The Journal of Neuroscience, July 2, 2003, 23(13):5634-5644
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Activation of Metabotropic Glutamate 5 and NMDA Receptors Underlies the Induction of Persistent Bursting and Associated Long-Lasting Changes in CA3 Recurrent Connections
Ron Stoop,1
François Conquet,1
Benoit Zuber,1
Leon L. Voronin,2 and
Etienne Pralong1
1Institute of Cellular Biology and Morphology,
University of Lausanne, CH-1005 Lausanne, Switzerland, and
2Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and
Neurophysiology, Russian Academy of Sciences, 117865 Moscow, Russia, and Brain
Research Institute, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, 103064 Moscow,
Russia
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Abstract
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The aim of this study was to describe the induction and expression
mechanisms of a persistent bursting activity in a horizontal slice preparation
of the rat limbic system that includes the ventral part of the hippocampus and
the entorhinal cortex. Disinhibition of this preparation by bicuculline led to
interictal-like bursts in the CA3 region that triggered synchronous activity
in the entorhinal cortex. Washout of bicuculline aftera1hr application
resulted in a maintained production of hippocampal bursts that continued to
spread to the entorhinal cortex. Separation of CA3 from the entorhinal cortex
caused the activity in the latter to become asynchronous with CA3 activity in
the presence of bicuculline and disappear after washout; however, in CA3,
neither the induction of bursting nor its persistence were affected.
Associated with the CA3 persistent bursting, a strengthening of recurrent
collateral excitatory input to CA3 pyramidal cells and a decreased input to
CA3 interneurons was found. Both the induction of the persistent bursting and
the changes in synaptic strength were prevented by antagonists of metabotropic
glutamate 5 (mGlu5) or NMDA receptors or protein synthesis inhibitors and did
not occur in slices from mGlu5 receptor knock-out mice. The above findings
suggest potential synaptic mechanisms by which the hippocampus switches to a
persistent interictal bursting mode that may support a spread of
interictal-like bursting to surrounding temporal lobe regions.
Key words: epilepsy; mGluR5 knockout; interictal bursting; synaptic plasticity; CA3 recurrent collaterals; persistent bursting; horizontal slice
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Introduction
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In brains of epileptic patients, short spontaneous "interictal
bursts" are observed between epileptic seizures. Although the exact
relationship between interictal bursts and seizure activity is poorly
understood, it appears that their development is closely related with the
epileptic pathology. Interictal bursts have been suggested to both being
predictive of seizure activity (Ralston,
1958
; Cascino et al.,
1996
; Holmes et al.,
1996
) and playing a role in the control of epileptic activity
(Avoli, 2001
;
de Curtis et al., 2001
). An
understanding of the mechanisms that lead to the development and maintenance
of interictal bursting may thus shed additional light on the nature of
epileptic pathology. In in vitro slice preparations of the
hippocampus, discharges resembling interictal activity can be readily provoked
by a blockade of GABAA-mediated inhibitory transmission. Anatomical
(Ishizuka et al., 1990
;
Gomez-Di Cesare et al., 1997
)
and electrophysiological (Miles and Wong,
1986
) studies have shown that a combination of spontaneous
bursting in pyramidal cells and recurrent excitatory circuitry underlies the
development of this interictal-like bursting in the hippocampus (for review,
see Traub and Jefferys, 1994
).
Synaptic plasticity has been extensively described in this region, but its
effects on the function of recurrent excitatory circuitry have been poorly
characterized. Activity-dependent long-lasting modifications of synapses in
recurrent loops may have drastic implications for the function of such
networks and may push them into states of permanently altered network behavior
(Bains et al., 1999
;
McEwen, 2001
).
