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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 15, 2002, 22(2):529-535
Dual Cholinergic Control of Fast-Spiking Interneurons in
the Neostriatum
Tibor
Koós and
James M.
Tepper
Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience, Rutgers, The
State University of New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey 07102
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ABSTRACT |
GABAergic interneurons appear to play a fundamental role in the
functioning of the neostriatum by modulating the spiking of striatal
projection neurons with great efficacy. The powerful and strongly
divergent output of the GABAergic interneurons neurons suggests that
modulation of their activity may be particularly effective at
controlling the functioning of the entire neostriatal circuitry.
Acetylcholine is one of the main modulators of striatal functioning.
The effects of acetylcholine on fast-spiking (FS) GABAergic
interneurons were studied with whole-cell recording in an in
vitro slice preparation. Acetylcholine exerted two distinct effects on fast-spiking interneurons. Acetylcholine directly
depolarized FS interneurons by acting on nondesensitizing
soma-dendritic nicotinic receptors. In addition, acetylcholine
attenuated the GABAergic inhibition of projection neurons by
fast-spiking interneurons through activation of presynaptic muscarinic
receptors. It is suggested that the nicotinic excitation of FS
interneurons may play an important role in translating the effect of
the brief behaviorally contingent cessation of firing of the tonically
active cholinergic interneurons to the output neurons of the
neostriatum. In contrast, the muscarinic presynaptic inhibitory
mechanism may be engaged primarily during longer-lasting elevations of
extracellular acetylcholine levels.
Key words:
fast-spiking interneuron; neostriatum; GABA; acetylcholine; nicotinic receptor; muscarinic receptor; presynaptic
inhibition; cholinergic interneuron; tonically active neurons
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INTRODUCTION |
Cholinergic signaling in the
neostriatum is an important modulator of the activity of the basal
ganglia and has long been recognized to act in a complex, and in many
ways antagonistic, manner with respect to dopaminergic transmission in
striatal function. Most of the studies concerning the effects of
acetylcholine (ACh) on the intrinsic properties of neostriatal neurons
have concentrated on the medium spiny (MS) projection neurons. Complex
modulation of the overall excitability, as well as the voltage
dependence, kinetic properties, and/or maximum conductance of various
potassium, calcium, and sodium channels of striatal spiny neurons has
been demonstrated and has led to insightful predictions about the
functional consequences of these neuromodulatory actions (Akins et al.,
1990 ; Plenz and Kitai, 1998 ). Furthermore, complex effects of ACh on synaptic transmission and plasticity in the neostriatum have been described previously (Sugita et al., 1991 ; Calabresi et al., 1998 , 1999 ). In general, however, it has been difficult to provide a mechanistic explanation for the systems level effects of cholinergic manipulations in the neostriatum based on this information alone (Calabresi et al., 2000 ). Part of the difficulty in bridging these cellular and network level phenomena may arise from the additional complexities introduced by cholinergic effects on striatal neuronal populations in addition to the MS neurons.
Recent anatomical and electrophysiological studies suggest that,
despite their relatively small number, aspiny GABAergic interneurons have a powerful effect on the overall functioning of the neostriatum (Bolam et al., 1983 ; Kita and Kitai, 1988 ; Kita et al., 1990 ; Jaeger et
al., 1994 ; Kawaguchi et al., 1995 ; Gerfen and Wilson, 1996 ; Kita,
1996 ). At least some of these interneurons are known to receive
cholinergic synaptic input (Chang and Kita, 1992 ). Consequently, the
control of these neurons and/or their synaptic interactions with
projection neurons by ACh may be essential in determining the overall
effect of ACh on the output of the neostriatum. In the current study,
the effects of ACh on fast-spiking (FS) interneurons and their synaptic
interaction with MS neurons were investigated using single and paired
whole-cell recordings in slices of the rat neostriatum.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Electrophysiology. Slices were from obtained from
either 13- to 30-d-old juvenile or adult (110-208 gm) Sprague Dawley
rats. All procedures were performed with the approval of the Rutgers University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee and in accordance with the NIH Guide to the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals. Slices were prepared and maintained with the
following modifications of previously described methods (Koós and
Tepper, 1999 ). The Ringer's solution used for recording and
maintaining the slices contained (in mM): 125.0 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 2.0 CaCl2, 1.0 MgCl2, 25.0 NaHCO3, 1.25 NaH2P04, 25.0 glucose, pH
7.3-7.4, 1.0 ascorbate, 3.0 pyruvate, and 0.4 myo-inositol. In some
cases, ascorbate, Pyruvate, and myo-inositol were omitted and the
concentrations of CaCl2,
MgCl2, and glucose were changed to 2.5, 1.5, and
9.0 mM respectively. Adult slices were prepared
in ice-cold (approximately 4°C) modified solution containing (in
mM): 225.0 sucrose, 2.5 KCl, 0.5 CaCl2, 7.0 MgCl2, 28.0 NaHCO3, 1.25 NaH2P04, 7.0 glucose, 1.0 ascorbate, and 3.0 pyruvate. The animals were transcardially perfused
with ~60 ml of the modified Ringer's solution at a rate of ~20
ml/min before slice preparation.
