine were strictly facilitatory (~40% of tested synapses;
n = 44) (Fig. 1). The
observation that ACh and nicotine did not elicit significant changes in
mini frequency at all of the MHN-IPN synapses tested, as well as the
range of effects elicited by cholinergic agonists at responsive
synapses (see below), suggest that the population of synapses assayed
is not homogeneous (McGehee et al., 1995 ). As such, our criteria for
significance in cholinoceptive responses may result in an underestimate
in the actual number of responsive synapses.

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Figure 1.
Facilitation of glutamatergic neurotransmission by
synaptic-like pulses of acetylcholine and by "smokers"
concentrations of nicotine. A, The electrophysiological
traces in Ai depict glutamatergic minis recorded at an
MHN-IPN synapse in culture, before and after the synapse had been
challenged with seven 100 msec pulses of 200 µM
ACh applied at 0.2 Hz. The frequency plots in Aii and
Aiii illustrate experiments performed at two distinct
MHN-IPN synapses. They show the number of minis per 10 sec intervals,
before and after ACh application. Note the different time scales for
the two plots. The recordings in Ai were taken from the
experiment illustrated in Aiii. Asterisks
indicate the time on the frequency plot at which the
electrophysiological traces in Ai were sampled.
Aii illustrates a synapse in which pulsatile ACh
elicited immediate increase in the mini frequency, which was followed
by a second episode of facilitation that lasted ~10 min.
Aiii depicts a synapse in which facilitation was
protracted and lasted up to 2 hr after ACh application.
B, At two representative MHN-IPN synapses, application
of a 1 min pulse of 0.5 µM nicotine (Nic)
enhanced the frequency of the minis. In Bii, the
frequency peaked and then rapidly declined before the end of nicotine
application, whereas in Biii, the frequency remained
elevated during and up to ~1 min after the end of the nicotine
challenge. No protracted facilitation was seen with nicotine. The
electrophysiological traces in Bi are taken from the
experiment illustrated in Biii. Asterisks
as in A.
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Synaptic current analysis before and after either nicotine or ACh
treatment revealed that they were no significant changes in mini
amplitude at the majority of synapses with statistically significant
changes in mini frequency (data not shown). This finding is consistent
with previous reports of nAChR-mediated presynaptic facilitation rather
than a change in postsynaptic responses to glutamate (McGehee et al.,
1995 ; Alkondon et al., 1996 ; Gray et al., 1996 ; Guo et al., 1998 ).
Facilitation produced by the phasic application of ACh was typically
larger in magnitude and more persistent than the synaptic facilitation
elicited by continuous nicotine (Fig. 1, compare A,
B).
Temporal differences between the responses to ACh and nicotine
application were the most obvious (Fig.
2). The delay for onset of facilitation
(i.e., the time elapsed between the beginning of agonist application
and the time at which a statistically significant increase in the mini
frequency was detected) was typically longer for ACh than for nicotine.
Thus, with nicotine, 83% of facilitated synapses responded during
application of the drug. In contrast, with ACh, less than half of the
cholinoceptive synapses exhibited significant changes in mini frequency
within 1 min of agonist application (Fig. 2Ai). The
average delay in onset of facilitation was 0.7 ± 0.2 min with
nicotine versus an average delay of 1.5 ± 0.5 min with ACh (Fig.
2Bi). The difference in average delay observed with
the two agonists was statistically significant.

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Figure 2.
Quantitative analysis of the time course and
magnitude of ACh- and nicotine-induced facilitation. A,
The graphs depict cumulative histogram distributions of time course
parameters and maximal value for ACh- and nicotine-induced
facilitation. In Ai, the delay for onset of facilitation
is the time elapsed between the beginning of agonist application and
the time when significant increase in mini frequency was observed. Each
data point on the plot is the cumulative percentage of
synapses for which the delay in minutes was shorter than or equal to a
given value indicated on the abscissa. The other plots
in Aii-Aiv were constructed in a similar manner. Right
shifts of the curves indicate larger values of ACh-induced facilitation
compared with nicotine-induced facilitation. These parameters were
calculated at individual responsive synapses as described (see
Materials and Methods). B, The column plots are
average ± SEM of the same parameters as those depicted in
A. Asterisks indicate significant
difference for nicotine versus ACh-induced facilitation.
