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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 2002, 22(11):4456-4467
Developmental Regulation of Small-Conductance
Ca2+-Activated K+ Channel Expression and
Function in Rat Purkinje Neurons
Lorenzo A.
Cingolani1,
Marco
Gymnopoulos1,
Anna
Boccaccio1,
Martin
Stocker1, 2, and
Paola
Pedarzani1, 3
1 Max-Planck-Institute for Experimental Medicine, 37075 Göttingen, Germany, and 2 Wellcome Laboratory for
Molecular Pharmacology, Department of Pharmacology, and
3 Department of Physiology, University College London,
London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
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ABSTRACT |
Calcium transients play an important role in the early and later
phases of differentiation and maturation of single neurons and neuronal
networks. Small-conductance calcium-activated potassium channels of the
SK type modulate membrane excitability and are important
determinants of the firing properties of central neurons. Increases in
the intracellular calcium concentration activate SK channels, leading
to a hyperpolarization of the membrane potential, which in turn reduces
the calcium inflow into the cell. This feedback mechanism is ideally
suited to regulate the spatiotemporal occurrence of calcium transients.
However, the role of SK channels in neuronal development has not been
addressed so far. We have concentrated on the ontogenesis and function
of SK channels in the developing rat cerebellum, focusing particularly
on Purkinje neurons.
Electrophysiological recordings combined with specific pharmacological
tools have revealed for the first time the presence of an
afterhyperpolarizing current (IAHP)
in immature Purkinje cells in rat cerebellar slices. The channel
subunits underlying this current were identified as SK2 and localized
by in situ hybridization and subunit-specific
antibodies. Their expression level was shown to be high at birth and
subsequently to decline during the first 3 weeks of postnatal life,
both at the mRNA and protein levels. This developmental regulation was
tightly correlated with the expression of
IAHP and the prominent role of SK2 channels
in shaping the spontaneous firing pattern in young, but not in adult,
Purkinje neurons. These results provide the first evidence of the
developmental regulation and function of SK channels in central neurons.
Key words:
SK channel; afterhyperpolarization; apamin; calcium-activated potassium current; development; Purkinje neurons
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INTRODUCTION |
Neuronal development involves
dramatic changes in both the morphology and excitable membrane
properties of the differentiating neurons. In particular, calcium
(Ca2+) transients with various
spatiotemporal features have been shown to be involved in the early and
later phases of differentiation and maturation of single
neurons and neuronal networks (for reviews, see Spitzer, 1994 ;
O'Donovan, 1999 ; Ben-Ari, 2001 ). Work performed on Xenopus
spinal neurons has revealed that potassium
(K+) currents, mainly of the
voltage-dependent type, play a pivotal role in the maturation
of the action potential and of the neuronal firing behavior
(Spitzer and Ribera, 1998 ; Ribera, 1999 ). Small-conductance Ca2+-activated
K+ channels (Kohler et al., 1996 ; Joiner
et al., 1997 ) regulate the firing properties of neurons in the CNS
(Sah, 1996 ). Given their high sensitivity to
Ca2+, they are ideally suited to regulate
the spatiotemporal features of Ca2+
transients by a feedback mechanism, but their role in neuronal development has not been addressed so far.
The rat cerebellum is an ideal system for studying the functional
impact of different ion channels during neuronal development, because
it is immature at birth and develops rapidly in the first weeks of
postnatal life. Purkinje cells provide the sole cerebellar efferent
pathway. Their differentiation involves complex interaction between
intrinsic and extrinsic programs (Hatten and Heintz, 1995 ; Goldowitz
and Hamre, 1998 ) and can be divided into three general phases, which
are completed within the first 3 weeks of postnatal development, and
during which Purkinje neurons organize themselves into a discrete
monolayer and progressively develop their typical, elaborated dendritic
tree and synaptic contacts (Uzman, 1960 ; Altman, 1972 ; Altman and
Bayer, 1997 ). Spontaneous activity in vivo can be observed
in rat Purkinje cells already at postnatal day (P) 1-2, and it matures
progressively in terms of frequency and regularity of the firing
pattern over the first 3 postnatal weeks, reaching values comparable
with the adult ones (Woodward et al., 1969 ; Latham and Paul, 1971 ;
Crepel, 1972 ).
Intracellular Ca2+ transients play a major
signaling role throughout postnatal development, as well as in adult
Purkinje cells (Tank et al., 1988 ; Gruol et al., 1992 ; Miyakawa et al.,
1992 ; Eilers et al., 1996 ). A number of studies have addressed the
developmental regulation of components essential for
Ca2+ signaling in Purkinje neurons, such
as Ca2+ channels (Regan, 1991 ; Gruol et
al., 1992 ; Falk et al., 1999 ), pumps (Takei et al., 1992 ; Strehler and
Zacharias, 2001 ), Ca2+ binding proteins
(Iacopino et al., 1990 ; Solbach and Celio, 1991 ; Ni et al., 1992 ;
Milosevic and Zecevic, 1998 ; Spilker et al., 2000 ), and
Ca2+ buffering capacity (Fierro and Llano,
1996 ). Additionally, the role of large-conductance
Ca2+- and voltage-dependent
K+ channels (BK type) in the
maturation of Purkinje cells has been studied extensively in cultured
preparations (Muller et al., 1998 , 2000 ; Muller and Yool, 1998 ).
This study focuses on a family of small-conductance
Ca2+-activated
K+ channels, the SK channels, that
are ideally suited to modulate calcium transients. By combining
eletrophysiological recordings in rat cerebellar slices with in
situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, we have demonstrated
for the first time the presence of an afterhyperpolarizing current
(IAHP) and the expression of the
underlying apamin-sensitive Ca2+-activated
SK channels in Purkinje neurons at early developmental stages.
Furthermore, this study presents the first evidence of a tight
developmental regulation of SK channel expression and provides evidence
for a prominent and specific role of these channels in the regulation
of the firing properties of Purkinje cells during the first weeks of
postnatal development.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
In situ hybridization. In situ
hybridization was performed on sagittal brain sections (10-16 µm)
from three male Wistar rats of different breeding pairs at the
following postnatal ages: P1, P3, P6, P12, P24, and P60 (P1 being the
day of birth), using 35S-labeled antisense
and sense oligonucleotide probes according to the procedure described
in detail by Stocker and Pedarzani (2000) . The sequences of
subunit-specific sense and antisense oligonucleotides used in this
study were identical to those used and described previously (Stocker
and Pedarzani, 2000 ).
The following control experiments were performed. First, adjacent
sections were hybridized with labeled sense oligonucleotides to
determine the general nonspecific background. Second, the specificity of the probes was controlled by performing competition experiments with
a 500-fold excess unlabeled oligonucleotide included in the hybridization mixture. This control experiment did not result in
detectable signal at any developmental stage (data not shown). Finally,
the oligonucleotide probes selected for this study had been used
previously to analyze the distribution of SK channel transcripts in the
adult rat brain (see Fig. 1, P60 panels) (Stocker and
Pedarzani, 2000 ). On adult brain sections, identical hybridization patterns had been obtained with a second set of oligonucleotide probes
for every SK channel subunit. This indicated that these independent
probes recognized the same gene product, ruling out the possibility of
spurious cross-reactivity (Stocker and Pedarzani, 2000 ).