Whole-cell current-clamp recordings were performed as described
previously (Koós and Tepper, 1999 ). For voltage-clamp recordings, the internal solution contained (in mM): 140.0 CsCl, 2.0 MgCl2, 10.0 HEPES, 3.0 Na2ATP, 0.3 Na3GTP, 10.0 EGTA, and usually 5 QX-314 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), pH 7.2-7.3.
Biocytin (0.1-0.5%) was also added to the solution in most cases.
Recordings were made with a Neurodata Instruments (New York, NY) IR-283
current-clamp and an EPC-9 (Heka Elektronik, Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany)
voltage-clamp amplifier. Voltage-clamp recordings were obtained with
3.5-5 M pipettes. The membrane potential of the MS neurons was
clamped at 70 mV. Series resistance compensation of 30-60% was
used, and recordings were filtered online with a second-order Bessel filter at 1 kHz and digitized at 10 kHz. Voltage-clamp experiments were
performed at room temperature. During paired recording experiments, the
presynaptic interneurons were stimulated at 0.5 Hz. At the completion
of the experiments, slices were processed as described previously
(Koós and Tepper, 1999 ) to visualize biocytin-stained neurons
(Horikawa and Armstrong, 1988 ).
Pharmacology. ACh chloride, AP-5, atropine sulfate,
bicuculline methochloride, carbamylcholine chloride (carbachol),
disodium-CNQX, muscarine chloride, mecamylamine hydrochloride (MEC),
methyllycaconitine citrate (MLA), nicotine
di-d-tartarate, and pirenzepine dihydrochloride were
obtained from Research Biochemicals (Natick, MA). CGP 55845A was a gift
from Ciba-Geigy (Basel, Switzerland). Drugs were freshly dissolved in
Ringer's solution as indicated, except for CGP 55845A, MLA, and
muscarine, which were stored at 20°C in aqueous stock solutions.
Drugs were applied in the perfusion medium or locally, via a pipette
(<2 µm tip) using a Picospritzer (General Valve, Fairfield, NJ).
Drugs were ejected at 10-30 sec intervals with 10 psi and 40-100 msec
duration pressure pulses. The pipettes were positioned 30-70 µm
(51.7 ± 5.4 µm; n = 6) from the soma of the
recorded neurons and at least 10 µm beneath the surface of the slice.
Drug concentrations for bath application were selected with reference
to receptor affinities (Doods et al., 1987 ). Drug concentrations for
pressure applications were determined empirically to provide specific
and sufficiently strong effects, consistent with previous reports (Guo
et al., 1998 ).
As a positive control for the effectiveness of MLA, a pressure
application experiment was performed using 400 µm coronal slices of
the dorsal hippocampus (see Results). The experiment was conducted subsequent to the collection of all striatal data using the same batch
of stock solution of MLA.
Data analysis. For IPSC amplitude measurements, window
averages of the recorded current were calculated at two positions
individually for each trace. The window averages were calculated as the
arithmetic mean of the digitized current values within a time window of
4.6 msec duration. The IPSC amplitude was defined as the difference between two window averages, with one window placed just after the peak
of the IPSC and another before the onset of the response. The two time
windows were separated exactly by 16.6 msec relative to each other to
eliminate line noise. Background noise distribution was determined the
same way as IPSC amplitudes but with the two averaging windows shifted
to ~30 msec before the elicited response (Stricker and Redman, 1994 ;
Stricker et al., 1996 ). The coefficient of variation (CV) of IPSCs was
calculated by dividing the SD of the IPSC amplitude by the mean
amplitude. Population data are reported as mean ± SE.