C, The graphs depict compound averages of normalized
mini frequency measured at synapses that responded either to ACh or
nicotine. For each synapse, the frequency was sampled as the number of
minis occurring in 20 sec bins in Ci and
Cii and in 1 min bins in Ciii and
Civ. Before averaging, the frequency at individual
synapses was normalized to the mean frequency observed before agonist
application. Each data point depicts average ± SEM
normalized frequency. In Ci is shown the average
normalized frequency of 18 synapses (of a total of 44 synapses) that
responded to 1 min of 0.5-1 µM nicotine. In
Cii is shown the average normalized frequency of eight
synapses selected for their immediate response to seven 100 msec pulses
of 200 µM ACh (delay for onset of facilitation 2 min).
In Ciii is shown average ± SEM normalized
frequency of all synapses (14 of a total of 24 synapses) that responded
to ACh. The value at 90 min is the average of 3 of 14 responsive
synapses that were still facilitated at this time. In
Civ is depicted average ± SEM normalized frequency
of four synapses that responded to ACh (of a total of 8 synapses) in
the presence of atropine 0.5-1 µM.
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The rise to peak facilitation and return to baseline mini frequency was
relatively rapid with nicotine. Most nicotine-facilitated synapses
reached peak frequency levels within 2 min of drug application (83%)
(Fig. 2Aii), and the average time-to-peak for
nicotine-induced facilitation was 1.3 ± 0.3 min (Fig.
2Bii). In contrast, only 50% of ACh-facilitated
synapses reached a maximum increase in mini frequency within 2 min
(Fig. 2Aii), and the average time-to-peak facilitation was 7.0 ± 2.7 min (Fig. 2Bii), a
value significantly larger than that found with nicotine.
Facilitation produced with ACh lasted much longer than facilitation
induced by nicotine. With nicotine, the mini frequency remained
elevated for ~0.5-10 min after drug application. On average, the
increase in mini frequency returned to baseline within 3.2 ± 0.7 min of nicotine application (Fig. 2Biii), and the
duration of significant synaptic facilitation never exceeded 10 min
(Fig. 2Aiii). In contrast, ACh-elicited facilitation
lasted an average of 27.5 ± 10.6 min (Fig.
2Biii). Transmission remained significantly elevated
above control levels at >40% of cholinoceptive synapses 10 min after
ACh application. At 21% of cholinoceptive synapses, facilitation
lasted for >1.5-2 hr (i.e., as long as we were able to reliably
monitor activity) (Fig. 2Aiii,Ciii).
The facilitation elicited by ACh tended to be somewhat larger than that
evoked by nicotine at most MHN-IPN connections. The average percentage change in frequency for ACh peaked at 557 ± 159%, whereas that for nicotine was 398 ± 132% above the basal level of secretion (Fig. 2Biv). Although differences
in the average facilitation elicited by ACh versus nicotine were not
statistically significant, the cumulative frequency distributions are
broad. Thus, >70% of MHN-IPN synapses facilitated by nicotine were
enhanced by less than twofold, whereas ACh elicited more than fivefold facilitation at the majority of synapses tested (Fig.
2Aiv).
Prolonged increases in mini frequency by ACh were also
observed at synapses treated with the muscarinic antagonist atropine (Fig. 2Civ), consistent with a nicotinic receptor-mediated
mechanism of sustained facilitation. Analysis of the subset of synapses that exhibited more rapid facilitation by ACh revealed an
initial episode of facilitation, similar in magnitude and duration to that induced by nicotine, preceding the second phase of more sustained increased mini frequency (Fig. 2, compare Ci,
Cii).
Synaptic depression by muscarinic AChRs-mediated pathways
At 21% of synapses assayed, ACh elicited a temporally distinct
phase of synaptic depression during which a net decrease in mini
frequency was evident (Fig. 3). At this
subset of synapses, mini frequency was decreased rapidly and repeatedly
within seconds of ACh application. Recovery from inhibition was rapid,
and activity returned to control within 10-20 sec after the end of ACh
application (Fig. 3A-C). ACh-elicited inhibition of
glutamate release was abolished by low concentrations of atropine (500 nM to 1 µM) (Fig. 3A,D), and inhibition was never
observed when nicotine was used as agonist. These data are consistent
with inhibition of release by activation of presynaptic muscarinic
receptors as reported previously (Marchi and Raiteri, 1989 ; Segal,
1989 ; Sheridan and Sutor, 1990 ; Vidal and Changeux, 1993 ; Barral et
al., 1999 ; Rouse et al., 1999 ). At a subset of cholinoceptive synapses
(13%), ACh produced an initial decrease and then an increase in mini
frequency (Fig. 3C). Concomitant inhibition and facilitation
of synaptic transmission may arise from coordinate activation of
presynaptic muscarinic and nicotinic AChRs on MHN inputs to IPN.