Antibody production and purification. Subunit specific
antibodies against the amino- (anti-NSK2) and the C- (anti-CSK2)
terminus of the SK2 subunit (GenBank accession no. U69882) were
generated. The N-terminal sequence of SK2, corresponding to amino acid
23-83, was amplified by PCR and cloned into the bacterial expression vector pGEX-2T. After induction, the glutathione
S-transferase-NSK2 fusion protein was purified by standard
procedures and lyophilized. Polyclonal rabbit antisera were generated
by a standard protocol for anti-NSK2 at Biogenes (Berlin, Germany).
The anti-NSK2 antibody was affinity purified using the pET-NSK2 fusion
protein, comprising the same channel region used to generate the
antibody inserted into the pET32 (Novagen, Madison, WI). All constructs
were confirmed by sequencing. The pET-NSK2 fusion protein was
overexpressed in Escherichia coli (BL21-DE3), purified using
Ni-NTA agarose (Quiagen, Hilden, Germany) following the manufacturer's
recommendations, and adsorbed to nitrocellulose membrane (Schleicher
und Schuell, Dassel, Germany). After blocking (5% low-fat milk powder
in PBS, 2 hr), the membrane was incubated with the antiserum at 4°C
overnight. Anti-NSK2 was eluted with an acidic buffer, pH 2.5, containing 0.2 M glycine, 150 mM NaCl, and 1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin (BSA)
and subsequently desalted (NAP10 columns, Amersham Biosciences,
Freiburg, Germany).
Western blot. Human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK-293) cells
were transiently transfected with the rat SK2 subunit cloned into pcDNA3 (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen). After 24 hr, cells were extracted at 4°C with a buffer
containing 10 mM Tris-HCl, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM DTT, 6.5%
SDS, at pH 6.8, supplemented with a protease inhibitor mixture
(Complete Mini tablet; Roche Diagnostics), and proteins were
solubilized by sonication. The protein concentration of the soluble
fraction was determined with the BCA Protein Assay Kit (Pierce,
Rockford, IL). Proteins (2-5 µg) were separated on a 10% SDS
polyacrylamide gel and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane
(Hybond-ECL, Amersham Biosciences). Western blotting was performed
using the ECL chemoluminescent system (Amersham Biosciences). Blocking
was performed in 5% low-fat milk powder and 5% normal goat serum
(NGS) in PBS plus 0.1% Tween 20 for 30 min. The purified anti-NSK2 and
the anti-CSK2 antibodies were used at a dilution of 1:500. Anti-rabbit
horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody (Bio-Rad,
Hercules, CA) was used at a dilution of 1:5000. Blots were exposed to
film for 0.5-2 min.
Controls were performed in parallel where either the primary antibody
was omitted or purified anti-NSK2 antibody was preincubated with
pET-NSK2 (10-20 µg/ml, 8-16 hr, 4°C).
Immunofluorescence on HEK-293 cells expressing SK channels.
Stably transfected cells were plated onto poly-lysine-coated coverslips for 48-72 hr, washed in PBS, and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (10 min). After permeabilization (0.2% Triton X-100) and washing, cells
were preblocked (10% calf serum, 3% BSA, 37°C, 30 min). Next, the
purified anti-NSK2 or the anti-CSK2 antibodies were applied (1:500, 1 hr, 37°C). After repeated washes with PBS, the secondary
FITC-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit antibody (1:500, Amersham
Biosciences, Arlington Heights, IL) was applied (30 min, 37°C).
Coverslips were mounted and immunostaining was visualized with a
fluorescence microscope (Axioscope, Zeiss), and pictures were taken
with a CCD camera (SPOT, Diagnostic Instruments, Inc.).
Immunohistochemistry. Male Wistar rats were anesthetized
with a mixture of ketamine HCl (Ketaset, 100 mg/ml; Fort Dodge
Laboratories Inc.) and xylazine (Rompum, 20 mg/ml; Miles, Elkhart, IN)
at 0.1 ml/100 gm of body weight. The animals were transcardially
perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.12 M
phosphate buffer, pH 7.35. After perfusion, brains were removed, fixed
for an additional hour at 4°C, and rinsed three times in PBS.
Sagittal sections (50 µm thick) were cut in cold PBS using a
Vibratome (Leica VT1000S, Nussloch, Germany) and incubated for 1 hr in
PBS containing 10% NGS, followed by an overnight incubation at 4°C
with the primary antibody (anti-NSK2 1:500, diluted in PBS containing
2% NGS). The next morning the free-floating sections were washed and
incubated first with the biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:200, 1 hr, room temperature) and then with avidin-biotin complex system (ABC,
Vectastain Elite, Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) for 1 hr at room
temperature. Peroxidase activity was revealed by 2-9 min incubations
at room temperature with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine as a chromogen (Vector
Laboratories). In controls, sections were incubated without primary
antibody, or purified anti-NSK2 antibody was treated with fusion
protein as described above. The second antibody (anti-CSK2) was used in
parallel for all experiments using the anti-NSK2 antibody and gave
similar results, thereby confirming the specificity of the staining
obtained with the anti-NSK2 antibody. Sections were analyzed with a
Zeiss Axioscope microscope, and pictures were taken with a CCD camera
(SPOT, Diagnostic Instruments, Inc.). For each stage, sections from two
animals were analyzed.
Slice preparation and electrophysiology. Sagittal cerebellar
slices (250-300 µm thick) of the vermis region were prepared from
male Wistar rats (12 and 50-60 d old) with a Vibratome (Leica VT1000S)
and subsequently incubated in a humidified interface chamber or in a
submerged chamber at room temperature for 1 hr. Tight-seal whole-cell
recordings were obtained from the somata of Purkinje cells under visual
control. Patch electrodes (4-7 M ) were filled with an intracellular
solution containing (in mM): 135 potassium
gluconate, 10 KCl, 10 HEPES, 2 Na2-ATP, 0.4 Na3-GTP, 1 MgCl2 (pH
7.2-7.3 with KOH). In experiments in which BAPTA (10 mM) was added to the intracellular solution, the
concentration of potassium gluconate was reduced to 110 mM to maintain constant osmolarity. Current-clamp
recordings were performed also in the cell-attached and
perforated-patch configurations. For the perforated-patch measurements,
electrodes (4-5 M ) were back-filled with amphotericin B (350 µg/ml). Recordings were performed in a submerged chamber with a
constant flow of artificial CSF (ACSF, 2 ml/min) at room temperature (21-24°C). ACSF contained (in mM):
125 NaCl, 1.25 KCl, 2.5 CaCl2, 1.5 MgCl2, 1.25 KH2PO4, 25 NaHCO3, 16 D-glucose, and
was bubbled with carbogen (95% O2/5%
CO2). Drugs were applied in the bath solution. In
voltage-clamp recordings, tetrodotoxin (TTX; 0.5 µM) and tetraethylammonium (TEA; 1 mM) or alternatively penitrem A (10 µM) were added to the superfusing ACSF.
Purkinje cells were depolarized from a holding potential of 50 mV to
values ranging from 8 to +40 mV for a period of 100-300 msec every
30 sec to induce unclamped Ca2+ spikes.
