 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, October 15, 2001, 21(20):8154-8163
Decreased Glutamate Receptor 2 Expression and Enhanced
Epileptogenesis in Immature Rat Hippocampus after Perinatal
Hypoxia-Induced Seizures
Russell M.
Sanchez1, 2,
Sookyong
Koh2,
Carlos
Rio2,
Carl
Wang2,
Ed D.
Lamperti2,
Deepak
Sharma2,
Gabriel
Corfas1, 2, and
Frances E.
Jensen1, 2
1 Program in Neuroscience, Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Massachusetts 02115, and 2 Division of
Neuroscience, Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
 |
ABSTRACT |
Hypoxic encephalopathy is the most common cause of neonatal
seizures and can lead to chronic epilepsy. In rats at postnatal days
10-12 (P10-12), global hypoxia induces spontaneous seizures and
chronically decreases seizure threshold, thus mimicking clinical aspects of neonatal hypoxia. We have shown previously that the acute
and chronic epileptogenic effects of hypoxia are age-dependent and
require AMPA receptor activation. In this study, we aimed to determine
whether hypoxia-induced seizures and epileptogenesis are associated
with maturational and seizure-induced changes in AMPA receptor
composition and function. Northern and Western blots indicated that
glutamate receptor 2 (GluR2) mRNA and protein expression were
significantly lower in neocortex and hippocampus at P10-12 compared
with adult. After hypoxia-induced seizures at P10, GluR2 mRNA was
significantly decreased within 48 hr, and GluR2 protein was
significantly decreased within 96 hr. AMPA-induced
Co2+ uptake by neurons in hippocampal slices
indicated higher expression of Ca2+-permeable AMPA
receptors in immature pyramidal neurons compared with adult. In slices
obtained 96 hr after hypoxia-induced seizures, AMPA-induced
Co2+ uptake was significantly increased compared
with age-matched controls, and field recordings revealed increased
tetanus-induced afterdischarges that could be kindled in the absence of
NMDA receptor activation. In situ end labeling showed no
acute or delayed cell death after hypoxia-induced seizures. Our results
indicate that susceptibility to hypoxia-induced seizures occurs during
a developmental stage in which the expression of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors is relatively high.
Furthermore, perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures induce increased
expression of Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors and an
increased capacity for AMPA receptor-mediated epileptogenesis without
inducing cell death.
Key words:
epilepsy; AMPA receptor; glutamate; neonatal; calcium; hippocampus; cobalt
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Hypoxic encephalopathy is the most
common cause of neonatal seizures and is associated with an increased
risk of epilepsy in later life (Volpe, 2000 ). Our laboratory
demonstrated previously that neonatal rats exposed to transient global
hypoxia on postnatal days 10-12 (P10-12) exhibit spontaneous
electrographic and behavioral seizures that result in decreased seizure
thresholds throughout adulthood, thus mimicking clinical aspects of
neonatal hypoxic encephalopathy (Jensen et al., 1991 , 1992 ).
Additionally, hippocampal slices obtained from animals that experienced
hypoxia-induced seizures exhibit long-term enhancement of synaptic
plasticity and ictal-like population discharges within area CA1 (Jensen
et al., 1998 ). The precise mechanisms that underlie these epileptogenic effects of hypoxia in the neonatal brain have not been fully
characterized. However, the AMPA subtype of glutamate receptor (GluR)
appears to play a critical role, because both the acute and chronic
effects of hypoxia can be blocked by pretreatment with an AMPA receptor antagonist but not by NMDA receptor antagonists or by GABA receptor agonists (Jensen et al., 1995 ).
AMPA receptors are hetero-oligomers assembled from four molecular
subunits termed GluR1-4 (alternatively GluRA-D; for review, see
Dingledine et al., 1999 ). In the adult brain, most native AMPA
receptors contain a GluR2 subunit, but in the immature brain, evidence
suggests that the expression of GluR2 is lower relative to other
subunits (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992 ; Durand and Zukin, 1993 ;
Monyer et al., 1994 ). Functionally, recombinant AMPA receptors that
lack a GluR2 subunit exhibit increased permeability to
Ca2+ and other divalent cations compared
with those that contain at least one GluR2 subunit (Burnashev et al.,
1992 ; Hollman and Heinemann, 1994 ). These observations suggest that the
proportion of AMPA receptors that are permeable to
Ca2+ is higher in the immature brain
compared with the adult. However, maturational differences in AMPA
receptor permeation properties have yet to be demonstrated.
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors have been
proposed to play a role in certain neurodegenerative disorders by
allowing excessive glutamate-stimulated
Ca2+ entry into vulnerable neurons
(Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997 ; Weiss and Sensi, 2000 ). In
particular, decreases in neuronal GluR2 expression after a variety of
neurological insults, including prolonged seizures (Pollard et al.,
1993 ; Friedman et al., 1994 ), are thought to result in pathologically
increased and toxic Ca2+ entry through
AMPA receptors. In immature rats, transient knockdown of GluR2
expression by intrahippocampal infusion of antisense GluR2 mRNA was
shown to elicit seizure-like behaviors and neurodegeneration in
hippocampal area CA3 (Friedman and Koudinov, 1999 ). These data suggested that the regulation of GluR2 expression can have critical consequences for epileptogenesis and neuronal injury in early development.
The epileptogenic effects of hypoxia are only observed in the immature
brain (Jensen et al., 1991 ) and are highly dependent on AMPA receptor
activation (Jensen et al., 1995 ). Given a possible relationship between
relative GluR2 expression and seizures, we hypothesized that the lower
GluR2 expression in the immature brain contributes to the age-dependent
susceptibility to hypoxia-induced seizures. In the present study, we
aimed to test the hypotheses that the susceptibility to hypoxia-induced
seizures occurs during an age window when GluR2 expression is
relatively low, and that increased hippocampal excitability after
perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures is associated with further decreases
in GluR2 expression. Additionally, we aimed to determine whether
changes in hippocampal GluR2 expression are associated with changes in
the numbers of Ca2+-permeable AMPA
receptors expressed by principal neurons. Our findings demonstrate that
the dynamic regulation of GluR2 expression during development and by
hypoxia-induced seizures determines the relative abundance of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors and support
a role for these receptors in perinatal hypoxia-induced
epileptogenesis. Notably, in contrast to other paradigms that result in
decreased GluR2 expression, our results also indicate that perinatal
hypoxia-induced seizures do not cause acute cell death, suggesting that
GluR2 downregulation can be associated with epileptogenesis in the
absence of cell loss.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. Male Long-Evans Hooded rats (Charles River
Laboratories, Wilmington, MA) were used in this study. Rats were housed in the animal care facility in a 12-hr light/dark cycle. All procedures were approved and in accordance with guidelines set by the
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
Hypoxia-induced seizures. At P10, animals were removed from
the litter and placed in an airtight chamber on a heating pad to
maintain temperature at 32-34°C. The O2
concentration measured with an oxygen meter placed inside the chamber
was lowered to 5-7% by infusion of N2 gas into
the chamber. Seizure activity produced by this model consists of a
period of myoclonic jerks followed by tonic-clonic activity of the
trunk and neck, and the numbers of both myoclonic jerks and
tonic-clonic seizures were counted by an observer. After 12 min, the
O2 concentration was lowered by ~1%/min until
the onset of apnea. The total duration of hypoxia ranged between 14 and
17 min. Only rats exhibiting at least one tonic-clonic seizure during
hypoxia were used in this study.