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Figure 3.
Inhibition of glutamatergic neurotransmission by
synaptic-like pulses of acetylcholine. A, The frequency
plot depicts an experiment in which seven 100 msec pulses of ACh 200 µM given at 0.2 Hz produced transient inhibition of
synaptic transmission at an MHN-IPN synapse. A second round
of ACh stimulation applied in the presence of 1 µM
atropine failed to inhibit transmission. B, The
electrophysiological traces were sampled from the experiment shown in
A. They illustrate minis recorded before (top 2 traces), during (middle 2 traces), and after
(bottom 2 traces) application of ACh in the absence of
atropine. C, Average normalized mini frequency of four
synapses (of a total of 24 synapses examined) that were inhibited by
the pulses of ACh. Note that, at the end of the episode of inhibition,
facilitation became apparent, indicating the contribution of both
nicotinic and muscarinic receptors. Frequency bin, 10 sec.
D, Average normalized mini frequency of eight synapses
that were recorded in the presence of 0.5-1 µM atropine.
None of these synapses exhibited detectable synaptic inhibition and
were thus averaged for the plot. Some nicotinic synaptic facilitation
was apparent during the pulses of ACh.
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Effects of prolonged exposure to nicotine
The results presented above are consistent with the involvement of
both nicotinic and muscarinic AChRs in the modulatory effects of ACh at
MHN-IPN synapses. Hence, the net effect of ACh will depend (at least
in part) on the relative contribution of these two general classes of
ACh receptors at individual synapses. Continuous exposure to low-level
nicotine can cause reversible desensitization, permanent inactivation,
and increase in the number of surface nAChRs. The extent of these
effects depends on the receptor subtypes and the cell type in which the
receptors are expressed (Wonnacott, 1990 ; Peng et al., 1994 ; Dani and
Heinemann, 1996 ; Olale et al., 1997 ; Peng et al., 1997 ; Wang et al.,
1998 ; Kuryatov et al., 2000 ). To examine the net effects of continuous
nicotine on responses to subsequent application of nicotine and ACh, we
exposed MHN-IPN synapses to nicotine for sustained periods of time as
described in Materials and Methods. Synaptic transmission in response
to subsequent challenges with either acute nicotine or ACh was assayed within the first 3 hr after removal of the drug and replacement in
nicotine-free recording media. In this set of experiments, we
calculated the average rate of responsiveness to nicotinic agonists
within platings as described in Figure 4.
In a subset of control cultures, an average of 51 ± 6% synapses
was thus found to respond to acute nicotine (Fig.
4A,G; an evaluation of
between-sample vs within-sample variance performed on the entire pool
of synaptic connections compared with that of this subset of
connections revealed no significant difference). After prolonged
exposure to nicotine, the average rate of responsiveness was
significantly reduced (19 ± 8%) (Fig.
4B,G).

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Figure 4.
Prolonged exposure to nicotine inactivates
presynaptic nicotinic AChRs but does not affect muscarinic receptors.
The frequency plots illustrate recordings performed in control
conditions and after prolonged exposure to nicotine. Note the different
time scales in these graphs. They depict average normalized frequency:
A, 12 control synapses that responded to acute nicotine;
B, 19 synapses in which acute nicotine failed to elicit
synaptic modulation after prolonged treatment with nicotine (in the
inset are depicted 5 treated synapses that responded to
acute nicotine); C, 10 control synapses that responded
to pulsatile application of ACh; D, 12 treated synapses
that were unresponsive to ACh (the inset illustrates 3 treated synapses that exhibited responsiveness to Ach);
E, four control synapses that were inhibited by ACh; and
F, three synapses treated with prolonged nicotine that
were inhibited by ACh. Note that, in contrast to control synapses
(E), some level of facilitation did not follow
inhibition after prolonged exposure to nicotine. In G
and H, the data are shown as percentage of synapses that
were modulated by nicotine or ACh, respectively. Columns
depict the average ± SEM percentage of synapses facilitated by
nicotine and either facilitated or inhibited by ACh under the following
conditions: in control coculture (Contr); after 24-72
hr treatment with 1 µM nicotine (Nic);
after 48 hr treatment with the drug followed by 5 hr recovery in
nicotine-free media (R 5 hr); and after 48 hr treatment
with the drug, followed by 24 hr recovery (R 24 hr). To
calculate the average percentage of responsive synapses, the number of
synapses that responded to nicotine or ACh was divided by the total
number of recorded synapses in each culture plating. Then, the ratios
in three to six different culture platings for each condition were
averaged. For convenience, upward columns illustrate the
percentage of synapses that were facilitated in each condition, whereas
downward columns illustrate the percentage of synapses
that were inhibited.