Subsequently the membrane potential was stepped back to 50 mV to
record afterhyperpolarization (AHP) currents as
Ca2+-activated tail currents. In Purkinje
cells the unclamped calcium spikes present characteristic regenerative
all-or-none properties. Given the tight dependence of
IAHP from the amount of calcium influx
(see Results and Fig. 6C,D), particular care was
taken in maintaining the number of calcium spikes constant before and after drug applications. Series resistance was monitored at regular intervals throughout the recording, and only measurements with a stable
series resistance 25 M were included in this study. No series
resistance compensation and no corrections for liquid junction
potentials were made. Only cells with a stable resting membrane
potential (±1 mV) throughout the experiment were included in the
analysis. Data were generated and acquired using an EPC9 amplifier
(HEKA, Lambrecht Germany) and the Pulse software (HEKA). In
voltage-clamp experiments, data were filtered at 1 kHz and sampled at 4 kHz; in current-clamp experiments, data were filtered at 0.4-3.3 kHz
and sampled at 1.6-13.3 kHz.
Analysis was performed using the programs Pulsefit (HEKA), Igor Pro
3.01 (Wave Metrics), Excel (Microsoft), and InStat (GraphPad Software).
All data are presented as mean ± SEM; statistical differences were determined by the Student's t test with < 0.05 taken as the level of significance. In current-clamp recordings
the burst frequency (number of bursts per second) and the frequency of
the single spikes (inverse of the interspike interval) were calculated over a period of 2 min for every cell tested. Coefficients of variation
(CVs) were obtained by dividing the SD by the mean interspike interval.
When pharmacological tests were performed, frequencies and CVs were
calculated immediately before application and after reaching the full
effect of the applied drug.
TEA, potassium gluconate, Na2-ATP,
Na3-GTP, dimethylsulfoxide, and amphotericin B
were obtained from Sigma (Münich, Germany); TTX and penitrem A
were obtained from Alomone Laboratories (Jerusalem, Israel); apamin and
iberiotoxin were obtained from Latoxan (Rosans, France);
1-ethyl-2-benzimidazolinone (1-EBIO) was obtained from Tocris Cookson
(Bristol, UK); BAPTA was obtained from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR);
all other salts and chemicals were obtained from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany).
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RESULTS |
SK transcripts in Purkinje neurons during
postnatal development
Ca2+-activated
K+ channels of the SK type are widely
expressed in a number of CNS neurons (Stocker and Pedarzani, 2000 ),
where they mediate apamin-sensitive
IAHP that play an important
role in shaping neuronal firing patterns (Sah, 1996 ; Stocker et al., 1999 ; Pedarzani et al., 2000 ; Wolfart et al., 2001 ). Given their high
Ca2+ sensitivity [cloned SK2 channels:
EC50 ~0.3 µM (Xia et
al., 1998 ); native small-conductance
Ca2+-activated
K+ channels in hippocampal neurons:
EC50 ~0.6 µM
(Hirschberg et al., 1999 )], SK channels are activated even
by small increases in the intracellular
Ca2+ concentration and cause a
hyperpolarization of the membrane potential. The hyperpolarization
reduces Ca2+ influx, making of SK channels
an ideally suited feedback system to regulate the spatiotemporal
occurrence of calcium transients.
Bearing in mind the pivotal role played by
Ca2+ signals in neuronal differentiation
and maturation and the special features of SK channels, we focused on
the ontogenesis of SK channels and AHP currents in rat Purkinje
neurons in situ to investigate the role of these channels in
the development of Purkinje cell excitability and firing properties.
Understanding the contribution of SK channels to the development of the
signaling properties of Purkinje cells requires information about their
expression and localization in these cells. Therefore, we performed a
detailed in situ hybridization analysis of the expression of
the three SK subunit mRNAs (SK1, SK2, and SK3) in Purkinje cells. We
selected five stages of postnatal development, covering the first 3 postnatal weeks, during which Purkinje cells reach their mature
phenotype and connectivity: P1 (corresponding to the day of birth), P3,
P6, P12, and P24, as well as one additional time point at adult age
(P60). SK1 and SK3 mRNAs were not detectable in Purkinje cells at any
developmental stage analyzed (data not shown). Conversely, the SK2
transcript, encoding the SK subunit with the highest sensitivity to the
bee-venom toxin apamin, was abundantly expressed in Purkinje neurons
throughout the cerebellum already at P1 (Fig.
1). The expression of SK2 mRNA can be
seen as a thick white layer of silver grains in the dark-field picture
(Fig. 1, P1, left panel). At birth,
Purkinje cells are still organized in a multilayered band in the
cerebellar anlage (Uzman, 1960 ), as is visible in the light-field
picture (Fig. 1, P1, right panel). During
the first postnatal days, Purkinje cells organize themselves into a
discrete monolayer located between the internal granule layer and the
molecular layer in the developing cerebellar cortex (Altman and Bayer,
1997 ). At this stage, the expression of the SK2 subunit mRNA persisted
at high levels, as is evident particularly in the light-field pictures
(P3, P6, and P12, right
panels), where the dark silver grains are easily visible over the
Purkinje cell somata. These stages were followed by a clear decline in
the SK2 expression level, as is evident from the dark-field pictures as
well as from the reduced number of silver grains localized over the
Purkinje neurons in the light-field pictures when going from P12 to P24
(Fig. 1), and finally leading to the very low levels observed in the
adult (Fig. 1) (see also Stocker and Pedarzani, 2000 ).

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Figure 1.
The expression level of SK2 mRNA is
developmentally regulated in the rat cerebellum. In situ
hybridization was performed on sagittal sections at different
developmental stages (P1, P3,
P6, P12, P24, and
P60) with SK2-specific oligonucleotides.
Sections were coated with photoemulsion and exposed for 3 months. The probe for SK2 strongly labeled Purkinje cells
(PC) from P1 to P12. The silver grains can be identified
as white signals in the layer labeled as PC in the dark-field
photomicrographs on the left. Light-field
photomicrographs show cresyl violet-counterstained Purkinje cell
neurons at high magnification (right panels), where the
SK2 signal is visible as clusters of black dots over the cell nuclei.
At P1, Purkinje neurons are organized in a multilayered band located between the
internal and external granule layer and already display a high level of
SK2 mRNA. At P3, P6, and P12, Purkinje cells are organized in a
discrete monolayer, and arrowheads point to some of the
silver grain clusters over Purkinje cell nuclei. Conversely, at P24 and
P60 the signal observed in the dark-field photomicrographs (left
panels) is attributable to a moderate level of expression of
SK2 transcript in granule cells. The SK2 signal on single Purkinje
cells (arrowheads in P24 and
P60, right panels) is below the threshold
limit of detection. EGL, External granule layer;
Gr, granule cells; IGL, internal granule
layer; ML, molecular layer; PC, Purkinje
cells. Scale bars: dark-field, left panels, 250 µm;
light-field, right panels, 25 µm.
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Localization of SK channel subunits in Purkinje neurons at
different developmental stages
To investigate the localization of SK2 channels in the cerebellum,
we generated rabbit polyclonal antibodies against amino- and C-terminal
sequences of the rat SK2 subunit, which show no significant homology to
the corresponding regions in the SK1 and SK3 subunits. To demonstrate
the specificity of the generated antibodies, Western analysis of
HEK-293 cells transiently transfected with the SK2 subunit was
performed. Figure 2 shows that the
C-terminal antibody anti-CSK2 (Fig. 2A, lane
1), as well as the affinity-purified amino-terminal antibody
anti-NSK2 (Fig. 2A, lane 3) recognized a
band corresponding to a molecular weight of 59 kDa, which is in good
agreement with the molecular weight predicted from the amino acidic
sequence of the SK2 subunit (63 kDa). A second higher molecular weight
band (>110 kDa) could be identified (Fig. 2A, lanes 1, 3). That both antibodies recognized the
lower and the higher molecular weight bands, that none of these bands
could be identified in nontransfected HEK-293 cells (Fig.