Northern blotting and quantification of GluR2 subunit mRNA.
Rats were decapitated, and the hippocampus and frontoparietal neocortex
were isolated and placed in liquid nitrogen. Liver RNA was used as a
negative control. RNA was isolated from tissue blocks as described
previously (Tolentino et al., 1995 ), electrophoresed in denaturing
gels, and then transferred and fixed to a charged membrane using a
modification of the basic Northern blot method that results in
increased sensitivity (Tolentino et al., 1995 ). RNA was hybridized to
32P-labeled DNA. Probes were prepared from
GluR2 cDNA (a gift from Dr. James Boulter, University of California Los
Angeles Medical School, Los Angeles, CA). After hybridization, blots
were exposed in PhosphorImager cassettes and imaged using a Molecular
Dynamics (Sunnyvale, CA) 445 SI PhosphorImager system. Digital
images were analyzed with the IP Lab Gel densitometry and gel analysis
software package (Signal Analytics Corporation, Vienna, VA).
Quantitative data were compared between the hypoxic samples and
littermate controls killed at the same age. Blots were stripped and
reprobed with another subunit probe. To control for variability in
loading and sample handling, we rehybridized all blots with a probe for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), which does not undergo significant tissue-specific changes with hypoxia or
development. Relative values for experimental and control signals from
the same blot were compared using Student's t test.
In situ hybridization for localizing GluR2 receptor subunit
RNA. Rats were killed at 48-96 hr after hypoxia and perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde. Coronal brain sections (20 µm thickness) were
prepared and stored at 20°C until prehybridization.
35S-[ -35S]UTP
(>1000 Ci/mmol; NEN, Boston, MA)-labeled antisense riboprobes for
GluR2 were generated by runoff transcription using linearized plasmid
DNA as a template for T7 RNA polymerase. Transcripts were hydrolyzed to
an average length of 200 bp using alkaline hydrolysis to ensure
efficient penetration of the probe into the tissue sections (Tolentino
et al., 1995 ). Hybridization was performed at 52°C for 18-24 hr in
50% deionized formamide, 0.3 M sodium chloride, 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 5 mM EDTA, 10 mM
Na2PO4-H2O,
pH 8, 10% dextran sulfate, 1× Denhardt's solution, and 500 µg/ml
total yeast RNA with 3.5 × 104
cpm/µl 35S-labeled RNA probe under
parafilm. After hybridization, slides were washed in 5× SSC and 10 mM dithiothreitol at 50°C and in 50% formamide, 2× SSC,
and 10 mM dithiothreitol at 65°C. Slides were rinsed in
washing buffer (two times for 10 min each), in washing buffer and RNase
A (20 µg/ml; Sigma, St. Louis, MO; 15 min), and then in washing
buffer without RNase and then washed at 37°C for 15 min in 2× SSC
and then for 15 min in 0.1× SSC. Sections were dehydrated rapidly and
apposed to high-performance autoradiography film (Hyperfilm; Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech, Arlington Heights, IL) for 55 hr. For
quantification, six consecutive sections spanning the dorsal
hippocampus were selected from each brain (3 control and 4 hypoxia, a
total of 84 sections through 14 hippocampi), images were acquired on a
personal computer, and the relative optical signal density was measured
using a Northern Light Precision Illuminator and Micro Computer Imaging
Device software (Imaging Research, Inc.). The circular measuring frame
was placed over the region of interest to include the pyramidal cell
layer, and six consecutive measurements were taken. The region of
interest was defined as area CA1 proper medial to the point of
transection by a straight line drawn through upper and lower blades of
the dentate gyrus.
Western blotting. Membrane protein preparations were made
according to the protocol described by Wenthold et al. (1992) . Protein concentrations were determined for each homogenized sample using a
Bradford assay (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). Homogenization buffer was added
to bring each sample to the same concentration, and then a Bradford
assay again was performed on the diluted samples to ensure comparable
protein concentrations. Equal volumes of each sample were then loaded
onto gel. The protein was then transferred to a membrane
(polyvinylidene difluoride), and a Coomassie blue stain (Sigma) was
performed on the gel to check again for consistent protein loading
across lanes. Membranes were incubated with polyclonal IgG GluR1- and
GluR2-specific antibodies [initial antibodies were a gift from Dr.
R. J. Wenthold (Wenthold et al., 1992 ), and additional antibodies
were obtained from Chemicon, Temecula, CA], incubated with a secondary
anti-IgG antibody conjugated to 125I, and
exposed in PhosphorImager cassettes. Digital images were quantified
using the IP Lab Gel software, and subunit protein was compared between
control and hypoxic rats using Student's t test.
Detection of DNA fragmentation by in situ end
labeling. Animals were perfused transcardially with 20 ml of PBS
followed by 40 ml of ice-cold 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M
PBS, pH 7.4. Brains were removed, post-fixed for 24 hr, and then
cryoprotected in 20% sucrose overnight. Fifty micrometer sections were
cut on a freezing microtome and processed for in situ nick
translation using a modification of the protocol developed by Wijsman
et al. (1993) and described in detail previously (Weiss et al., 1996 ). Briefly, free-floating sections were incubated in 1[times] SSC (300 mM NaCl and 30 mM
Na-citrate, pH 7) at 80°C for 20 min and then treated for 10 min with
pronase (1 µg/ml; Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Indianapolis, IN).
Digestion was stopped in 2% glycine, and the sections were briefly
rinsed in water and incubated for 1 hr at room temperature with 50 µg/ml DNA polymerase I (Promega, Madison, WI) and 10 µM each of biotin-21-dUTP (Clontech), dCTP, dATP, and dGTP dissolved in buffer A (50 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 5 mM
MgCl2, 10 mM
-mercaptoethanol, and 0.005% BSA). Biotin end-labeled DNA fragments
were detected using avidin-biotin-peroxidase (Vectastain Elite kit;
Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) with nickel (II) sulfate
intensification. Sections were mounted onto gelatin-coated slides,
dehydrated, cleared, and coverslipped in Permount.
Cobalt staining method to assess divalent cation
permeability. Rat pups were decapitated, the brains were removed,
and hippocampus was dissected rapidly and immersed in ice-cold uptake
buffer (in mM: 57.5 NaCl, 5 KCl, 2 MgCl2, 1 CaCl2, 12 glucose,
139 sucrose, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.4, bubbled with 100%
O2). Four hundred micrometer slices of
hippocampus were cut in a plane perpendicular to the septotemporal axis
using a manual tissue chopper (Stoelting). AMPA-stimulated
Co2+ uptake was performed using a
modification of procedures described previously (Pruss et al., 1991 ).