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Because recovery of presynaptic facilitation did not occur within the
first 3 hr after nicotine treatment, we tested whether longer recovery
times in nicotine-free medium would return responsiveness to
pretreatment levels. Synaptic cocultures, previously exposed to
nicotine for 48 hr, were allowed to recover in control medium for
>3-24 hr before assay (Fig. 4G). After ~5 hr in a
nicotine-free environment, there was little recovery of
nicotine-elicited synaptic facilitation or of the percentage of
nicotine-responsive synapses. Full recovery to "pretreatment"
control levels of nicotine-induced synaptic facilitation required
24-27 hr of "drug-free" conditions (percentage of
nicotine-responsive synapses, 48 ± 8 vs 51 ± 6% in control).
Facilitatory responses to ACh (of both short and long duration)
were similarly susceptible to the apparent inactivation of nicotinic
AChRs by prolonged exposure to nicotine. ACh-elicited increases in mini
frequency were detected at only 19 ± 12% of MHN-IPN synapses
subjected to prolonged nicotine treatment (compared with 60 ± 14% of sibling control synapses) (Fig.
4C,D,H). In
contrast, muscarinic AChR-mediated effects were unaltered by nicotine
exposure. Thus, the temporal profile and extent of synaptic inhibition
elicited by ACh was equivalent in control and nicotine-treated
conditions (Fig.
4E,F,H). The net
effect of prolonged nicotine exposure, therefore, is a significant
decrease in the proportion of synapses that are facilitated versus
those that are depressed by subsequent challenges with ACh (Fig.
4H).
Sustained nicotine was without significant effect on other parameters
of glutamatergic synaptic transmission at MHN-IPN synapses. Neither
the basal frequency, average amplitude, amplitude distribution, nor
rise or decay time of glutamatergic minis were altered by prolonged
exposure to nicotine (Table 1). Likewise,
nicotine did not significantly affect either the amplitude or kinetics of currents recorded in IPN neurons in response to direct application of glutamate (300 µM) (Table 1).
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DISCUSSION |
ACh, delivered in repetitive high-concentration pulses, can elicit
both facilitatory and inhibitory neuromodulation of glutamatergic synapses between MHN and IPN neurons. Initially, ACh-elicited facilitation matches the typically monophasic and short-lived effects
of nicotine delivered as when inhaled through smoking. Second, and
perhaps most importantly, ACh can elicit sustained enhancement of
glutamate transmission, an effect that also appears to be initiated by
interaction with nicotinic AChRs. At most cholinoceptive synapses ACh
elicited facilitation that lasted for ~30 min. At 21% of responsive
synapses facilitation was persistent, lasting for >1 hr after
application of a single set of ACh pulses. Finally, phasic application
of ACh, but not nicotine, also elicits significant inhibition of
synaptic transmission at a subset of MHN-IPN synapses. Synaptic
inhibition appears to involve the activation of muscarinic AChRs and
was relatively transient.
Nicotinic ACh receptor-mediated facilitation
Our protocol for ACh delivery was intended to mimic secretion of
ACh from active cholinergic nerve endings. Obviously, the exact profile
of agonist exposure experienced by cholinergic receptive sites in the
IPN is unknown and our protocol reflects a "best-guess" based on
limited in vivo data on central cholinergic activity. Phasic, rather than continuous, application of ACh is likely to better
approximate ACh release during activation of cholinergic neurons.
Different subsets of cholinergic neurons have been found to discharge
intermittent bursts of action potentials (Khateb et al., 1992 ; Alonso
et al., 1996 ; Manns et al., 2000 ), and ACh released from cholinergic
nerve endings is rapidly degraded by acetylcholinesterase.
Morphological evidence consistent with a presynaptic or perisynaptic
release of ACh has been provided in cortical and limbic areas of the
brain (Woolf, 1991 ; Lubin et al., 1999 ). Pulsatile delivery of ACh
producing persistent facilitation of glutamatergic transmission likely
occurs at sites of MHN-IPN contact in vivo, because the IPN
receives the most abundant cholinergic innervation in the brain,
arising from cholinergic nuclei located within the basal forebrain, the
brainstem, and from cholinergic neurons within the MHN per se (Woolf,
1991 ).