2A, lanes 2, 4), and
that no bands could be detected when the anti-NSK2 antibody was
preincubated with the corresponding fusion protein demonstrated that
the raised antibodies were specific. Furthermore, these results
indicate that the higher molecular weight band corresponds to an
aggregate of SK2 subunits.

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Figure 2.
The expression of SK2 protein is
developmentally regulated in Purkinje neurons, as shown by
immunohistochemistry with SK2-specific antibodies. A,
Western blot on SK2 channel subunits expressed in HEK-293 cells and
characterized with anti-CSK2 and affinity-purified anti-NSK2 antibody.
Arrowheads indicate the bands corresponding to the SK2
channel subunit (lanes 1, 3). There are
no bands visible in fractions from cells that do not express SK2
channel subunits (lanes 2, 4). No
bands are detected after preadsorption of the primary antibody with the
antigen (lane 5), demonstrating that the high molecular
band corresponds to an aggregate of SK2 channel subunits.
B, C, Immunofluorescence of HEK-293 cells
transfected with SK2, showing a specific staining with both the
anti-CSK2 and the anti-NSK2 antibodies. D, Labeling of
membrane standing SK2 channels in transfected HEK-293 cells with
a fluorescent derivative of apamin (apamin-Alexa488).
E-J, Light-microscopy micrographs
showing the immunohistochemical reactions of the affinity-purified
anti-NSK2 antibody in the cerebellum at P12 and P60. In
F, no staining is visible with preadsorbed antibodies
(+pET-NSK2). In G and H,
low-magnification views of the cerebellum show strong SK2 signals on
the majority of Purkinje neurons at P12 (G), but
only very weak ones on a few scattered Purkinje neurons on sections
from adult rats (H, P60). In
I and J, at a cellular level of
resolution, Purkinje neurons show a strong SK2 signal on the somata and the dendritic stem at P12
(I), but not at P60
(J). In J, three Purkinje cells
are indicated by arrowheads. One of them presents a
light stain by anti-NSK2. This was observed in sporadic cases, but the
level of staining at P60 was always lower than the one observed at
earlier developmental stages (I).
Gr, Granule cells; ML, molecular layer;
PC, Purkinje cells. Scale bars: B, C, D,
20 µm; E, 0.5 mm; F, G, H, 150 µm;
I, J, 20 µm.
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Next, we performed a set of immunocytochemical experiments on HEK-293
cell lines expressing SK1, SK2, or SK3 to demonstrate the subunit
specificity of the anti-CSK2 and anti-NSK2 antibodies. In Figure 2,
B and C, immunofluorescence signals show the
binding of the anti-CSK2 and the affinity-purified anti-NSK2 antibody to cells expressing the SK2 channel. A membrane localization was visible with both antibodies. The same antibodies did not
generate any signals when applied to nontransfected cells or to
cell lines expressing SK1 or SK3 channels (data not shown),
thereby demonstrating their subunit specificity. In Figure
2D, cells expressing SK2 channels were labeled with a
fluorescent derivative of apamin (apamin-Alexa488). The apamin-binding
was performed on nonfixed and nonpermeabilized cells and confirmed the
membrane localization of the SK2 subunits. No binding could be observed
on empty HEK-293 cells.
The immunopurified anti-NSK2 antibody gave rise to a specific, strong
DAB immunoreaction in Purkinje cells at P12 (Fig.
2E,G,I) showing
the presence of the SK2 subunit. Both omission of primary antiserum
(data not shown) and preabsorption of anti-NSK2 antibodies with the
fusion protein (Fig. 2F) resulted in the lack of DAB immunoreaction, confirming the specificity of the signal. Nearly all
Purkinje cells at P12 showed strong immunoreactivity (Fig. 2G), whereas only a few scattered Purkinje cells at P60
showed a weak staining (Fig. 2H). Higher resolution
revealed a localization of the SK2 immunoreactivity in the somata and
main dendritic branches of P12 Purkinje neurons (Fig.
2I). Figure 2J shows the weak
staining of one mature Purkinje cells (P60), whereas the neighboring
cells, indicated by arrows, were devoid of any
immunoreactivity. The second antibody generated against a peptide
derived from the C-terminal region of SK2 (anti-CSK2) yielded similar
results (data not shown).
Altogether it can be concluded that the expression of SK2 transcripts
(Fig. 1) as well as of SK2 channel subunits (Fig.
2G-J) shows a progressive reduction
during the first 3 weeks of postnatal development, leading to a
complete downregulation at adult age in Purkinje neurons. Therefore,
the data obtained by in situ hybridization and
immunohistochemistry demonstrate unequivocally that the expression of
SK2 channel subunits in cerebellar Purkinje cells is developmentally regulated.
Impact of SK channel activity on the firing pattern of developing
Purkinje cells
The evidence that we obtained of a developmental regulation of the
SK channel expression at the mRNA and protein level led us to
hypothesize that these channels might play a differential role in
regulating the firing properties of Purkinje neurons at different
developmental stages.
To test this hypothesis, we investigated the firing patterns of
Purkinje neurons from 12-d-old rats, because P12 is a central day in
the decisive period of the second to third week of postnatal development (see introductory remarks), when intrinsic properties and
synaptic connectivity of Purkinje neurons reach their final stage of
maturation (Altman and Bayer, 1997 ). Additionally, according to our
in situ hybridization (Fig. 1) and immunohistochemistry data
(Fig. 2), P12 is the later stage when a very homogeneous, high
expression level of SK2 transcript and channel protein can still be
observed when compared with P24 or adult Purkinje neurons.
Purkinje neurons at P12 presented three different patterns of
spontaneous firing activity (Fig. 3). The
first pattern, observed in the majority of the cells (~50%),
displayed a rhythmic bursting behavior, with a mean burst frequency of
0.36 ± 0.03 Hz, a burst duration of 1.6 ± 0.2 sec, and
interburst intervals of 1.8 ± 0.2 sec (n = 32)
(Fig. 3A). The second pattern, observed in ~30% of the
cells, showed a sustained tonic firing of single spikes with an average
frequency of 4.4 ± 0.7 Hz (n = 20) (Fig.
3B). Finally, the third pattern found in the remaining 20%
of the cells did not present any spontaneous firing (silent cells)
(Fig. 3C) and displayed an average membrane resting
potential of 57 ± 2 mV (n = 12). This
variability in the spontaneous firing patterns of the developing
Purkinje neurons was not attributable to the recording conditions
(whole-cell patch-clamp configuration), because we obtained nearly
identical results also with perforated-patch recordings (57% of
bursting, 29% of single spiking, and 14% of silent cells; data not
shown), where intracellular dialyzation does not occur. Moreover, the
bursting and single spiking patterns were robust phenomena, because
they did not substantially change by switching from the cell-attached
to the whole-cell configuration in the same neuron (n = 20; data not shown).

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Figure 3.