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RESULTS |
Nicotinic depolarization of FS interneurons
FS interneurons were targeted on the basis of their appearance
with differential interference contrast microscopy under infra-red transillumination and were identified electrophysiologically
(Kawaguchi, 1993 ; Kawaguchi et al., 1995 ; Koós and Tepper, 1999 ).
All FS interneurons were strongly hyperpolarized (less than 70 mV)
and silent at rest. FS interneurons fired narrow action potentials and
exhibited high maximal firing frequencies (~200 Hz) in response to
current injection, as shown in Figure 1.
In addition, constant depolarizing current injections induced an
irregular bursty firing pattern (Fig. 1B). The
morphological properties of biocytin-stained FS interneurons
corresponded to previous descriptions of this cell type
(n = 5; data not shown) (Kita et al., 1990 ; Kawaguchi, 1993 ; Kita, 1993 ; Kubota et al., 1993 ; Kawaguchi et al., 1995 ; Koós and Tepper, 1999 ).

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Figure 1.
Characteristic electrophysiological properties of
striatal FS interneurons recorded in whole-cell mode in
vitro. A, Responses of a typical FS interneuron
to intracellularly injected current pulses. Note the high maximal
firing rate (~200 Hz; right panel).
B, Typical response of an FS interneuron to constant
depolarizing current injection of varying amplitudes. All FS
interneurons were hyperpolarized and silent at rest. Depolarizing
current injection elicited subthreshold membrane potential fluctuations
(arrowheads), which were always absent at rest and could
also induce episodes of firing. Firing epochs occurred at irregular
intervals but exhibited stable intraburst frequencies. The firing
pattern was stable over the duration of the depolarization (>10 sec).
Action potentials truncated as a result of aliasing.
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Ten of 11 FS interneurons responded to local (n = 8) or
bath (n = 3) application of cholinergic agonists. For
local pressure application experiments, nicotinic agonists
(n = 8) were applied, including 20 mM carbachol (n = 4), 3-5
mM ACh (n = 3), or 250 µM nicotine (n = 1).
Locally applied cholinergic agonists depolarized FS interneurons by
7.1 ± 1.8 mV (n = 8; range of 3.4-13.7 mV) (Fig.
2A). The response to
pressure-applied cholinergic agonists could be completely blocked by
bath application of the selective nicotinic receptor antagonist MEC at
concentrations of 1-10 µM (n = 4), as shown in Figure 2A. In one other FS
interneuron, 1 µM MEC reduced the
depolarization by 92%. Partial reversal of the MEC blockade was
obtained by washing for 40 min (5 µM;
n = 1) (Fig. 2A). To further
characterize the receptor subtype underlying the nicotinic depolarization, MLA, a selective antagonist of the 7 subunit containing type 1 nicotinic receptors, was applied at 100 nM, a concentration sufficient to completely
block these receptors, as well as certain 2 subunit-containing (type
2) receptors (Alkondon and Albuquerque, 1993 ). MLA (100 nM; n = 3) had little or no
effect on the depolarization evoked by pressure application of
nicotinic agonists (n = 3), including ACh (3-5
mM; n = 2) or carbachol (20 mM; n = 1), as illustrated for
one neuron in Figure 2B. These responses were all
blocked by the subsequent application of 1-10 µM MEC (Fig. 2B). To
demonstrate the efficacy of MLA, the effects of the drug were tested on
carbachol-induced depolarization of hippocampal stratum radiatum
interneurons, a cell type known to express type 1 nicotinic receptors
(Frazier et al., 1998 ). On these neurons, MLA was shown to be fully
potent at the expected effective concentration (Frazier et al., 1998 ),
as shown in Figure 2C.

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Figure 2.