Slices were collected in a Ca2+-free
HEPES-buffered Krebs' saline (in mM: 118 NaCl, 4.6 KCl, 1.2 MgSO4, 10 glucose, and 25 Na-HEPES, pH 7.4)
and rinsed two times for 5 min in uptake buffer. Slices were then
stimulated for 20 min with 100 µM AMPA (Sigma) in uptake
buffer containing 5 mM CoCl2 and the
NMDA receptor antagonist APV (100 µM; Sigma) at room
temperature in an airtight chamber continuously infused with 100%
O2. AMPA stimulation was performed with or
without the specific AMPA receptor antagonist
2,3-dihydro-6-nitro-7-sulfamoyl-benz (F) quinoxaline (NBQX) (100 µM; Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA) or a selective
blocker of Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors,
1-napthyl-acetyl-spermine (100 µM; RBI). Slices were then
rinsed quickly in Krebs' saline and then three times for 5 min each in
Krebs' saline with 2 mM EDTA to remove extracellular
Co2+, and intracellular
Co2+ was precipitated by incubation in
0.2% (NH4)S for 5 min. Slices were then fixed by
submersion in 4% paraformaldehyde for 1-2 hr, rinsed, and stored in
PBS until silver enhancement. For silver enhancement, slices were
transferred to enhancement solution without silver (in mM:
292 sucrose, 15.5 hydroquinone, and 42 citric acid), warmed to 50°C,
and then incubated for 45 min at 50°C in enhancement solution
containing 0.1% AgNO3, added fresh every 15 min.
Slices were then rinsed twice in double-distilled water, dehydrated in methanol:ethyleneglycol monomethyl ether (1:1) for 4-12 hr, and transferred to a warm mixture of 1% cetyl alcohol in polyethylene glycol distearate to be infiltrated overnight at 37°C. Slices were
embedded in a mold containing the same mixture at room temperature. Twenty micrometer sections were cut on a microtome (RM2135; Leica, Nussloch, Germany), mounted wet, air-dried, cleared in acetone, hydrated, counterstained in methylene green, dehydrated, cleared in
xylene, and coverslipped in Permount.
For the quantification of Co2+ staining,
six consecutive sections were selected from the middle third of each
slice to avoid edge artifacts and to minimize data from injured cells
near the slice surfaces. A 250 µm line segment was drawn through the
pyramidal cell layer in the CA1/CA2 region, and the numbers of
Co2+-positive cell bodies that intersected
this line segment were counted. This was done to minimize the numbers
of interneurons counted. Counts were averaged across sections, and the
average counts were compared between the control versus hypoxia-treated groups by Student's t test.
Slice preparation and electrophysiological recordings.
Hippocampal slices were prepared from hypoxia-treated and age-matched control pups 4-9 d after hypoxia treatment, and electrophysiological recordings were obtained using previously published methods (Sanchez et
al., 2000 ). Briefly, after decapitation, the brains were rapidly dissected from the skull and placed in ice-cold artificial CSF (ACSF;
in mM: 124 NaCl, 5 KCl, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 2 CaCl2, 1.3 MgSO4, 10 D-glucose, and 26 NaHCO3, bubbled
with 95%O2 and 5%CO2).
For extracellular recordings, one hippocampus was removed, and 400 µm
slices were cut using a manual tissue chopper (Stoelting) and transferred to a flow-through interface chamber perfused with oxygenated ACSF at 40-50 ml/hr at 33.5°C. For whole-cell recordings, 300 µm slices were cut using a vibratome and incubated in oxygenated ACSF at room temperature. All slices were incubated for 60-90 min
before recording. Field recordings were obtained at 33.5°C, and
whole-cell recordings were obtained at room temperature.
The intracellular solution for whole-cell recordings consisted of (in
mM): 123 Cs-gluconate, 4 NaCl, 2 MgCl2, 10 EGTA, 10 HEPES, 2 Na-ATP, 0.3 GTP, and
0.1 spermine, pH 7.2. Spermine was added fresh to the patch solution
immediately before use. Borosilicate pipettes (4-6 M ) were used to
form gigaohm seals on CA1 pyramidal neurons under visual guidance.
Voltage-clamp recordings were obtained using an Axopatch 200A amplifier
(Axon Instruments, Union City, CA), and data were digitized and
collected onto a computer using the PClamp6 acquisition system (Axon
Instruments). Whole-cell AMPA receptor-mediated currents were evoked by
bath application of kainate (Sigma), and I-V relationships
were determined by subtracting responses to continuous voltage ramps
( 60 to +50 mV in 1.25 sec) before kainate application from responses
to the same voltage protocols during kainate application.
Kainate-evoked currents were recorded with 1 µM
tetrodotoxin (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA) and 20 µM bicuculline (Sigma) in the bath to block
voltage-gated Na+ channels and
GABAA receptors, respectively. Slopes of the
plotted I-V curves were determined by fitting straight
lines over the voltage ranges of 60 to 40 mV and +10 to +30 mV, and
the I-V rectification ratio was defined as the ratio of the
slope measured at positive potentials to that measured at negative
potentials. Rectification ratios were averaged across cells and
compared between control and hypoxia-treated groups using Student's
t test.
For experiments to study in vitro kindling-like
epileptogenesis, field population spikes were recorded from area CA1
stratum pyramidale through glass microelectrodes filled with ACSF
(1-2M ) using an A-M Systems 1800 AC amplifier. Schaffer collateral
axons were electrically stimulated through a bipolar tungsten
stimulating electrode (Fred Haer) placed in area CA3 stratum radiatum.
Input-output curves were obtained by applying single pulses (0-450
µA, 0.1 msec duration) every 30 sec. High-frequency stimulation (100 Hz for 2 sec) was then applied once every 10 min using a stimulus intensity twice that which evoked the largest population spike (typically 700-800 µA). Evoked population spikes were acquired and
analyzed on a computer using SCOPE (Neuropro; RC Electronics), and
continuous data after tetanic stimulation were recorded using Fetchex
(pCLAMP6; Axon) and analyzed using Clampfit 8.0 (Axon Instruments) and
Igor Pro (Wavemetrics).
Quantification of electrically evoked afterdischarges. The
numbers of population spikes evoked by each tetanic stimulus were counted by eye and compared between hypoxic and control slices using a
two-way repeated measures ANOVA. For analysis of NMDA receptor-independent in vitro kindling-like epileptogenesis,
the numbers of afterdischarge spikes were normalized by the number of
spikes in the initial afterdischarge (response to first tetanus), and
the maximum percent increase was determined. Slices were defined as
showing kindling-like epileptogenesis if they exhibited an afterdischarge that was at least a 150% of the initial afterdischarge (i.e., at least a 50% increase), and Fisher's exact test was used to
compare the proportion of slices from each group (control versus hypoxia treatment) that exhibited kindling-like epileptogenesis. Post hoc analyses using different criteria for defining
kindling-like epileptogenesis (ranging from a 20 to 100% increase in
afterdischarge) altered the proportions of slices defined as exhibiting
epileptogenesis but did not alter the statistical significance.
 |
RESULTS |
Maturational and seizure-induced regulation of GluR2
mRNA expression
We first used Northern blot analysis to examine maturational and
perinatal seizure-induced changes in GluR2 mRNA expression. As
indicated by the representative blot in Figure
1, GluR2 mRNA levels were clearly less in
both hippocampus and neocortex of rats aged P10-12 compared with
mature rats aged P60 (n = 5 per group), confirming
previously published findings (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1991 ;
Durand and Zukin, 1993 ). We further analyzed neocortical and
hippocampal tissue obtained from hypoxia-treated and age-matched control animals killed at 10 min and 2, 6, 24, and 48 hr after hypoxia
treatment. In the hippocampi of hypoxia-treated animals, GluR2 mRNA
showed a progressive, significant decline with time, to a maximum
decrease to 50% of control at 48 hr after hypoxia (Fig.
2; p < 0.05, ANOVA;
n = 5 per group per time point). Control experiments
showed no significant change in GluR1 mRNA (n = 5 per
group; data not shown).