Purkinje cells present different spontaneous
firing patterns at P12. A, Fifty percent of the Purkinje
cells presented a pattern of spontaneous activity characterized by
rhythmic bursts of action potentials at P12. The mean burst frequency
was 0.36 ± 0.03 Hz, the burst duration was 1.6 ± 0.2 sec,
and the interburst intervals were 1.8 ± 0.2 sec
(n = 32). B, Approximately 30% of
the Purkinje cells showed a sustained tonic firing of single spikes
with an average frequency of 4.4 ± 0.7 Hz and a CV of 0.24 ± 0.03 (n = 20). C, The remaining
20% of the cells did not present any spontaneous firing (silent cells)
and displayed an average membrane resting potential of 57 ± 2 mV (n = 12). All traces displayed were recorded in
the whole-cell configuration, with no steady current injected. The
dashed line corresponds to a membrane potential of 40
mV. Calibration is the same for all three traces.
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Injection of steady depolarizing or hyperpolarizing currents could
switch these spontaneous firing patterns in a consistent manner. Thus,
injection of depolarizing current converted bursting cells
into silent ones; a further depolarization led to tonic firing of
single spikes in the same neuron. Steady depolarizing currents could
also transform spontaneously silent cells into tonic firing ones.
Conversely, cells presenting a sustained tonic firing of single spikes
could be changed into silent ones by injection of hyperpolarizing
current. Finally, in some cases tonic firing (2 of 8) or silent cells
(1 of 5) could be converted into bursting ones by injecting steady
hyperpolarizing currents (data not shown).
To elucidate the contribution of the SK channels to these different
spontaneous firing patterns, we first tested the effect of apamin, a
specific SK channel blocker (Strong, 1990 ), on rhythmically bursting
Purkinje cells at P12 (n = 4). As shown in Figure
4, A and B, apamin
(100 nM) produced two major effects on
rhythmically bursting Purkinje cells: it increased the frequency of the
action potentials within each burst (intraburst frequency) (Fig.
4A, insets, B) by more than
twofold, and it clearly increased the frequency of the bursts (burst
frequency) (Fig. 4A,B). A more detailed analysis of the bursting firing pattern revealed that apamin
shortened the duration of each burst, without substantially affecting
the length of the interburst intervals (Fig.
4B), and enhanced the
Ca2+ spike terminating each burst (Fig.
4A, inset, arrow). Besides increasing the intraburst firing frequency, apamin decreased the regularity of the firing, as quantified by the change in the CV, corresponding to the SD normalized to the mean interspike interval (Fig. 4B).

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Figure 4.
The SK channel blocker apamin modifies the
spontaneous firing behavior of Purkinje neurons at P12 but not at adult
age. A, When applied on spontaneously bursting Purkinje
cells, apamin (100 nM) increased both the frequency of the
action potentials within each burst (intraburst frequency) and the
frequency of the bursts (burst frequency). Moreover, apamin shortened
the duration of each burst and enhanced the Ca2+
spike terminating each burst (inset,
arrow). Calibration in inset: 10 mV, 250 msec. B, Bar diagram summarizing the effects of apamin
(100 nM) on spontaneously bursting Purkinje cells. The
intraburst frequency was increased by 213 ± 81%
(n = 3), and the burst frequency was increased by
37 ± 12% (n = 4), whereas the burst duration
was reduced by 40 ± 15% (n = 4). Besides
increasing the intraburst firing frequency, apamin decreased the
regularity of the firing within each burst, as quantified by the
increase in the CV by 54 ± 27% (n = 3).
C, When applied to spontaneously single-spiking Purkinje
cells, apamin (100 nM) favored the transition to a bursting
firing pattern. D, Bar diagram summarizing the effect of
apamin on single-spiking Purkinje cells. The overall firing frequency
was increased by 97 ± 44%, and the CV was increased by 305 ± 213% (n = 5). E, At P12, apamin
(100 nM) induced spontaneous firing of single spikes,
without affecting the resting membrane potential ( 52 ± 2 mV
before and 50 ± 2 mV after apamin application;
p = 0.65; n = 4).
F, By contrast, apamin (100 nM) did not
change the spontaneous firing behavior of silent Purkinje cells at
adult age (P60). The dashed line in
A, C, E, and
F represents a membrane potential of 40 mV. No steady
current was injected during these whole-cell current-clamp
recordings.
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When applied to tonically firing, single-spiking cells
(n = 5), apamin (100 nM) reset
the spontaneous firing pattern leading to the generation of spike
doublets or bursts (Fig. 4C). In tonically firing Purkinje
neurons, a detailed analysis revealed that apamin increased the overall
firing frequency and even more prominently disrupted the regularity of
the spike discharge as expressed by the increase in the CV (Fig.
4D).
Finally, in all silent Purkinje cells at P12, the application of apamin
(100 nM) induced spontaneous firing of single spikes (Fig.
4E) without significantly affecting the resting
membrane potential ( 52 ± 2 mV before and 50 ± 2 mV
after apamin application; p = 0.65). By contrast, in
adult Purkinje neurons (P50-60), which in 56% of the cases did not
display any spontaneous firing activity under our recording conditions,
the same dose of apamin did not induce spontaneous firing
(n = 5) (Fig. 4F), as observed
instead at P12. Similarly, apamin did not change the firing pattern of the remaining 44% of adult Purkinje cells presenting sporadic single
or complex spikes (n = 4; data not shown). Thus,
suppression of the apamin-sensitive, voltage-independent SK channels
strongly affects the spontaneous firing properties of developing (P12) but mature (P50-60) Purkinje neurons.
The observed effects on the spontaneous firing activity of young
Purkinje cells are specific for the SK family of
Ca2+-activated
K+ channels, because suppression of the
Ca2+- and voltage-activated BK channel
activity by the specific blocker iberiotoxin produced distinct effects
on the firing patterns of Purkinje cells at P12. Iberiotoxin (50 nM) did not significantly affect burst duration in
spontaneously bursting cells, and it decreased the firing frequency in
tonically firing, single-spiking cells (data not shown), in contrast to
the increase induced by apamin (Fig. 4D).
Furthermore, suppression of the BK channel activity did not convert the
firing pattern from tonic to bursting (data not shown), as shown for
apamin in Figure 4C. On the basis of these results, we
conclude that BK and SK channels regulate in different ways the
spontaneous firing activity of developing Purkinje neurons.
The results we obtained with apamin strongly point to a critical
involvement of SK channels in shaping the spontaneous firing pattern of
young Purkinje neurons. In particular, blocking the channels with
apamin favored or enhanced bursting. On the basis of this observation,
enhancing, rather than suppressing, SK channel activity should induce
an opposite effect, namely a transition from the bursting mode into a
tonic, single-spike firing mode. As predicted, application of the SK
channel enhancer 1-EBIO (100 µM) (Pedarzani et al., 2001 )
to spontaneously bursting Purkinje cells at P12 led to a tonic,
single-spiking pattern (Fig. 5)
(n = 4). In the presence of 1-EBIO, single spikes were
fired at a low frequency (3.5 ± 0.6 Hz) and in a very regular
manner (CV = 0.17 ± 0.05 compared with 0.24 ± 0.03 in
spontaneously tonic, single-spiking neurons in the absence of 1-EBIO),
each of them being followed by a pronounced afterhyperpolarization
(Fig. 5, middle panel), a clear indication of an
increased SK channel activity. Evidence that the 1-EBIO effect on the
firing pattern was specifically induced by an enhancement of SK channel
activity can be seen in Figure 5 (bottom panel),
where the application of the selective SK channel blocker apamin
reversed the effect of 1-EBIO completely.

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Figure 5.