Nicotinic receptor-mediated responses of FS
interneurons. A, Local pressure application of ACh (5 mM; 40 msec duration; thick bar) induced a
depolarization (ACh) that was blocked by bath application of 5 µM MEC. There was partial recovery after washing for 40 min. Note that the experiment was conducted in the presence of CNQX and
APV. B, Local pressure application of 5 mM
ACh (thick bar) evoked a depolarization (ACh) that was
primarily unaffected by bath application of 100 nM MLA but
was almost completely blocked by subsequent application of 1 µM MEC. C, As a positive control, the
effectiveness of MLA was tested on the nicotinic depolarization evoked
by local pressure application of 5 mM carbachol
(thick bar) on a hippocampal stratum radiatum
interneuron. The strong depolarization and firing of action potentials
(top trace; action potentials truncated as a result of
averaging) were completely blocked by bath application of 10 nM MLA, demonstrating the potency of the antagonist.
D, Bath application of 100 µM carbachol
depolarized a silent FS interneuron by ~44 mV and induced irregular
bursty firing. The firing was maintained for the duration of the drug
application (>10 min).
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The effect of bath application of cholinergic agonists was also tested
on four FS interneurons, all of which were depolarized by agonist
administration. Application of carbachol (40 µM;
n = 1) or nicotine (100 µM,
n = 2; 200 µM,
n = 1) depolarized the interneurons by 15 (10.3 ± 2.6) or 9.5 mV, respectively. The depolarization was stable for
the duration of the drug application (>10 min) and could be fully
reversed during washing with normal Ringer's solution
(n = 1) or be blocked by 1-5
µM MEC (n = 3). In addition, a
higher concentration of carbachol (100 µM)
could induce an MEC-sensitive, irregular, bursty firing in FS
interneurons (n = 2) (Fig. 2D). The
pattern of firing induced by carbachol was similar to the one evoked by
constant current injection (Figs. 1B,
2D). In contrast, muscarine did not have a measurable
effect on the resting membrane potential of FS interneurons and,
although this was not examined systematically, did not appear to alter
the latency, threshold, duration, or afterhyperpolarization of action
potentials evoked by intracellular current injection in these neurons
(Fig. 3,
4A, bottom
traces).

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Figure 3.
Muscarinic receptor-mediated inhibition of
synaptic transmission between FS interneurons and MS neurons.
Representative example of recording from a synaptically connected pair
of an FS interneuron and an MS neuron. Single action potentials of the
FS interneuron elicited IPSCs (green sweeps) with
variable amplitudes (left). Bath application of 10 µM muscarine strongly reduced the average amplitude of
the postsynaptic response without affecting passive or active
properties of the FS interneuron. Coapplication of 10 µM
atropine reversed the effect of muscarine (right).
Red traces are population means. IPSCs are inward
because of chloride loading (see Materials and Methods).
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Figure 4.
Muscarinic modulation of GABAergic IPSCs between
FS and MS neurons is presynaptic. A, Muscarine induced
change in the amplitude distribution of IPSCs. Ten consecutive traces
are shown for control condition (left) and after the
application of 2.5 µM muscarine (right).
Approximately the same amplitude levels were observed under the two
conditions, but there is clear shift in relative frequencies away from
the larger and toward the smaller and intermediate response amplitudes
induced by muscarine. To prevent the complete disappearance of larger
amplitude responses, the traces shown were recorded
before the full inhibitory effect of muscarine developed (~30%
inhibition). B, Correspondence between the reduction in
IPSC amplitude and increase of CV for a pair of FS and MS neurons. Each
point represents the mean amplitude and CV for ~20
consecutive responses. C, Linear regression of the
percentage of change of CV induced by muscarine against the percentage
of reduction of the average IPSC amplitude for seven pairs.
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To control for the possibility that the nicotinic responses were
mediated indirectly through the induced release of glutamate (McGhee et al., 1995 ; Radcliffe et al., 1999 ), in four cases, the response to bath (n = 2) or local pressure
application (n = 2) of cholinergic agonists was
examined in the presence of the ionotropic glutamate receptor
antagonists CNQX (50 µM) and APV (100 µM). The presence of these drugs did not block
or otherwise affect the nicotinic depolarization of FS interneurons
(Fig. 2A).