This study also attempted to model the effects of nicotine because it
may be delivered with both "acute" (i.e., when smoking a single
cigarette) and prolonged (i.e., in habitual smokers) administration by
cigarette smoking. Smoking results in gradual increases and decreases
of arterial nicotine concentration, which are likely to sum with
repeated administrations (i.e., with each "puff" and with multiple
cigarettes) because the turnover of nicotine is relatively slow. The
maximal drug concentrations achieved are thought to be in the range of
0.5-1 µM (Benowitz et al., 1989 ; Russell, 1989 ;
Henningfield et al., 1993 ). Acute smoking was modeled by applying
0.5-1 µM nicotine to MHN-IPN synapses continuously for
1 min. The drug elicited synaptic facilitation that was relatively short lived and that subsided within minutes of drug removal (McGehee et al., 1995 ; Alkondon et al., 1996 ; Gray et al., 1996 ; Guo et al.,
1998 ; present study).
The most parsimonious interpretation of our results is that acute
nicotine and the pulses of ACh initiate facilitation by similar
cellular mechanisms, that is, by activating presynaptic nAChRs
expressed at MHN nerve terminals (McGehee et al., 1995 ). The following
observations support this view: (1) ACh enhanced the frequency of minis
without changing their amplitude; (2) sustained ACh-induced
facilitation persisted in the presence of the muscarinic antagonist
atropine; (3) both ACh- and nicotine-induced facilitation were
depressed to a similar extent when nAChRs were deactivated by
preexposure with nicotine; and (4) ACh can elicit an initial episode of
facilitation with time course and magnitude that closely resemble those
of the short burst of facilitation induced by nicotine.
Based on these findings and those of numerous other studies, activation
of presynaptic nAChRs, by either ACh or nicotine, appears to promote
calcium influx, indirectly through voltage gated calcium channels
and/or directly through the nicotinic receptors (Mulle et al., 1992 ;
McGehee et al., 1995 ; Gray et al., 1996 ; Lena and Changeux, 1997 ; Girod
et al., 2000 ). The nAChR-elicited increase in intraterminal calcium
thereby initiates presynaptic facilitation, whereas the more prolonged
facilitation observed with "synaptic-like" application of ACh might
arise from downstream effects, such as calcium-induced calcium release
and subsequent activation of second-messenger cascade(s). In addition,
other mechanisms involved in long-term potentiation of glutamatergic synapses (Mansvelder and McGehee, 2000 ) may account for the prolonged changes in synaptic transmission reported here. If the effects of ACh
involve the activation of NMDA receptors, then inhibition of these
receptors as a result of nAChR activation (Fisher and Dani, 2000 ) may
work as a negative feedback mechanism to limit synaptic responses to ACh.
Pulsatile application of high concentrations of nicotine recapitulates
some of the more long-lasting effects of ACh, inducing facilitation for
5-10 min in hippocampal cultures (Radcliffe and Dani, 1998 ).
Persistent enhancement of glutamate release lasting 1 hr or more,
initiated by ACh and mediated via nicotinic receptor activation, has
not, to our knowledge, been reported previously. Although our results
are consistent with ACh causing prolonged enhancement of evoked
secretion of glutamate, such long-term effects could not be
investigated in the present system because stable recordings of evoked
transmission (i.e., >10 min) are rare.
Recent reports have suggested that nicotine can facilitate the
induction of long-term potentiation of glutamatergic transmission in
the hippocampus (Fujii et al., 1999 ) and in the midbrain dopaminergic reward pathways (Mansvelder and McGehee, 2000 ). The present results show that the endogenous neurotransmitter ACh may use similar cellular
mechanisms to promote sustained facilitation of glutamate secretion via
activation of presynaptic nAChRs.
Muscarinic ACh receptor-mediated inhibition
Our observation that synaptic-like pulses of ACh elicited
muscarinic receptor-mediated inhibition of glutamate release at MHN-IPN synapses is consistent with data obtained in other brain regions, including the hippocampus (Marchi and Raiteri, 1989 ; Segal,
1989 ; Sheridan and Sutor, 1990 ; Rouse et al., 1999 ), striatum (Barral
et al., 1999 ), and cortex (Vidal and Changeux, 1993 ). Results obtained
in the hippocampus (Egorov et al., 1996 ; Qian and Saggau, 1997 ) and in
the striatum (Barral et al., 1999 ) indicate that synaptic depression
results from the inhibition of voltage-gated calcium channels by
presynaptic mAChRs. A direct interaction of mAChRs with the secretory
machinery has also been proposed (Scanziani et al., 1995 ; Linial et
al., 1997 ).