The SK channel enhancer 1-EBIO exerts an opposite
effect to the blocker apamin on the spontaneous firing pattern of
Purkinje neurons at P12. When applied to a spontaneously bursting
Purkinje cell (top panel), 1-EBIO (100 µM) promoted the transition to a single-spiking pattern,
with action potentials fired at a low frequency (3.5 ± 0.6 Hz)
and in a very regular manner (CV = 0.17 ± 0.05;
middle panel). Additionally, every action
potential was followed by a pronounced afterhyperpolarization in the
presence of 1-EBIO (middle panel), a clear
indication of an increased SK channel activity. The application of
apamin (100 nM) completely reversed the effect on the
firing pattern induced by 1-EBIO and demonstrates unequivocally that
1-EBIO specifically enhanced SK channel activity (bottom
panel). Similar results were obtained in four cells. All
traces were recorded in the whole-cell configuration. Calibration is
the same for all traces. Spike height was truncated for better
resolution of the afterhyperpolarizations after single or bursts of
action potentials.
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Altogether, the results obtained on the firing activity of Purkinje
neurons underscore the functional expression of SK channels and suggest
that they play an important and specific role in modulating the
spontaneous firing frequency and pattern of activity of developing Purkinje neurons.
A Ca2+-activated current in developing
Purkinje neurons
Given the effects of apamin and 1-EBIO on the spontaneous firing
pattern of young Purkinje neurons, we were interested in characterizing
the underlying SK-mediated current in these neurons. To record the
SK-mediated IAHP in P12
Purkinje cells, we adopted a protocol used previously successfully to
isolate this current in hippocampal pyramidal neurons (Stocker et al.,
1999 ). In particular, the membrane voltage was stepped from a holding
potential of 50 mV to a depolarized potential ( 8 to +40 mV) for
100-300 msec in the presence of the Na+
channel blocker TTX (0.5 µM) and of the BK
channel blockers TEA (1 mM) or penitrem A (10 µM) to elicit a robust
Ca2+ influx corresponding to the
generation of one or more all-or-none Ca2+
spikes (Fig.
6A,B,
insets). Under these recording conditions, a tail current
following the Ca2+ spikes (Fig.
6A) and resembling the
IAHP measured in hippocampal neurons
could be observed. When three Ca2+ spikes
were evoked (in 0.5 µM TTX + 10 µM penitrem A), the tail current presented an
average amplitude of 446 ± 30 pA and a time constant of decay of
99 ± 13 msec (n = 9) (Fig. 6A).
By contrast, mature Purkinje cells (P50-60) displayed no tail current
under identical recording conditions (n = 4) (Fig.
6B).

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Figure 6.
Purkinje neurons present a
Ca2+-activated K+ current after
depolarization-induced Ca2+ spikes at P12, but not
at adult age under the same conditions. A, Tail current
after a depolarizing pulse (200 msec to +10 mV) sufficient to elicit
three Ca2+ spikes in a Purkinje cell at P12 in the
presence of the Na+ channel blocker TTX (0.5 µM) and of the BK channel blocker penitrem A (10 µM). A
similar current was observed in nine cells. Calibration in
inset: 1 nA, 100 msec. B, In an adult
Purkinje cell, a longer depolarizing pulse (600 msec to 10 mV) was
needed to elicit three Ca2+ spikes as in
A, in the presence of identical concentrations of TTX
and penitrem A. The Ca2+ influx did not induce a
tail current as observed at P12. Similar results were obtained in four
cells. Calibration in inset: 2 nA, 200 msec.
C, D, The tail current amplitude and
duration increased proportionally to the number of all-or-none
Ca2+ spikes triggered by the depolarizing pulses.
The numbers beside the current traces (1,
2, 3) indicate the number of
Ca2+ spikes preceding each tail current.
E, In P12 Purkinje cells, the tail current disappeared
in Ca2+-free medium (0 Ca2+; 5 mM Mg2+). This effect was fully
reversible. F, The Ca2+ channel
blocker Cd2+ (50 µM) strongly and
reversibly suppressed the tail current. G, When the
Ca2+ chelator BAPTA (10 mM) was enclosed
in the pipette solution, the tail current was progressively reduced
during the first minutes in the whole-cell configuration.
H, Bar diagram summarizing the results presented in
E-G. In Ca2+-free
medium the tail current was reduced by 81 ± 5%
(n = 3); 50 µM
Cd2+ suppressed the tail current by 82 ± 5%
(n = 5). In the presence of BAPTA, the tail current
was inhibited by 75 ± 5% (n = 4).
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As expected for the apamin-sensitive
IAHP, the amplitude and time course of
the tail currents after the Ca2+ influx in
P12 Purkinje neurons showed no voltage dependence (data not shown) but
a clear correlation to the number of Ca2+
spikes triggered by the depolarizing pulse: peak amplitude and time
constant of decay increased along with the number of
Ca2+ spikes (Fig.
6C,D).
The tight dependence of the tail current amplitude and decay time
course on the number of evoked Ca2+ spikes
provided a first indication of the Ca2+
dependence of the tail current. To show that the tail current was
indeed Ca2+ activated, we performed three
sets of experiments. First, removal of
Ca2+ from the extracellular ACSF resulted
in a full and reversible suppression of the tail current, concomitant
with the disappearance of the Ca2+ spike
(Fig. 6E,H). Second,
application of 50 µM
Cd2+ to block voltage-gated
Ca2+ channels potently and reversibly
suppressed both Ca2+ spikes and tail
currents (Fig. 6F,H).
Finally, the addition of the fast Ca2+
chelator BAPTA (10 mM) to the pipette solution
prevented the activation of the tail current during stimulation and
intracellular [Ca2+] increase. The tail
currents could be observed only during the initial phase of whole-cell
recordings with BAPTA (Fig. 6G, current trace 30 sec after
breakthrough), and during dialyzation of the cell they declined
irreversibly (Fig. 6G, current trace 4 min after
breakthrough, and H). In parallel, we observed an
increase in the number of Ca2+ spikes
evoked by the same depolarizing pulse (data not shown).
Altogether, these results demonstrate that a
Ca2+-activated
K+ current of the AHP type
(IAHP) is indeed present in
Purkinje neurons at postnatal day 12, but not in cells from adult animals.
The Ca2+-activated current in P12 Purkinje neurons is
sensitive to apamin and 1-EBIO
Besides being voltage independent and
Ca2+ activated, in neocortical and
hippocampal neurons IAHP is
specifically characterized by its sensitivity to the SK channel blocker
apamin (Schwindt et al., 1992 ; Stocker et al., 1999 ) and to the SK
channel enhancer 1-EBIO (Pedarzani et al., 2001 ). To test whether the
tail current observed after Ca2+ spikes
ultimately corresponds to IAHP, we
applied apamin to P12 Purkinje cells. Apamin (50 nM) strongly and irreversibly suppressed the
Ca2+-activated tail current (83 ± 4% inhibition; n = 11) (Fig.
7A). This effect was dose
dependent, and the concentration of apamin producing a half-maximal
suppression of the current (IC50) was ~135
pM (Fig. 7B). This value is very close
to the estimated sensitivity of recombinant homomultimeric SK2 channels
(Kohler et al., 1996 ), suggesting that
IAHP is most probably mediated by
homomultimeric SK2 channels in Purkinje neurons at P12. This assumption
is supported by the exclusive expression of this subunit in young
Purkinje neurons as detected by in situ hybridization (Fig.
1).

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Figure 7.
The Ca2+-dependent tail current
in P12 Purkinje neurons is an SK2-mediated
IAHP, sensitive to apamin and 1-EBIO.