In the present study, we show that 3060 min of bicuculline-mediated
disinhibition induces a persistent interictal-like bursting that spreads from
the CA3 region to the entorhinal cortex, where it triggers and maintains a
synchronized interictal-like activity. Our data suggest that bursting is
maintained because of a persistent potentiation of the recurrent collateral
synapses on CA3 pyramidal cells and long-lasting depression of projections
from the recurrent collaterals on CA3 interneurons. The induction, but not the
maintenance of these persistent changes, depends on the activation of
metabotropic glutamate 5 (mGlu5) and NMDA receptors and requires protein
synthesis. These findings show how a restricted period of enhanced endogenous
activity in the normal hippocampus can cause permanent changes in synaptic
transmission and a persistent interictal-like activity that can control
bursting activity in other parts of the temporal lobe.
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Materials and Methods
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Slice preparation. Male and female C57B1/6 mice (34 weeks
old) were used throughout the study of either the wild type or, where
indicated, lacking mGlu5 receptors [metabotropic glutamate 5 receptor
(mGluR5)-knock-out (KO)] (Chiamulera et
al., 2001
). Horizontal slices were prepared using methods similar
to those described for the slice preparation from the rat brain
(Stoop and Pralong, 2000
).
Slices were transferred to the recording chamber (Fine Science Tools,
Heidelberg, Germany), in which they were maintained on a nylon grid at the
interface between humidified carbogen and a constant flow (1.5 ml/min) of
artificial CSF (ACSF) containing the following (in mM): 118 NaCl,
25 NaHCO3, 10 glucose, 2 KCl, 2
MgCl2x6H2O, 2
CaCl2x2H2O, and 1.2 NaH2PO4
at 31°C, saturated with carbogen [95% O2 (5% CO2)],
pH 7.4. After 1 hr of recovery in the bath, extracellular K+
concentration was augmented to 5 mM by the addition of KCl, and the
slices were left for 1 hr in this condition before the experiments began.
Electrophysiological recordings. Extracellular recordings were
made using 0.5 M
tungsten microelectrodes (Frederick Haer Company,
Bowdoinham, ME); signals were preamplified 20 times and additionally amplified
100 times by a Cyberamp380 amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA).
Conventional intracellular voltage recordings were made from neurons in the
CA3 pyramidal cell layer using an Axoclamp 2A amplifier (Axon Instruments) in
the bridge mode and sharp glass electrodes filled with potassium acetate (4
M) with resistances ranging from 80 to 120 M
. The membrane
potential was monitored on a digital recording oscilloscope (Kombigraf 4;
Gould Instruments, Valley View, OH). Membrane currents were obtained from
visually guided whole-cell patch-clamp recording under infrared
videomicroscopy (DMLFS; Leica, Bensheim, Germany) using 510 M
borosilicate pipettes filled with the following (in mM): 150 KOH,
150 HCH3SO3, 10 HEPES, 2
MgCl2x6H2O, 0.1 BAPTA, 2 ATP (Na+
salt), and 0.4 GTP (Na+ salt), adjusted with KOH, pH 7.2, and held
at 70 mV. The holding potential of 40 mV was used for measuring
IPSCs when they were not pharmacologically isolated. Pharmacologically
isolated IPSCs were measured at 70 mV, in which case KOH and
HCH3SO3 were replaced with KCl (150 mM) in
the intracellular solution, and the blockers of excitatory glutamate receptors
d()-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP-5) (100
µM) and
1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-6-nitro-2,3-dioxo-benzo[f]quinoxaline-7-sulfonamide (NBQX)
(10 µM) were added to the ACSF immediately before the
recordings. GABAergic identity of these currents was confirmed post
hoc by perfusion with bicuculline (20 µM). For the
patch-clamp recordings, the Axopatch 200B amplifier (Axon Instruments) was
used.