View larger version (38K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
GluR2 mRNA expression was found to be relatively
low during the age window of susceptibility to hypoxia-induced
seizures. Shown is a representative Northern blot comparing GluR2 mRNA
levels in P10-12 rat brain with those of the adult. Note the lower
expression of GluR2 mRNA in both the hippocampus and neocortex of rat
at ages P10 and P12 compared with adult (P60). GAPDH was used as a
control and was not significantly different across lanes.
|
|

View larger version (93K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
GluR2 mRNA was significantly decreased within 48 hr after hypoxia-induced seizures at P10. Shown is a representative
Northern blot comparing GluR2 mRNA levels in P14 rat brain from control
animals and animals that experience hypoxia-induced seizures at P10. In
hippocampus, GluR2 mRNA showed a progressive, significant decline with
time, to a maximum decrease to 50% of control at 48 hr after hypoxia
(p < 0.05, ANOVA).
|
|
We next used in situ hybridization to localize the
maturational and seizure-induced changes in GluR2 mRNA. In
situ hybridization revealed clear age-dependent differences in
mRNA expression in principal neurons of the hippocampus, with
hippocampal pyramidal neurons showing lower GluR2 mRNA expression at
P12 compared with P60 (data not shown). Semiquantitative analysis using
densitometry measurements (see Materials and Methods) of sections from
animals 48-96 hr after hypoxia-induced seizures showed that the
seizure-induced decreases in GluR2 mRNA were most evident in principal
neurons throughout the hippocampus, particularly in the CA1/CA2
pyramidal cell layer (Fig. 3).
Densitometry revealed a significant decrease in GluR2 mRNA in sections
from hypoxia-treated animals compared with controls (mean optical
density, 79 ± 3.8% of control; p < 0.03;
n = 3 control animals and 4 hypoxia-treated
animals).

View larger version (20K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
GluR2 mRNA was significantly decreased in the
hippocampal pyramidal cell layers after perinatal hypoxia-induced
seizures. In situ hybridization showed that GluR2 mRNA
was significantly decreased in the pyramidal cell layers within 48 hr
after hypoxia-induced seizures at P10. The most significant decrease
was observed in CA1/CA2 pyramidal cells (arrows).
|
|
Maturational and seizure-induced changes in GluR2
protein expression
To determine whether the maturational and seizure-induced changes
in GluR2 mRNA were associated with changes in the expression of GluR2
protein, we next used Western blot analysis. Consistent with the
Northern blot data, Western blots revealed apparently less GluR2
protein expression in both hippocampus and neocortex at P10 compared
with P60 (Fig. 4). Additionally, GluR2
expression was significantly decreased in both hippocampus and
neocortex in hypoxia-treated animals at 96 hr after hypoxia compared
with age-matched controls (Fig. 5).
Compared with tissue from littermate controls, GluR2 protein was
decreased by 25.4 ± 13.69% in hippocampus (n = 15; p < 0.01) and was decreased by 28 ± 8% in
neocortex (n = 5; p < 0.03) at 96 hr
after hypoxia-induced seizures. No significant changes were observed in
GluR1 protein expression in neocortex or hippocampus.

View larger version (26K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
GluR2 protein expression was found to be
relatively low at an age when susceptibility to hypoxia-induced
seizures is highest. Shown is a representative Western blot comparing
hippocampal GluR2 protein expression in P10 rat with that in the adult
(P60). GluR2 expression was clearly less in immature rat hippocampus
compared with adult.
|
|

View larger version (36K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
GluR2 protein expression was significantly
decreased within 96 hr after hypoxia-induced seizures. Shown are
Western blots comparing GluR1 and GluR2 expression. GluR2 protein
expression was significantly decreased in hippocampus within 96 hr
after hypoxia treatment. In contrast, GluR1 expression did not change
significantly after hypoxia-induced seizures.
|
|
Decreased GluR2 expression is associated with an increase in
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors
To determine whether lower GluR2 expression in immature rat
hippocampus was indicative of a higher proportion of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors, we used the
cobalt-staining technique (Pruss et al., 1991 ; see Materials and
Methods). This histological technique specifically identifies neurons
that express divalent-permeable AMPA receptors by visualizing
AMPA-stimulated Co2+ uptake in the
presence of NMDA receptor antagonists. As shown in Figure
6, exposure of hippocampal slices to AMPA
(100 µM) in the presence of the NMDA receptor antagonist
APV (400 µM) in 2 mM
Co2+-containing medium resulted in many
Co2+-stained pyramidal neurons in P10
slices, with no staining of pyramidal neurons in adult slices.
Additionally, Co2+ accumulation in
immature slices was completely blocked by the AMPA receptor antagonist
CNQX (200 µM; data not shown), indicating that the
Co2+ accumulation had been dependent on
the activation of AMPA receptors. These results suggested that the
lower GluR2 expression in P10-12 rat hippocampus is associated with a
greater number of native Ca2+-permeable
AMPA receptors compared with adult.

View larger version (125K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Co2+ staining showed that the
lower GluR2 expression in the immature hippocampal pyramidal cell
layers was associated with increased numbers of divalent-permeable AMPA
receptors. A, High-power micrograph of the CA1/CA2
pyramidal cell layer in a section of Co2+-stained
P10 hippocampus; B, same for a P60 animal. Clearly, a
large number of pyramidal neurons in the P10 hippocampus exhibited
AMPA-induced Co2+ uptake, whereas no uptake was
observed in pyramidal cells of the adult hippocampus. Scale bar, 20 µm.
|
|
To determine whether the decreased GluR2 expression after
hypoxia-induced seizures resulted in increased numbers of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors, we
performed Co2+ staining on slices obtained
from same-age control and hypoxia-treated animals 96 hr after hypoxia
treatment. As shown in Figure 7,
AMPA-induced Co2+ uptake was observed in a
greater number of neurons in area CA1 in the hippocampi of animals that
experienced hypoxia-induced seizures at P10 compared with those of
age-matched controls. The average number of
Co2+-positive pyramidal neurons per 250 µm (see Materials and Methods) were 4.3 ± 0.8 for the control
group (n = 5 animals) and 12.5 ± 2.3 for
hypoxia-treated group (n = 5; p < 0.02) (Fig. 7). AMPA-induced Co2+ uptake
was inhibited by NBQX (100 µM; data not shown),
indicating that Co2+ uptake required
activation of AMPA receptors. Furthermore, AMPA-induced Co2+ uptake was inhibited by
1-napthyl-acetyl-spermine (100 µM), a selective
blocker of divalent-permeable AMPA receptor channels (Fig.
7C). This indicated that the increased
Co2+ accumulation was likely attributable
to increased entry through Ca2+-permeable
AMPA receptors. These results indicated that the decreased GluR2
expression 96 hr after hypoxia-induced seizures at P10 resulted in
increased numbers of Ca2+-permeable AMPA
receptors in hippocampal pyramidal neurons, particularly in area
CA1.