A, Apamin (50 nM) strongly and irreversibly
suppressed IAHP, without affecting
the Ca2+ spikes elicited by the depolarizing pulses
(insets), in Purkinje neurons at P12. Similar results
were observed in 11 cells. Calibration in insets: 0.5 nA, 40 msec. B, Dose-response curve for the block of
IAHP by apamin. Data points were fit with
the Hill equation, giving an IC50 value of ~135
pM and a Hill coefficient of 1. For each point,
n = 3-6; error bars are SEM. C,
1-EBIO (100 µM) enhanced IAHP
in P12 Purkinje cells, without significantly affecting the
Ca2+ spikes (insets). The
right panel shows the two traces scaled and overlapped
to display the effect of 1-EBIO on the time course of
IAHP. Similar effects were observed in five
cells. Calibration in insets: 1 nA, 100 msec.
D, Bar diagram summarizing the effects of 1-EBIO (100 µM) on IAHP. The AHP current
amplitude was increased by 25 ± 5%, the time constant of decay
was increased by 95 ± 12%, and the total charge transfer was
increased by 168 ± 6% (n = 5).
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Recently, 1-EBIO has been introduced as a new pharmacological tool for
the characterization of SK channels in heterologous and native systems
and has been shown to enhance SK channel activity in a
Ca2+-dependent manner (Pedarzani et al.,
2001 ). When applied to P12 Purkinje cells, 1-EBIO (100 µM) produced an increase in the peak amplitude of the
Ca2+-activated tail current (25 ± 5% increase; n = 5) (Fig. 7C,D). Additionally, it substantially prolonged the decay time course of the
current (time constant of decay: 124 ± 15 msec before and 238 ± 25 msec after 1-EBIO application; n = 5;
p = 0.008) (Fig. 7C,D). The
increased amplitude and the slower deactivation of IAHP induced by 1-EBIO were mostly
reversible and resulted in a nearly twofold increase of the
IAHP charge transfer (168 ± 6% increase) (Fig. 7D). The complete block of the enhanced
IAHP by apamin demonstrated the
specificity of the 1-EBIO effect on SK channels (data not shown).
The results obtained in voltage-clamp recordings allowed us to
unequivocally identify the Ca2+-dependent
tail current observed in Purkinje neurons at P12 with IAHP. A current with these features
was not present in Purkinje cells from adult rats. These results are in
agreement with the change in the expression level of SK2 subunit
transcript and protein with age and with the observed effects of apamin
on the firing patterns of P12 and adult Purkinje cells.
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DISCUSSION |
This study provides the first molecular and functional
characterization of the apamin-sensitive, voltage-independent
Ca2+-activated
IAHP in Purkinje neurons. The
channel subunits underlying this current (SK2) were detected and
localized by in situ hybridization and subunit-specific
antibodies. A further novel and important finding is that the
expression level of SK2 subunits is high at birth and subsequently
declines during the first 3 weeks of postnatal life, both at the mRNA
and at the protein level. This developmental regulation is tightly
correlated with the expression of IAHP
and the prominent role of SK2 channels in shaping the spontaneous firing pattern in young (P12) but not in adult Purkinje neurons in situ.
Although a role for Ca2+-activated
K+ currents in the regulation of the
firing of Purkinje cells has been proposed (Llinas and Sugimori, 1979 ,
1980a ,b ), to our knowledge this is the first study investigating the
ontogenesis, molecular basis, and function of the purely
Ca2+-activated SK channels in cerebellar
neurons in situ. A developmental regulation has been
described previously for the large conductance voltage- and
Ca2+-activated channel (BK) in primary
cultures of Purkinje neurons (Yool et al., 1988 ; Muller et al., 1998 ).
Interestingly, the ontogenetic pattern of BK channels is completely
different from that of SK channels. Thus, BK channel expression
increases gradually during the first 2 weeks of postnatal life and
reaches high, stable levels in adult Purkinje neurons in
vivo (Knaus et al., 1996 ; Muller et al., 1998 ). By contrast,
in situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry, and
electrophysiology provided convergent lines of evidence supporting the
notion that SK channels of the SK2 type are highly expressed during the
first 2-3 weeks of postnatal development and display a substantial
downregulation in Purkinje neurons from P12 onwards. The other known
members of the SK potassium channel subfamily, SK1 and SK3, are
expressed neither in differentiating (this study) nor in adult Purkinje
neurons (Stocker and Pedarzani, 2000 ).
The developmental pattern observed at the level of SK2 mRNA, protein,
and corresponding AHP current was in good agreement with the results
obtained in current-clamp recordings in P12 Purkinje neurons, where
blockade of the SK channels by apamin favored the occurrence of
spontaneous bursting and the transition from a silent to a spiking
behavior (Fig. 4), whereas enhancement of SK channel activity by 1-EBIO
converted bursting patterns into tonic, single-spiking ones (Fig. 5).
Conversely, SK channel blockers did not display any effects on the
spontaneous activity of adult Purkinje neurons, which were mainly
silent under our recording conditions. Both the recording at room
temperature and the removal of excitatory synaptic inputs by the
slicing procedure (Llinas and Sugimori, 1980b ) might have contributed
to the decrease in spontaneous firing observed in our study. The lack
of effect of apamin on the spontaneous firing of adult Purkinje cells
reported in this study is in agreement with previous measurements
performed in slices from adult guinea pig, where spontaneous spike
doublets (measured in 5 mM extracellular K+ at 30°C) were not affected by 1 µM apamin (Etzion and Grossman, 1998 ). In general, the
changes in firing patterns observed in the presence of different SK
channel modulators at P12 (Figs. 4, 5) were robust and reproducible,
because they also persisted with identical features in perforated-patch
or cell-attached recordings. Apamin did not modify the spontaneous
firing patterns of P12 Purkinje neurons by changing their membrane
potential but rather by reducing the afterhyperpolarizing current
activated by Ca2+ entering the neurons
during single and bursts of action potentials.
Surprisingly, the presence of the apamin-sensitive current decreased
rather than enhanced the hyperpolarization after each burst while
slowing down the action potential firing to a modest rate within each
burst (intraburst frequency) (Fig. 4A, left
panel). The observed decrease in the hyperpolarization
after each burst could be explained by the fact that in the presence of
the AHP current the intraburst firing frequency was low, thus limiting the Ca2+ buildup and the accumulation of
Na+ channel inactivation that might
contribute to the interburst hyperpolarization. The lack of
contribution of the AHP current to the interburst hyperpolarization, as
shown in this study, raises the question of which conductances underlie
it. We have preliminary evidence that a
Ca2+-dependent current that is insensitive
to apamin and to low concentrations of TEA is present in adult Purkinje
cells (L. A. Cingolani, M. Stocker, and P. Pedarzani, unpublished
observation). This current would fit in the model proposed by Pouille
et al. (2000) in which the rhythmic interplay between low-threshold
Ca2+ current and a calcium-dependent
hyperpolarizing conductance would underlie the bursting firing pattern
in Purkinje cells, but its contribution to the bursting firing pattern
needs further investigation. Moreover, it is noteworthy that the
results we obtained with apamin on the spontaneous firing of P12
Purkinje cells are comparable with the effect of this blocker on the
endogenous firing pattern of deep cerebellar nuclei neurons at P12-15,
where apamin also induced spontaneous, regularly occurring spike bursts
(Aizenman and Linden, 1999 ). This finding is in agreement with the
expression of the SK2 channel subunit that we observed also in deep
cerebellar nuclei neurons at P12 (Figs. 1, 2).