Extracellular stimulation was performed using a bipolar tungsten electrode
of 1 M
with a tip separation of 125 µm (Frederick Haer Company) that
was connected to a Grass S88 stimulator. Single stimuli were delivered at
0.10.2 Hz frequency. NBQX (10 µM) and AP-5 (100
µM) were used to isolate IPSPs. Their averages were made of five
consecutive traces. ACSF-filled glass pipettes were used for minimal
stimulation of the mossy fiber or recurrent collateral pathway (0.1 Hz;
3050 µsec). Stimulus intensities were adjusted to a level at which
the mean amplitude of the EPSCs and failure rate were independent of the
stimulus intensity over a range of approximately ±5% (see
Fig. 7B), suggesting
activation of a single presynaptic fiber
(Raastad, 1995
). Our pilot
experiments showed that this "minimal stimulation protocol"
induced
4050% transmission failures (see
Fig. 7D). Because the
construction of a detailed stimulusresponse curve (see
Fig. 7B) was time
consuming and could induce activity-dependent changes of synaptic efficacy, we
typically used a simpler procedure to ensure activation of one presynaptic
fiber (or only a few): the stimulus strength was set at the level
corresponding to
4050% of transmission failures. Evoked EPSCs were
accepted for analysis if they appeared in the interval between 2 and 7 msec
after stimulation, their latency was stable within <1 msec, and they
exhibited characteristic fast rising and exponential decay phases and peak
amplitudes that exceeded two SDs of the baseline noise. Stimulus trials that
did not produce events meeting these criteria were considered transmission
failures and were not used for additional analysis.

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Figure 7. Evoked EPSCs before and 3 hr after bicuculline washout A, Diagram
of the slice preparation indicating the sites of the recordings (filled
circles) and stimulation (arrows). B, Plot of EPSC amplitudes at
different stimulus intensities (n = 5 measurements per point) from a
representative experiment. C, Example traces of evoked EPSCs recorded
in a CA3 pyramidal cell after minimal stimulation of the recurrent
collaterals. D, Amplitude histogram from the same experiment
illustrated in B and C. E, F, Mean amplitudes of the minimal
evoked EPSCs recorded from pyramidal cells (E) and interneurons
(F) before (black columns) and 3 hr after bicuculline (20
µM) washout (gray columns). All data were obtained from
wild-type mice, except for the columns that indicated m5KO, which were from
mGluR5-KO mice. +AP-5 and +MPEP indicate treatments with AP-5 (100
µM) and MPEP (50 µM). All experiments were
performed at a holding potential of 70 mV. The drugs were applied 30
min before and kept throughout the 1 hr bicuculline incubation (n =
520 cells per bar). The stimulated pathways are indicated below the
columns in F (*p < 0.05; ANOVA).
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Data acquisition and statistical analysis. Data acquisition was
performed using a Digidata 1200 interface (Axon Instruments) and an
IBM-compatible computer running Axotape 7 software or pClamp 5.7.1 (Axon
Instruments). Extracellular, intracellular, or patch-clamp signals were
filtered at 1, 2, or 5 kHz, respectively, and digitized at a rate of 2, 5, or
10 kHz. For automated analysis of extracellular signals, Labview 4.1 software
(National Instruments, Austin, TX) was used. Events with <700 msec delays
between the end of one population spike and the beginning of the next were
considered to belong to the same interictal burst. Effects of pharmacological
agents or other treatments were quantified by measuring burst parameters
(frequency and duration). Statistical significance was assessed using ANOVA
test (p < 0.05, considered significant).
Postsynaptic currents obtained with whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were
automatically detected and analyzed using the Strathclyde Electrophysiological
Data Recorder V2.1.2 software and Whole Cell Program V3.1.4 software (Dr. John
Dempster, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK). Detected spontaneous
synaptic currents or those evoked by minimal stimulation were visually
inspected, and the events that immediately preceded or followed (within 50
msec before and 100 msec after) interictal bursts were manually removed. One
to three cells were recorded from each slice. Two hundred to 300 spontaneous
events were measured in each cell before and after bicuculline application,
and respective mean values for each cell were calculated. The sets of these
mean data were used afterward for calculations of general means across all
recorded cells, and ±SEM is given in the text and tables. Rise time was
defined as the time from 10 to 90% of the peak amplitude, and decay time was
defined as the time to 50% of the peak amplitude. In general, the values
before and after the treatments were derived from different cells. They were
also compared using ANOVA (Van der Kloot,
1991
). Cells were classified into pyramidal cells and interneurons
according to their position relative to the pyramidal cell layer and their
spiking behavior after current injections
(van Hooft et al., 2000
).