Presynaptic muscarinic inhibition of synaptic transmission between
FS interneurons and MS neurons
The effects of muscarinic agonists on synaptic transmission
between FS interneurons and MS neurons were tested on 10 synaptically connected cell pairs. Two of the 10 pairs involved the same FS interneuron paired with a different spiny neuron. Four pairs were recorded in slices obtained from young animals (average of 21 ± 2.9 d; range of 14-28 d) and six pairs in adults (average of 151.3 ± 17.1 gm; range of 110-208 gm). There was no
statistically significant difference between the age groups with
respect to the mean IPSC amplitudes or CV of the IPSCs (unpaired
t test; p > 0.8 and p > 0.5, respectively), and therefore the data were pooled.
Single action potentials of FS interneurons elicited IPSCs in
synaptically connected MS neurons with a generally high but variable
fidelity (Fig. 3). In most pairs, the failure rate was <1%
(n = 4 pairs; ~200 trials). One pair exhibited a
slightly higher failure rate of 4.9%, and, in one pair, a failure rate of 33.3% was observed. The mean peak IPSC amplitude was 212.6 ± 73 pA under control conditions (range of 21.9-499.3 pA;
n = 9 pairs; 20-200 traces averaged for each pair at
70 mV). A control amplitude could not be measured for one of the 10 pairs in which the recording was initiated in the presence of
muscarine. The trial-to-trial variance of the IPSC amplitude for
individual pairs far exceeded the stochastic background fluctuation of
the recording resulting from spontaneous synaptic activity and other
sources, suggesting the involvement of multiple release sites (see
below) (Figs. 3, 4A). The decaying phase of the IPSC
could be fitted with a single exponential with a time constant of
12.1 ± 0.7 msec (n = 4 pairs; 20-25°C).
Bath application of muscarine (2.5-10 µM) reduced the
mean IPSC amplitude elicited by single action potentials of FS
interneurons to 13.7-54.3% of their original amplitude
(n = 8 pairs; 20-200 IPSCs for each pair) (Fig. 3). In
another pair, 10 µM carbachol reduced the
average IPSC amplitude to 38.5% of control. The reduction was
statistically significant for each pair (Mann-Whitney U
test; p < 0.0001). Because each neuron was only tested
at a single drug concentration, a dose-response relationship of the
inhibition could not be determined for individual pairs. However,
linear regression of the percentage of control IPSC amplitude in
muscarine against the concentration of the drug across the eight pairs
resulted in a statistically significant linear fit with
R2 = 0.669 (F = 10.13; p = 0.024), demonstrating a dose dependence of
the muscarinic effect.
Application of the nonselective muscarinic antagonist atropine (5-10
µM) blocked 79.1 ± 10.9% of the muscarine-induced
IPSC amplitude reduction (n = 5 pairs; 50-200 IPSCs
for each pair) (Fig. 3). The blockade was statistically significant
(Mann-Whitney U test; p < 0.0001 for all
five pairs) and was complete in all but two cases in which sufficiently
long drug duration application was not possible (Fig. 3). To further
characterize the muscarinic receptor subtype, the effect of
pirenzepine, a selective
M1/M4 receptor antagonist
(Doods et al., 1987 ), was also tested. Pirenzepine at 100-200
nM significantly increased the IPSC amplitude
measured in the presence of muscarine (2.5-10
µM; 59 ± 16.8%; n = 3 pairs; Mann-Whitney U test; p < 0.005 for
each pair). The pirenzepine-induced amplitude increase represented the
recovery of approximately half (47.6 ± 15.7%) of the muscarinic
inhibition (n = 2).
No formal quantal analysis was attempted on the data because of
the relatively small number of IPSCs recorded under each condition (Stricker and Redman, 1994 ; Stricker et al., 1996 ). However, in most
cases, muscarinic receptor stimulation appeared to shift the
distribution of the IPSC amplitudes by increasing the relative frequency of smaller amplitude responses without altering the apparently discreet amplitude levels themselves (Fig.