The ability of immature Purkinje neurons to endogenously generate
electrical activity has been documented in different preparations, including Purkinje cells in acutely isolated preparations (Nam and
Hockberger, 1997 ; Raman and Bean, 1997 , 1999 ), in primary culture (Gruol and Franklin, 1987 ; Gruol et al., 1991 ), and already starting from P2 in vivo (Woodward et al., 1969 ; Crepel,
1972 ). Besides endogenous conductances, such as sodium currents (Nam and Hockberger, 1997 ; Raman and Bean, 1997 ), excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs also contribute to the spontaneous activity of developing Purkinje neurons. In the acute slice preparation used in
this study, the question arises whether the SK channels are localized
exclusively postsynaptically or possibly also presynaptically. In our
study the effect of apamin on the spontaneous firing of P12 Purkinje
neurons is most likely attributable to a postsynaptic effect on SK
channels, given their high expression in the Purkinje cell somata and
main dendritic branches. Furthermore, no effects of apamin on the
spontaneous firing pattern of Purkinje cells would be expected in the
presence of GABA or glutamate receptor inhibitors if apamin acted on
the spontaneous firing by affecting the release of GABA or glutamate
from presynaptic terminals of interneurons or granule cells. Instead,
when we suppressed synaptic signaling by application of glutamate and
GABA receptor inhibitors, the enhancement of burst firing induced by
apamin persisted (Cingolani, Stocker, and Pedarzani, unpublished
data). Apamin has been reported not to block somatic potassium current
in basket cells (Southan and Robertson, 1998 , 2000 ) and not to affect
axonal Ca2+ transients and
neurotransmitter release from basket cell terminals (Tan and Llano,
1999 ). These results further support the view that a presynaptic action
of the toxin on GABAergic interneurons is unlikely to be responsible
for the effects observed on the spontaneous firing of Purkinje neurons.
The in situ hybridization (Fig. 1) and immunohistochemistry
results (Fig. 2) pointed to SK2 as the main channel underlying the
effects of SK channel modulators on the firing properties of P12
Purkinje neurons. The pharmacological characterization of the AHP
current that we performed on P12 Purkinje cells revealed an
IC50 of IAHP for
apamin of 135 pM, close to those reported for
homomultimeric SK2 channels in different expression systems (range,
27-83 pM) (Kohler et al., 1996 ; Strobaek et al.,
2000 ; Grunnet et al., 2001 ). This result strongly supports the
hypothesis that Purkinje cells express homomultimeric SK2 channels at
early postnatal developmental stages. The downregulation of SK2
expression observed by in situ hybridization and
immunohistochemistry was reflected by an absence of
IAHP in adult Purkinje cells after a
triggering pulse comparable to the one used at P12. This result is in
good agreement with the lack of effect of apamin on the spontaneous
firing of adult Purkinje cells and with the absence of apamin-sensitive
channels in nucleated patches from Purkinje neurons from 3- to
5-week-old mice, as reported by Southan and Robertson (2000) .
The SK channel enhancer 1-EBIO has been shown in a previous work to
increase the amplitude of the apamin-sensitive
IAHP in hippocampal pyramidal neurons
two- to threefold (Pedarzani et al., 2001 ). The effect of 1-EBIO on
IAHP in Purkinje cells is different
from the one observed in CA1 neurons. Thus, in Purkinje cells 1-EBIO
affected only marginally the peak amplitude of
IAHP but strongly slowed down the
decay time course of this current (Fig. 7C,D).
The reason for this different effect lies in the mechanism of action of
1-EBIO on SK2 channels. In the presence of saturating
Ca2+ concentrations (1-10
µM), the main effect of 1-EBIO is to slow down
the deactivation of SK2 channels (Pedarzani et al., 2001 ), and the
result obtained in Purkinje cells suggests that SK channels might be
exposed to almost saturating
[Ca2+]i in
response to the protocol used to elicit
IAHP. This assumption is in accord
with the [Ca2+]i
measured during depolarizing pulses in Purkinje cell somata and
dendrites and attained mean values of 5 and 30 µM (500 msec pulses) (Maeda et al., 1999 ) and
~2 and 4 µM (100 msec pulses) (Llano et al.,
1994 ), respectively, and 0.5-1.5 µM in a
somatic submembrane compartment (100 msec pulses) (Eilers et al.,
1995 ). Similar Ca2+ transients were
observed in the dendrites and in a narrow somatic submembrane shell in
Purkinje cells during stimulation of climbing fibers (Eilers et al.,
1995 , 1996 ), suggesting that SK channels might respond and possibly
regulate the Ca2+ signals elicited by
synaptic activity.
Our results show that the postnatal change in the expression of SK2
channels parallels, on one hand, the development of the dendritic tree
and the establishment of mature synaptic contacts onto Purkinje cells,
which is completed by P21 (Altman and Bayer, 1997 ). On the other hand,
it inversely correlates with the maturation of the
Ca2+-buffering properties of Purkinje
neurons, because it has been shown that the
Ca2+-binding ratio doubles from P6 to P15
(Fierro and Llano, 1996 ), and this is most likely related to a
developmentally regulated increase in the concentration of
Ca2+-binding proteins, such as parvalbumin
and calbindin (Iacopino et al., 1990 ; Solbach and Celio, 1991 ). A
recent study has additionally shown that spontaneous
Ca2+ oscillations, mediated by L-type
Ca2+ channels and elicited by endogenously
generated electrical activity, are a prominent feature of early
developing Purkinje neurons (Liljelund et al., 2000 ). Taking all this
evidence into consideration, we propose that SK2 channels might play a
pivotal role in the regulation of Ca2+
transients and oscillations during the first 2 weeks of postnatal development of Purkinje cells, whereas at later developmental stages a
mature pattern of Ca2+ channels, BK
channels, and Ca2+ buffering proteins
might take over in regulating and shaping the
Ca2+ signals generated by mature synapses.
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FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 8, 2002; revised March 5, 2002; accepted March 11, 2002.
This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft Sonderforschungsbereich 406, Project C8 (M.S., P.P.) and the Human Frontier Science Program (P.P.). M.S. is a Wellcome
Trust Senior Research Fellow. We thank D. D'hoedt, K. Hentrich,
M. E. Rubio, A. Thalhammer, and F. Varoqueaux for assistance and
advice. We thank Rüdiger W. Veh for technical advice on the purification of antibodies. We are very grateful to Walter
Stühmer for his generous support, and to David A. Brown for
useful discussion. The excellent technical assistance of B. Scheufler,
R. Schubert, and the personnel of the animal facility at the
Max-Planck-Institute for Experimental Medicine is acknowledged.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Paola Pedarzani, Department
of Physiology, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E
6BT, UK, E-mail: p.pedarzani{at}ucl.ac.uk; or Dr. Martin Stocker,
Wellcome Laboratory for Molecular Pharmacology, University College
London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK, E-mail:
m.stocker{at}ucl.ac.uk.
 |
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M. D. Womack and K. Khodakhah
Somatic and Dendritic Small-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels Regulate the Output of Cerebellar Purkinje Neurons
J. Neurosci.,
April 1, 2003;
23(7):
2600 - 2607.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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J. R Edgerton and P. H Reinhart
Distinct contributions of small and large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels to rat Purkinje neuron function
J. Physiol.,
April 1, 2003;
548(1):
53 - 69.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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