Prolonged exposure with nicotine may alter the balance between the
facilitatory and inhibitory effects of ACh
ACh may facilitate or inhibit transmission at MHN-IPN synapses,
depending on whether the ligand interacts with presynaptic nicotinic
and/or muscarinic AChRs. Opposing effects of ACh by activation of
nAChRs versus mAChRs have also been reported in studies of cortical
synapses (Vidal and Changeux, 1993 ). At such sites, the balance of
synaptic facilitation versus depression, and hence, the net effect of
ACh, will be determined by the relative contribution of functional
nicotinic versus muscarinic AChRs. Shifts of this balance may occur in
habitual smokers in which receptive sites are exposed to sustained, low
levels of nicotine that are expected to selectively desensitize or
inactivate certain subtypes of nAChRs (Wonnacott, 1990 ; Peng et al.,
1994 ; Dani and Heinemann, 1996 ; Olale et al., 1997 ; Peng et al., 1997 ;
Wang et al., 1998 ; Kuryatov et al., 2000 ). Habitual smokers seem to
adjust their cigarette consumption so as to achieve stable plasma
concentration of nicotine throughout the day (Benowitz et al., 1989 ;
Russell, 1989 ; Henningfield et al., 1993 ). We modeled habitual smoking by exposing MHN-IPN cultures to nicotine for extended periods of time
(24-72 hr). Prolonged exposure to nicotine depressed both nicotine-
and ACh-mediated presynaptic facilitation, without altering muscarinic
receptor-mediated synaptic depression, consistent with a functional
inactivation of presynaptic nAChRs. Full recovery of nicotinic
receptor-mediated synaptic facilitation required ~24 hr, suggesting
an approximate half-time for recovery of ~10-12 hr. Such slow
kinetics are consistent with proposed models of sustained deactivation
of nAChRs, requiring new receptor synthesis and insertion for full
recovery of function. Similar effects of prolonged exposure to nicotine
were found for nAChRs expressed in reconstituted systems (Whiting et
al., 1991 ; Peng et al., 1994 , 1997 ). Because muscarinic receptor
activation and ACh-elicited presynaptic inhibition are unaltered by
prolonged exposure to nicotine, the treatment shifts the balance toward
muscarinic AChR-mediated inhibition and decreases the contribution of
nicotinic AChR-mediated presynaptic facilitation.
Our protocol for prolonged exposure to nicotine only partially
recapitulates habitual smoking. In contrast to continuous treatment with the drug, a typical day of smoking is interrupted by several hours
of smoke-free sleep. Nevertheless, indirect evidence suggests that,
despite nocturnal interruption of nicotine self-administration, smoking
induces significant inactivation of brain nicotinic receptor. Indeed,
the number of nicotinic receptor binding sites in postmortem brains
increases in habitual smokers (Breese et al., 1997 ; Perry et al.,
1999 ), and surface receptor upregulation has been proposed to be
initiated by inactivation of receptors by chronic nicotine (Marks et
al., 1983 ; Schwartz and Kellar, 1985 ; Fenster et al., 1999 ). Our
results suggest that inactivation of certain subtypes of nicotinic
receptor by nicotine inhaled through smoking may cause a switch between
presynaptic facilitatory and inhibitory influences of central
cholinergic projections.
Overall, these results suggest that activation of central cholinergic
pathways may regulate neuronal networks by producing a combination of
long-lasting presynaptic nicotinic AChR-mediated facilitation and
shorter-term, presynaptic muscarinic AChR-mediated inhibition of
glutamatergic neurotransmission. Furthermore, aspects of nicotine
dependence may involve selective disruption of the nicotinic component
of cholinergic signaling by prolonged exposure to nicotine.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 15, 2000; revised April 24, 2001; accepted May 1, 2001.
This work was supported by National Institute on Drug Abuse Awards
DA09366 (to L.W.R.) and DA05840 (to R.G.). We thank A. B. MacDermott, E. K. Kandel, J. Koester, M. Jareb, Y. Jo, C. Du, P. Devay, and T. Davis for helpful suggestions for this manuscript. We
also thank J. Goldberg for assistance in performing some of the initial experiments.
Correspondence should be addressed to L. W. Role, Department of
Anatomy and Cell Biology, Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1051 Riverside
Drive, Psychiatric Institute Annex 807, New York, NY 10032. E-mail: lwr1{at}columbia.edu.
 |
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