4A), suggestive of a presynaptic mechanism of
inhibition. The possibility of a presynaptic locus of action for
muscarine was further examined by analyzing the drug-induced change in
the probability of failures and the CV. Failure rates were calculated
only for those pairs for which the minimal response amplitude was
sufficiently large to reliably discriminate them from the background
noise. The average control failure rate for these pairs was 0.46 ± 0.4% (n = 4 pairs). Application of muscarine
significantly increased the failure rate to 12.7 ± 4.4%
(n = 4; 2 test;
p < 0.025 for each pair). In addition to the change in failure rate, the decrease in the mean IPSC amplitude during muscarine application was paralleled by an increase of the CV of the IPSCs (Fig.
4B). The mean CV for the nine pairs under control
conditions was 0.53 ± 0.08. After reaching maximal effect,
muscarine significantly increased the CV to 0.97 ± 0.12, or 183%
of control (n = 9 pairs; 20-200 IPSCs for each pair;
F test; p < 0.0001 for each pair). Four of
the seven pairs tested with a nonparametric but less sensitive test for
the equality of variances (Wald-Wolfowitz runs test) also showed a
significant difference at p < 0.005. Linear regression analysis revealed a strong correlation, with
R2 = 0.91 (F = 53.1; p = 0.0008) between the magnitude of reduction of
the average IPSC amplitude and the relative change of the CV across the
pairs tested (Fig. 4C). The validity of the CV method depends on the relative magnitudes of the noise- and signal-related variance of the PSC amplitudes. In the recorded pairs, 0.19-4.44% of
the variance of the IPSC amplitudes was attributable to background noise, as determined by measuring the current amplitude fluctuation just before the evoked IPSCs (see Materials and Methods).
An indirect mediation of the muscarinic reduction of the IPSCs by
another neurotransmitter system could not be completely excluded in
this study. However, the involvement of GABAB
receptors was ruled out because the high-affinity
GABAB receptor antagonist CGP 55845A (1 or 2 µM; n = 2) failed to prevent the
inhibitory effects of muscarine on the IPSCs (data not shown). Although
not studied systematically, CGP 55845A did not appear to affect the IPSC amplitude or alter simple paired-pulse ratios at 300 or 500 msec
interstimulus intervals.
In three pairs in which muscarinic presynaptic inhibition was
demonstrated, the effect of bath application of nicotine (100 µM, n = 2; 200 µM, n = 1) was also tested. All
three FS interneurons were depolarized by nicotine (9.66 ± 2.33 mV), demonstrating that functional nicotinic soma-dendritic receptors
and muscarinic presynaptic receptors coexist in at least some
neostriatal FS interneurons.
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DISCUSSION |
The present study is the first to examine the effects of ACh on
neostriatal GABAergic FS interneurons. The main findings are that ACh
affects FS interneurons both postsynaptically, resulting in a powerful
nicotinic excitation, and presynaptically, resulting in a muscarinic
presynaptic inhibition of GABAergic synaptic transmission between FS
interneurons and spiny projection neuron. Considering the powerful
effect of these interneurons on the activity of the projection neurons
(Koós and Tepper, 1999 ), the cholinergic control of these
interneurons is expected to have a significant effect on the overall
activity of the neostriatum.
ACh led to substantial excitation of FS interneurons via nicotinic
receptors. The nicotinic excitation exhibited no apparent desensitization and produced depolarization sufficient to elicit spiking in previously silent interneurons. The nicotinic excitation appears to be a direct postsynaptic effect, independent of
glutamatergic afferents (McGhee et al., 1995 ; Radcliffe et al., 1999 ),
because it persisted in the presence of blockade of NMDA and non-NMDA receptors. The blockade of the nicotinic depolarization of FS interneurons by MEC, the insensitivity of the response to high concentrations of MLA, and the sustained response to bath application of nicotinic agonists strongly suggest that the response is not mediated by the exclusively 7 subunit-containing type 1 receptors (Alkondon and Albuquerque, 1993 ; Zoli et al., 1998 ). Some type 2 receptors containing 2 subunits can also be ruled out (Zoli et al.,
1998 ); however, it is possible that, depending the subtypes of
heteromeric subunits involved, a 2-containing receptor might still be involved.
One of the eleven tested FS interneurons did not respond to either bath
(20 µM) or pressure (20 mM) application of
carbachol. The intrinsic properties of this neuron did not appear to be
different from those of Ach-responsive FS interneurons. This finding
may reflect a heterogeneity among FS neurons, possibly corresponding to
the previously noted morphological diversity of this neuron type (Kita
et al., 1990 ; Kawaguchi, 1993 ; Kubota and Kawaguchi, 1993 ; Kawaguchi et
al., 1995 ; Koós and Tepper, 1999 ).