View larger version (111K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Co2+ staining revealed
increased AMPA-induced Co2+ uptake by pyramidal
neurons in P14 hippocampal slices from animals that experienced
hypoxia-induced seizures at P10 (B) compared with
age-matched controls (A). The numbers of
Co2+-positive neurons intersecting a 250 µm
straight line segment drawn through the CA1 pyramidal cell layer of
each section were counted and averaged (6 sections per animal). The
average numbers of Co2+-positive neurons counted in
this manner were 4.3 ± 0.8 for the control group
(n = 5 animals) and 12.5 ± 2.3 for the
hypoxia-treated group (n = 5; p < 0.02). Additionally, coapplication of the selective antagonist
1-napthyl-acetyl-spermine (100 µM) clearly inhibited
AMPA-induced Co2+ uptake (C),
indicating that the Co2+ entry was at least in part
through divalent-permeable AMPA receptors. Scale bar, 20 µm.
|
|
Altered AMPA receptor current-voltage relationships after
hypoxia-induced seizures
Recombinant AMPA receptors that lack a GluR2 subunit not only
exhibit high permeability to divalent cations but also display inwardly
rectifying I-V relationships (Hollman et al., 1991 ;
Verdoorn et al., 1991 ). For native AMPA receptors, these properties
also are correlated with decreased GluR2 mRNA expression (Bochet et al., 1994 ; Jonas et al., 1994 ; Geiger et al., 1995 ). Because our data
thus far indicated decreased GluR2 expression and increased expression
of divalent-permeable AMPA receptors in CA1 pyramidal neurons, it was
expected that AMPA receptor-mediated currents in these cells also would
exhibit increased inward rectification in their I-V
relationships. To test this hypothesis, we obtained whole-cell
voltage-clamp recordings from CA1 pyramidal neurons in hippocampal
slices and examined the I-V relationships for
kainate-evoked currents. Continuous I-V curves were
generated by plotting the subtracted current responses to voltage ramps
before and during bath application of 200 µM
kainate as a function of the command potential (Fig.
8A,B). Rectification
ratios were then calculated by dividing the fitted slope of the
I-V curve from +10 to +30 mV by the slope at 60 to 40
mV. Some inward rectification in the I-V curves (ratio <1)
was observed in neurons from the control group, but the rectification
ratios were significantly less in the hypoxia-treated group, indicating
increased inward rectification in the I-V curves. The
mean ± SD rectification ratios were 0.93 ± 0.14 for neurons
from the control group (n = 5) and 0.72 ± 0.11 for the hypoxia-treated group (n = 8) and were
significantly different (p < 0.02). Notably,
the degree of rectification for both groups appeared to be intermediate
to that observed for hippocampal neurons that exhibit a type I (linear
or outwardly rectifying) or type II (inwardly rectifying)
I-V relationship for kainate-evoked currents (Iino et al.,
1990 ; Bochet et al., 1994 ).

View larger version (14K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8.
I-V relationships for
kainate-evoked currents showed increased inward rectification in CA1
pyramidal neurons from animals that experienced hypoxia-induced
seizures. I-V curves were generated by subtracting the
current responses to continuous voltage ramps without kainate from
those with kainate in the bath. Representative subtracted currents are
shown for one neuron from the control group (A)
and one from the hypoxia-treated group (B). The
magnitude of rectification in the I-V curves was
determined by taking the ratio of the slopes fitted over the region of
+20 to +40 mV to that over the region of 60 to 40 mV.
C, The bar graphs indicate the mean
rectification ratios determined in this manner and illustrate the
increase in the magnitude of inward rectification for
I-V curves obtained from the hypoxia-treated
group.
|
|
Enhanced AMPA receptor-dependent epileptogenesis after
hypoxia-induced seizures
In immature rat hippocampal slices, repeated high-intensity,
high-frequency (tetanic) electrical stimulation of CA3 Schaffer collaterals results in progressively longer ictal-like population afterdischarges that can be recorded from area CA3 or area CA1 (Stasheff et al., 1985 ). This form of in vitro
"kindling-like" epileptogenesis is thought to depend on
Ca2+ influx through NMDA receptors
(Stasheff et al., 1989 ), because NMDA receptor blockade prevents the
progressive increase but not the expression of tetanus-induced
afterdischarges. Given the above evidence for increased permeability of
AMPA receptors to Ca2+, we asked whether
the pathologically increased numbers of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors in
hippocampal pyramidal neurons after hypoxia-induced seizures could
mediate this form of in vitro epileptogenesis in the absence
of NMDA receptor activation. To answer this question, we examined
population afterdischarges in area CA1 evoked by this type of
stimulation with NMDA receptors blocked in hippocampal slices obtained
from animals at 4-9 d after hypoxia-induced seizures and from
age-matched control animals. In all slices, tetanic stimulation applied
in the presence of the NMDA receptor antagonist APV (100 µM) induced afterdischarges (Fig.
9). As expected, APV prevented the
increase in the number of population spikes in the afterdischarges evoked by repeated tetanic stimulation in the majority of control slices, and kindling-like epileptogenesis (defined as a 50% increase beyond the initial afterdischarge; see Materials and Methods) was
observed in only 1 of 10 control slices. In contrast, increased afterdischarges were observed in the majority of slices from
hypoxia-treated animals in the presence of APV, with 7 of 10 slices
exhibiting NMDA receptor-independent kindling-like epileptogenesis
(p < 0.05, Fisher's exact test). This finding
indicated that the GluR2 downregulation and increased number of
divalent-permeable AMPA receptors were correlated with an increased
capacity for AMPA receptor-mediated epileptogenesis.

View larger version (21K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 9.
Repeated tetanic stimulation in the presence of
the NMDA receptor antagonist APV (100 µM) revealed that
hippocampal slices from rat pups that experienced hypoxia-induced
seizures 4-9 d earlier (at P10) had the capacity for purely AMPA
receptor-mediated epileptogenesis, whereas control slices did not.
Shown are representative field recordings from a control slice and a
slice from a same-age hypoxia-treated animal. Tetanus-induced
afterdischarges were always observed in the presence of APV but
increased with repeated stimulation only in the majority of slices (7 of 10) from hypoxia-treated animals. This type of increase was observed
in only 1 of 10 control slices.
|
|
Hypoxia-induced seizures do not cause acute neuronal death in
perinatal brain
Transient GluR2 knockdown in immature hippocampus was shown
previously to result in both seizure-like events and hippocampal neuronal degeneration (Friedman and Koudinov, 1999 ). To determine whether the GluR2 decrease that resulted from hypoxia-induced seizures
was associated with neuronal death, we used in situ
end-labeling (ISEL) to identify injured or dying cells in hippocampus
after hypoxia-induced seizures. ISEL at 12, 24, 48, 72, and 96 hr and 7 d after hypoxia-induced seizures at P10 revealed no increase in
the numbers of ISEL-positive cells compared with control littermates (Fig. 10; n = 3 per
group per time point). Thus, perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures result
in altered AMPA receptor subunit expression and function in the
complete absence of cell loss.

View larger version (109K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 10.
ISEL revealed no cell injury at any point within
1 week after perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures at P10. High-power
micrographs of the hippocampal CA1 region show no ISEL-positive cells
at 24 hr (A), 48 hr (B),
and 7 d (C) after hypoxia-induced seizures.
D, Positive control hippocampal CA1 region from a rat
that experienced kainate-induced status epilepticus at P45, 3 d
earlier.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Altered GluR2 expression, AMPA receptor function, and hippocampal
excitability after perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures
Our data indicate that perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures result
in delayed changes in the molecular composition and function of AMPA
receptors expressed by pyramidal neurons in the hippocampus. Specifically, we observed that hypoxia-induced seizures in the P10 rat
resulted in significantly decreased GluR2 mRNA expression within 48 hr
and significantly decreased GluR2 protein expression within 96 hr after
hypoxia treatment. In situ hybridization showed that the
decrease in GluR2 mRNA in hippocampus occurred primarily in pyramidal
neurons, especially those in area CA1. GluR2-lacking AMPA receptor
channels are relatively permeable to divalent cations (Jonas and
Burnashev, 1995 ); therefore, these observations implied that perinatal
hypoxia-induced seizures resulted in increased expression of
divalent-permeable AMPA receptors. Staining in hippocampal slices for
AMPA receptor-mediated Co2+ uptake
confirmed this and further showed that increased divalent-permeable AMPA receptors were expressed in the same cell populations that exhibited decreased GluR2 mRNA. Additionally, whole-cell currents evoked by the nondesensitizing AMPA receptor agonist kainate exhibited inwardly rectifying current-voltage relationships, as are typical of
AMPA receptors with high divalent permeability (Hollman et al., 1991 ;
Verdoorn et al., 1991 ). Taken together, these data indicate that
perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures result in delayed persistent changes
in AMPA receptor composition and function that are consistent with
pathologically increased AMPA receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx in principal neurons of the hippocampus.
Our data further indicate that increased AMPA receptor-mediated
Ca2+ influx may contribute to the chronic
epileptogenic effects of perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures. We
demonstrated previously that hyperexcitability persists in hippocampal
slices from adult animals after perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures
(Jensen et al., 1998 ). Here we showed at 4-9 d after hypoxia-induced
seizures that hippocampal slices exhibited purely AMPA
receptor-mediated (NMDA receptor-independent) epileptogenesis in
response to repeated tetanic stimulation. The prevention of this
in vitro kindling-like epileptogenesis by NMDA receptor
blockade only in control slices suggested that increased
Ca2+ influx through AMPA receptors in
slices from hypoxia-treated animals was sufficient to trigger
mechanisms of plasticity that are normally activated by
Ca2+ influx through NMDA receptors. It
also is possible that changes in AMPA receptor function other than
increased Ca2+ permeability (see below)
could have contributed to the enhancement of AMPA receptor-mediated
plasticity, because the precise mechanisms that link AMPA receptor
activation to epileptogenesis in this model have yet to be identified.
Nonetheless, our data indicate that seizure-induced changes in AMPA
receptor permeation properties are associated with increased
hippocampal excitability and may contribute to the long-term
epileptogenic effects of perinatal hypoxia (Jensen et al., 1991 ,
1992 ).
Maturational regulation of GluR2 expression, AMPA receptor
function, and susceptibility to hypoxia-induced seizures
Our previous work demonstrated that the susceptibility to
hypoxia-induced seizures is only observed in rats during a narrow age
window of P10-12 (Jensen et al., 1991 ). Additionally, we previously observed that hypoxia-induced seizures at this age are resistant to
antiepileptic compounds that augment GABA receptor function or inhibit
NMDA receptor function but are blocked by systemically tolerated doses of the AMPA receptor antagonist NBQX (Jensen et al.,
1995 ). Notably, AMPA receptor density as revealed by binding studies in
rat peaks at approximately P10 before gradually declining to adult
levels (Insel et al., 1990 ). These findings suggested a key role for
the maturational state of AMPA receptor expression and function in the
generation of hypoxia-induced seizures.
Our present data indicate that GluR2 expression is developmentally
regulated such that expression is relatively low at approximately P10
compared with adulthood in Long-Evans rats, consistent with previous
reports in other rat strains (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1992 ;
Durand and Zukin, 1993 ; Monyer et al., 1994 ). These observations
implied that higher proportions of neurons in the immature brain
express Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors
compared with the adult brain, and we now have confirmed this by
demonstrating increased numbers of neurons labeled positively for
AMPA-induced Co2+ uptake in P10
hippocampal slices compared with adult slices. The physiological
significance of this developmental difference is not yet known.
Ca2+ entry via AMPA receptors has been
shown to mediate various forms of synaptic plasticity in spinal cord
dorsal horn neurons (Gu et al., 1996 ), cerebellar stellate cells (Liu
and Cull-Candy, 2000 ), and hippocampal interneurons (Laezza et al.,
1999 ). Thus, the higher numbers of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors in immature
hippocampal pyramidal neurons suggest that AMPA receptor-mediated
plasticity in principal hippocampal networks may have an important yet
unknown physiological role in early brain development. Given that the
susceptibility to hypoxia-induced seizures occurs specifically at a
developmental stage in which the numbers of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors are
relatively high and AMPA receptors are expressed at high levels (Insel
et al., 1990 ), a consequence of increased AMPA receptor-mediated
plasticity may be to increase susceptibility to hypoxia-induced
seizures and epileptogenesis.
Role of altered AMPA receptor subunit composition
in epileptogenesis
Our data indicate that the decrease in GluR2 expression by
maturation or hypoxia-induced seizures is associated with an increase in the permeability of AMPA receptors to divalent cations.
Additionally, our data indicate that the seizure-induced switch in AMPA
receptor composition and function is associated with an increased
capacity for AMPA receptor-mediated epileptogenesis in hippocampus,
because in vitro kindling-like epileptogenesis was not
blocked by an NMDA receptor antagonist in slices from hypoxia-treated
animals. The dependence of this form of in vitro
epileptogenesis on NMDA receptor activation in control slices in this
and previous studies (Stasheff et al., 1989 ; Stasheff et al., 1993 )
suggested that the plasticity that underlies this form of
epileptogenesis is mediated by glutamate-stimulated Ca2+ entry, as is generally the case for
NMDA receptor-mediated plasticity (Malenka and Nicoll, 1993 ).
Kindling-like epileptogenesis of slices from hypoxia-treated animals in
the absence of NMDA receptor activation therefore suggested that the
increased AMPA receptor-mediated Ca2+
entry was sufficient to trigger mechanisms of plasticity and epileptogenesis that are normally triggered by NMDA receptor-mediated Ca2+ entry in this model.
It is important to note, however, that AMPA receptors that lack the
GluR2 subunit may differ from GluR2-containing AMPA receptors in ways other than just their permeability characteristics. For example, GluR2 subunits show specific interactions with certain postsynaptic density elements such as
N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion protein (Osten et al.,
1998 ; Song et al., 1998 ; Luthi et al., 1999 ), glutamate
receptor-interacting protein (Li et al., 1999 ), and AMPA
receptor-binding protein (Srivastava et al., 1998 ). These
subunit-specific interactions may generate additional differences in
the localization, function, and modulation of GluR2-containing versus
GluR2-lacking AMPA receptors. Furthermore, studies of recombinant heteromeric AMPA receptors suggest that GluR2-containing AMPA receptors
are likely to exhibit significantly lower channel conductances compared
with those lacking a GluR2 subunit (Swanson et al., 1997 ). Thus, the
alteration in AMPA receptor function after decreased GluR2 expression
that critically contributes to enhancing epileptogenesis may yet be
independent of a change in permeation properties or may depend on a
combination of functional alterations.
Additionally, although our previous work indicated that animals that
experienced hypoxia-induced seizures at P10 exhibit decreased seizure
thresholds into adulthood (Jensen et al., 1992 ), we do not yet know the
complete time course of changes in hippocampal GluR2 expression.