Monosynaptic innervation of parvalbumin-positive interneurons by
choline acetyltransferase-positive terminals has been demonstrated in
the neostriatum (Chang and Kita, 1992 ). Because parvalbumin-positive neurons most likely correspond to FS interneurons (Kawaguchi, 1993 ;
Kita, 1993 ; Kawaguchi et al., 1995 ; Koós and Tepper,
1999 ), FS interneurons receive monosynaptic input from cholinergic
interneurons. Surprisingly, however, in a few preliminary experiments,
we were unable to reliably elicit nicotinic EPSPs in FS interneurons
using extracellular field stimulation. The reasons for this failure are
unclear, but several possibilities exist, including that our stimulation failed to recruit a sufficient number of cholinergic afferents, that the cholinergic terminals were compromised in some way,
or possibly that simultaneous release of other neurotransmitters effectively attenuated ACh release. It is possible, however, that, in
contrast to the slice preparation, in the in vivo situation volume transmission of ACh may be sufficient to activate the receptors extrasynaptically.
The second major effect of ACh on FS interneurons was inhibition of the
FS-evoked IPSC in MS neurons. Cholinergic inhibition of GABAergic
transmission has been demonstrated previously in the neostriatum
(Sugita et al., 1991 ; Szabo et al., 1998 ). Those studies showed that
GABAergic IPSPs evoked by extracellular stimulation were reduced in
amplitude by the application of muscarinic agonists. The present study
confirms and extends these previous findings. In particular, the use of
the dual recording technique allowed the identification of the afferent
source of at least one ACh-modulated GABAergic input of MS neurons as
the FS interneurons.
The presynaptic locus of action of ACh was inferred from a significant
change of the CV of the IPSC. Calculation of the CV changes the
variance introduced by noise and therefore can result in an artifactual
appearance of a change in the overall CV of the IPSC, even in the case
of a purely postsynaptic reduction of the evoked response (Clements and
Silver, 2000 ). To control for this possibility, the relative
contribution of noise to the total variance was estimated. The noise
variance was a only a small fraction (0.19-4.44%) of the total signal
variance. Therefore, the near doubling of the CV under muscarinic
stimulation cannot be a result of the scaling of the noise-related
variance and hence reflects a change in the IPSC amplitude distribution
and demonstrates a presynaptic mechanism of action for ACh, consistent
with the increased IPSP failure rate.
Cholinergic regulation of neostriatal GABA release has also been
studied neurochemically. Nonselective cholinergic agonists have been
shown to increase basal GABA overflow in vitro through nicotinic receptors (Limberger et al., 1986 ). In contrast, GABA overflow induced by electrical stimulation (Sugita et al., 1991 ) or
high extracellular K+ (Marchi et al.,
1990 ) was found to be inhibited by ACh through muscarinic receptors.
These opposite effects of cholinergic stimulation on GABA release in
the stimulated and unstimulated conditions may be explained by the dual
regulation of the FS interneuron through nicotinic and muscarinic
mechanisms reported in the present paper. Considering that FS
interneurons are hyperpolarized and inactive in vitro (Fig.
1B, bottom trace) (Kawaguchi, 1993 ;
Koós and Tepper, 1999 ) and assuming that the rate of action
potential-independent spontaneous release of GABA from their terminals
is low, it would be expected that, in the presence of a nonselective
agonist, the GABA release-inducing effect of nicotinic stimulation
would predominate over presynaptic muscarinic inhibition. Conversely,
when FS interneurons are activated to release GABA, the stimuli may
excite the FS interneurons to such levels such that additional
nicotinic stimulation produces only a relatively minor further increase
in firing rate and consequent GABA release, and therefore the
inhibitory presynaptic effect of the muscarinic receptors dominates.