Preliminary long-term experiments suggest that the seizure-induced
GluR2 downregulation may not be long-lasting. During development, the
susceptibility to hypoxia-induced seizures is highest at a time of
heightened synaptic plasticity (Swann et al., 1999 ). It is possible
that GluR2 downregulation at this time could prolong this period of
heightened plasticity and enable the establishment of long-lasting
aberrant synaptic connections. Thus, long-term epileptogenic changes in
hippocampal synaptic function could conceivably arise from even a
temporary decrease in GluR2 expression during early maturation.
Lack of cell death associated with decreased GluR2 after perinatal
hypoxia-induced seizures
Pathological decreases in GluR2 expression have been proposed to
underlie neuronal injury and death in a variety of situations (Weiss
and Sensi, 2000 ). Our present data are the first to demonstrate seizure-induced GluR2 downregulation and subsequent enhanced
hippocampal excitability in the complete absence of neuronal death or
injury. This lack of injury may be attributable to maturational
factors, because the immature brain is relatively resistant to
seizure-induced injury compared with the adult (Sperber, 1996 ; Holmes,
1997 ). Significant neuronal degeneration in immature hippocampus was induced by antisense knockdown of GluR2 (Friedman and Koudinov, 1999 ),
but the magnitude of the decrease in GluR2 expression induced in this
manner appeared to be much greater than that observed after perinatal
hypoxia-induced seizures. This lack of injury may also have been
attributable to the lesser degree of seizure severity in our model.
Other seizure models in which GluR2 downregulation has been
demonstrated, such as after kainate-induced status epilepticus (Pollard
et al., 1993 ; Friedman et al., 1994 ), involve much more prolonged and
repeated seizures compared with those induced by perinatal hypoxia.
Regardless of mechanism, the long-term pro-epileptic changes in brain
function that result from perinatal hypoxia-induced seizures represent
a form of pure epileptogenesis without compensatory responses to cell
loss; therefore, the associated decrease in GluR2 expression and
alterations in AMPA receptor function strongly argue for their
potential contribution to epileptogenesis in the immature brain. The
mechanism of injury after GluR2 downregulation has been postulated to
be an overload of AMPA receptor-mediated Ca2+ entry into neurons that do not have
adequate Ca2+-buffering mechanisms (Weiss
and Sensi, 2000 ; Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997 ).
Summary
Our findings indicate that the dynamic expression of the AMPA
receptor subunit GluR2 is inversely correlated with the expression of
Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors in
hippocampus. Our data further confirm that GluR2 expression is
regulated by maturation such that the susceptibility to hypoxia-induced
seizures is highest when the total expression of AMPA receptors is high
and the expression of GluR2 is relatively low. Furthermore, perinatal
hypoxia-induced seizures result in further decreased GluR2 expression
that is associated with altered AMPA receptor properties and increased divalent permeability. The changes in AMPA receptor function are further associated with enhanced NMDA receptor-independent
epileptogenesis in immature hippocampus. Because perinatal
hypoxia-induced seizures do not result in hippocampal
neurodegeneration, this decreased GluR2 expression and enhanced
epileptogenesis cannot be compensatory responses to cell loss;
therefore, GluR2 downregulation is associated only with hippocampal
epileptogenesis in this setting. Although increased AMPA
receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx is the most
likely mechanism contributing to enhanced epileptogenesis after GluR2
downregulation, other functional properties of GluR2-deficient AMPA
receptors may contribute as well. Identification of the mechanisms by
which GluR2 expression is downregulated after perinatal seizures and
the specific functional changes that contribute to epileptogenesis in
the developing brain may lead to more specific strategies to treat
neonatal hypoxic encephalopathy to minimize the risk of epilepsy.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 23, 2001; revised June 5, 2001; accepted July 26, 2001.
This research was supported by National Research Service Award AG00222
from the National Institute on Aging (R.M.S.), by an Epilepsy
Foundation of America research training fellowship (R.M.S.), by
National Institutes of Health Grants K08 NS02068 (S.K.) and R01 NS31718
(F.E.J.) from the National Institute on Neurological Disorders and
Stroke, by grants from the Klingenstein Foundation (G.C.) and the EJLB
Foundation (G.C.), and by Children's Hospital Mental Retardation
Research Center Grant P30 HD18655 from the National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development. We thank Dr. Robert J. Wenthold for
generously providing glutamate receptor antibodies. We also thank
Matthew Corbett, David Hershberger, Elijah Owens, and Jorge Benzecry
for contributing to this work.
R.M.S. and S.K. contributed equally to this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Frances E. Jensen, Division
of Neuroscience, Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA
02115. E-mail: jensen{at}a1.tch.harvard.edu.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Bochet P,
Audinat E,
Lambolez B,
Crepel F,
Rossier J,
Iino M,
Tsuzuki K,
Ozawa S
(1994)
Subunit composition at the single-cell level explains functional properties of a glutamate-gated channel.
Neuron
12:383-388[ISI][Medline].
-
Burnashev N,
Monyer H,
Seeburg PH,
Sakmann B
(1992)
Divalent ion permeability of AMPA receptor channels is dominated by the edited form of a single subunit.
Neuron
8:189-198[ISI][Medline].
-
Dingledine R,
Borges K,
Bowie D,
Traynelis SF
(1999)
The glutamate receptor ion channels.
Pharmacol Rev
51:7-61[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Durand GM,
Zukin RS
(1993)
Developmental regulation of RNAs encoding rat brain kainate/AMPA receptors: a Northern analysis study.
J Neurochem
61:2239-2246[ISI][Medline].
-
Friedman LK,
Koudinov AR
(1999)
Unilateral GluR2(B) hippocampal knockdown: a novel partial seizure model in the developing rat.
J Neurosci
19:9412-9425[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Friedman LK,
Pellegrini-Giampietro DE,
Sperber EF,
Bennet MVL,
Moshe SL,
Zukin RS
(1994)
Kainate-induced status epilepticus alters glutamate and GABAA receptor gene expression in adult rat hippocampus: an in situ hybridization study.
J Neurosci
14:2697-2707[Abstract].
-
Geiger JR,
Melcher T,
Koh DS,
Sakmann B,
Seeburg PH,
Jonas P,
Monyer H
(1995)
Relative abundance of subunit mRNAs determines gating and Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors in principal neurons and interneurons in rat CNS.
Neuron
15:193-204[ISI][Medline].
-
Gu JG,
Albuquerque CJ,
Lee CJ,
MacDermott AB
(1996)
Synaptic strengthening through activation of Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors.
Nature
381:793-796[Medline].
-
Hollman M,
Heinemann S
(1994)
Cloned glutamate receptors.
Annu Rev Neurosci
17:31-108[ISI][Medline].
-
Hollman M,
Hartley M,
Heinemann S
(1991)
Ca2+ permeability of KA-AMPA-gated glutamate receptor channels depends on subunit composition.
Science
252:851-853[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Holmes GL
(1997)
Epilepsy in the developing brain: lessons from the laboratory and clinic.
Epilepsia
38:12-30[ISI][Medline].
-
Iino M,
Ozawa S,
Tsuzuki K
(1990)
Permeation of calcium through excitatory amino acid receptor channels in cultured rat hippocampal neurones.
J Physiol (Lond)
424:151-165[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Insel TR,
Miller LP,
Gelhard RE
(1990)
The ontogeny of excitatory amino acid receptors in the rat forebrain I: N-methyl-D-aspartate and quisqualate receptors.