The results of the present study, however, cannot in themselves account
for the finding that nicotinic receptor-mediated increase of GABA
release persists in TTX (Limberger et al., 1986 ; Radcliffe et al.,
1999 ). Therefore, nicotinic receptors may also be present on some
GABAergic presynaptic terminals. Although these presynaptic receptors
may be expressed on FS interneurons, it is also possible that the
TTX-insensitive nicotinic receptor-mediated GABA release originates
from other striatal GABAergic terminals.
The dual cholinergic control of the inhibition of MS neurons by FS
interneurons described here suggests a complex regulation of these
interneurons by ACh. The activation of soma-dendritic nicotinic
receptors should increase the feedforward inhibition of spiny
projection neurons, whereas presynaptic muscarinic receptors are
expected to exert the opposite effect. The balance between these
opposing effects will depend on the magnitude and timing of changes in
ACh release. Neostriatal ACh release is under a complex regulation
involving dopaminergic, glutamatergic, GABAergic, and other inputs
inducing both rapid and slow changes in ACh levels (Aosaki et al.,
1994 , 1995 ; Smolders et al., 1995 ; DeBoer and Abercrombie, 1996 ; DeBoer
et al., 1996 ; Abercrombie and DeBoer, 1997 ). These patterns of ACh
release could be differentially registered by muscarinic and nicotinic
receptors of FS interneurons. In particular, there is evidence that
resting ACh levels do not tonically inhibit GABA release through
muscarinic receptors in the neostriatum (Smolders et al., 1995 ).
Because ACh release increases significantly during cortical activation
(Timmerman and Abercrombie, 1996 ; Abercrombie and DeBoer, 1997 ), it is
possible that presynaptic muscarinic receptors on FS interneuron
terminals are activated specifically during periods of increased
behavioral arousal.
On a much faster time scale, dramatic behaviorally contingent
regulation of ACh release has been demonstrated by recording the firing
of physiologically identified cholinergic interneurons in the primate
neostriatum (Apicella et al., 1991 ; Aosaki et al., 1994 , 1995 ; Schultz
et al., 1995 ). It has been shown that putative cholinergic interneurons
(tonically active neurons, or TANs) cease firing for a short (<300
msec) period when the animal is presented with a behaviorally relevant
sensory cue (Aosaki et al., 1994 , 1995 ). It is unclear, however, how
this brief change in ACh release is registered by the neostriatal spiny
neurons. Because of the short duration of the pause in the firing of
TANs, a temporally correlated effect would require the transmission of
this signal by a sufficiently fast postsynaptic signaling mechanism.
Although direct membrane-delimited signaling pathways of muscarinic
receptors, including those regulating MS neurons (Howe and Surmeier,
1995 ), may be sufficiently rapid to reverse partially during these
brief reductions of ACh release (Zhou et al., 1997 ), the
nondesensitizing nicotinic receptors of FS interneurons are likely to
follow these events more effectively and with more temporal
specificity. Because FS-spiny synaptic transmission is
primarily GABAA mediated (Koós and
Tepper, 1999 ) and therefore also fast, it is possible that disfacilitation of FS interneurons plays a crucial role in mediating the pause signal of cholinergic interneurons to the rest of the striatal circuitry, in particular to the spiny neuron, with great temporal fidelity. The reduced activity of these interneurons would in
turn cause disinhibition of MS neurons, inducing increased output from
the neostriatum. Consistent with this hypothesis, an increase in firing
rate of some MS neurons is observed during the same phase of the
behavioral task during which the pause of firing of TANs occurs
(Hikosaka et al., 1989 ). Disinhibition of MS neurons in response to the
detection of relevant stimuli may serve an important function in the
generation of the behavioral response.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 30, 2001; revised Oct. 23, 2001; accepted Oct. 25, 2001.
This research was supported in part by National Institutes of
Health Grants MH 58885 and NS 34865 and a Busch Biomedical
Support Grant from Rutgers University. We thank E. Borók and F. Shah for excellent technical assistance and Dr. J. C. Magee for
providing a slice preparation protocol for adult animals.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. James M. Tepper, Center for
Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience, Program in Cellular and
Molecular Biodynamics, Rutgers University, 197 University Avenue,
Newark, NJ 07102. E-mail: tepper{at}axon.rutgers.edu.
T. Koós present address: Section of Neurobiology, Yale University
School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, P.O. Box 208001, New Haven, CT
06520-8001.
 |
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