Neuroscience
35:31-43[ISI][Medline].
-
Jensen FE,
Applegate CD,
Holtzman D,
Belin T,
Burchfiel J
(1991)
Epileptogenic effects of hypoxia on immature rodent brain.
Ann Neurol
29:629-637[ISI][Medline].
-
Jensen FE,
Holmes GH,
Lombroso CT,
Blume H,
Firkusny I
(1992)
Age dependent long term changes in seizure susceptibility and neurobehavior following hypoxia in the rat.
Epilepsia
33:971-980[ISI][Medline].
-
Jensen FE,
Alvarado S,
Firkusny IR,
Geary C
(1995)
NBQX blocks the acute and late epileptogenic effects of perinatal hypoxia.
Epilepsia
36:966-972[ISI][Medline].
-
Jensen FE,
Wang C,
Stafstrom CE,
Liu Z,
Geary C,
Stevens MC
(1998)
Acute and chronic increases in excitability in rat hippocampal slices after perinatal hypoxia in vivo.
J Neurophysiol
79:73-81[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Jonas P,
Burnashev N
(1995)
Molecular mechanisms controlling calcium entry through AMPA-type glutamate receptor channels.
Neuron
15:987-990[ISI][Medline].
-
Jonas P,
Racca C,
Sakmann B,
Seeburg PH,
Monyer H
(1994)
Differences in Ca2+ permeability of AMPA-type glutamate receptor channels in neocortical neurons caused by differential GluR-B subunit expression.
Neuron
12:1281-1289[ISI][Medline].
-
Laezza F,
Doherty JJ,
Dingledine R
(1999)
Long-term depression in hippocampal interneurons: joint requirement for pre- and postsynaptic events.
Science
285:1411-1414[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Li P,
Kerchner GA,
Sala C,
Wei F,
Huettner JE,
Sheng M,
Zhuo M
(1999)
AMPA receptor-PDZ interactions in facilitation of spinal sensory synapses.
Nat Neurosci
2:972-977[ISI][Medline].
-
Liu SQ,
Cull-Candy SG
(2000)
Synaptic activity at calcium-permeable AMPA receptors induces a switch in receptor subtype.
Nature
405:454-458[Medline].
-
Luthi A,
Chittajallu R,
Duprat F,
Palmer MJ,
Benke TA,
Kidd FL,
Henley JM,
Isaac JT,
Collingridge GL
(1999)
Hippocampal LTD expression involves a pool of AMPARs regulated by the NSF-GluR2 interaction.
Neuron
24:389-399[ISI][Medline].
-
Malenka RC,
Nicoll RA
(1993)
NMDA-receptor-dependent synaptic plasticity: multiple forms and mechanisms.
Trends Neurosci
16:521-527[ISI][Medline].
-
Monyer H,
Burnashev N,
Laurie DJ,
Sakmann B,
Seeburg PH
(1994)
Developmental and regional expression in the rat brain and functional properties of four NMDA receptors.
Neuron
12:529-540[ISI][Medline].
-
Osten P,
Srivastava S,
Inman GJ,
Vilim FS,
Khatri L,
Lee LM,
States BA,
Einheber S,
Milner TA,
Hanson PI,
Ziff EB
(1998)
The AMPA receptor GluR2 C terminus can mediate a reversible, ATP-dependent interaction with NSF and alpha- and beta-SNAPs.
Neuron
21:99-110[ISI][Medline].
-
Pellegrini-Giampietro DE,
Bennett MVL,
Zukin RS
(1991)
Differential expression of three glutamate receptor genes in developing rat brain: an in situ hybridization study.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
88:4157-4161[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Pellegrini-Giampietro DE,
Bennett MVL,
Zukin RS
(1992)
Are Ca2+-permeable kainate/AMPA receptors more abundant in immature brain?
Neurosci Lett
144:65-69[ISI][Medline].
-
Pellegrini-Giampietro DE,
Gorter JA,
Bennett MVL,
Zukin RS
(1997)
The GluR2 (GluR-B) hypothesis: Ca(2+)-permeable AMPA receptors in neurological disorders.
Trends Neurosci
20:464-470[ISI][Medline].
-
Pollard H,
Heron A,
Moreau J,
Ben-Ari Y,
Khrestchatisky M
(1993)
Alteration of the GluR-B AMPA receptor subunit flip/flop expression in kainate-induced epilepsy and ischemia.
Neuroscience
57:545-554[ISI][Medline].
-
Pruss RM,
Akeson RL,
Racke MM,
Wilburn JL
(1991)
Agonist-activated cobalt uptake identifies divalent cation permeable kainate receptors on neurons and glia.
Neuron
7:509-518[ISI][Medline].
-
Sanchez RM,
Wang C,
Gardner G,
Orlando L,
Tauck DL,
Rosenberg PA,
Aizenman E,
Jensen FE
(2000)
Novel role for the NMDA receptor redox modulatory site in the pathophysiology of seizures.
J Neurosci
20:2409-2417[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Song I,
Kamboj S,
Xia J,
Dong H,
Liao D,
Huganir RL
(1998)
Interaction of the N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor with AMPA receptors.
Neuron
21:393-400[ISI][Medline].
-
Sperber EF
(1996)
The relationship between seizures and damage in the maturing brain.
Epilepsy Res
S12:365-376.
-
Srivastava S,
Osten P,
Vilim FS,
Khatri L,
Inman G,
States B,
Daly C,
DeSouza S,
Abagyan R,
Valtschanoff JG,
Weinberg RJ,
Ziff EB
(1998)
Novel anchorage of GluR2/3 to the postsynaptic density by the AMPA receptor-binding protein ABP.
Neuron
21:581-591[ISI][Medline].
-
Stasheff SF,
Bragdon AC,
Wilson WA
(1985)
Induction of epileptiform activity in hippocampal slices by trains of electrical stimuli.
Brain Res
344:296-302[ISI][Medline].
-
Stasheff SF,
Anderson WW,
Clark S,
Wilson WA
(1989)
NMDA antagonists differentiate epileptogenesis from seizure expression in an in vitro model.
Science
245:648-651[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Stasheff SF,
Mott D,
Wilson WA
(1993)
Axon terminal hyperexcitability associated with epileptogenesis in vitro. II. Pharmacological regulation by NMDA and GABAA receptors.
J Neurophysiol
70:976-984[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Swann JW,
Pierson MG,
Smith KL,
Lee CL
(1999)
Developmental neuroplasticity: roles in early life seizures and chronic epilepsy.
Adv Neurol
79:203-216[Medline].
-
Swanson GT,
Kamboj SK,
Cull-Candy SG
(1997)
Single-channel properties of recombinant AMPA receptors depend on RNA editing, splice variation, and subunit composition.
J Neurosci
17:58-69[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Tolentino PJ,
Dikkes P,
Tsuruda L,
Ebert K,
Fink JS,
Villa-Komaroff L,
Lamperti ED
(1995)
Quantitative analysis of the expression of a VIP transgene.
Brain Res Mol Brain Res
33:47-60[Medline].
-
Verdoorn TA,
Burnashev N,
Monyer H,
Seeburg PH,
Sakmann B
(1991)
Structural determinants of ion flow through recombinant glutamate receptor channels.
Science
252:1715-1718[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Volpe JJ
(2000)
Neonatal seizures.
In: Neurology of the newborn, pp 178-214 Philadelphia: Saunders.
|