Excitatory AMPA receptor-mediated currents were measured as inward currents
and inhibitory GABAA receptor-mediated (Cl )
currents as outward currents at 70 mV. Only recordings in which all
inward currents could be blocked by NBQX (10 µM) were used for
analysis.
Pharmacological treatments. All drugs were applied by bath
perfusion. Application of 20 µM bicuculline was started 1 hr
after increasing extracellular KCl to 5 mM to ensure development of
interictal bursting events (Tancredi and
Avoli, 1987
). NBQX, AP-5, cycloheximide, and actinomycin D were
purchased from Sigma, and mGluR5 antagonist
2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)-pyridine (MPEP) and group II agonist
(2S,2'R,3'R)-2-(2',3'-dicarboxycyclopropyl)glycine
(DCG-IV) were purchased from Tocris Cookson (Bristol, UK). Antagonists were
perfused for 30 min before the start of the bicuculline application until
bicuculline washout unless otherwise indicated.
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Results
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Persistence of bursting activity after bicuculline washout
Extracellular recordings were obtained from the CA3 region of the ventral
hippocampus and superficial layers (IIII) of the entorhinal cortex,
starting 1 hr after the mouse brain slices were transferred to the
experimental chamber. Similar to previous findings in the rat horizontal slice
preparation (Stoop and Pralong,
2000
), regular interictal-like bursts (hereafter also referred to
as bursts) started to appear in both regions within 510 min after
bicuculline application (Fig.
1). Individual bursts consisted of a large amplitude spike,
followed by a variable number of so-called "afterdischarges"
(Fig. 1, bottom left). Although
burst onsets in both the CA3 and entorhinal cortex were always synchronous,
afterdischarges showed more autonomous patterns
(Fig. 1, bottom row). After
2030 min of bicuculline application, synchronous interictal-like
bursting in both regions reached an average frequency of 6.6 ± 0.7
bursts per minute and an average burst duration of 331 ± 47 msec in the
hippocampus and 403 ± 35 msec in the entorhinal cortex
(Fig. 2A,B,
respectively) (n = 35 slices). The burst onset in the entorhinal
cortex occurred on average with a delay of 24 ± 4 msec after the burst
onset in the hippocampal CA3 region (n = 30).

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Figure 1. Effects of bicuculline application and washout on spontaneous bursting
activity in the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex. Top traces represent
examples of extracellular recordings of bursting activity in the hippocampal
CA3 region and EC before, during, and after bicuculline application. Insets
represent enlarged parts of the top two traces to show the regularity of the
bursting activity (middle traces) as well as the individual bursts with
afterdischarges (bottom traces). Bicuculline application is indicated by the
gray bar.
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Figure 2. Summary of the effects of bicuculline application and washout on
spontaneous bursting activity in intact slices and after separation of the
hippocampus from the entorhinal cortex. A, Average burst frequencies
before, during, and after 60 min of bicuculline application in the hippocampus
(CA3; filled circles) and layers IIII of the entorhinal cortex (open
circles). In all graphs, bicuculline application (BIC; 20 µM) is
indicated by gray bars, and dotted lines indicate average frequencies obtained
during 60 min bicuculline incubation. Insets show representative intracellular
recordings from the same CA3 pyramidal neuron after stimulation of recurrent
collaterals before (left) and 3 hr after bicuculline washout (right) in the
presence of AP-5 (100 µM) and NBQX (10 µM) at
holding potentials of 55, 70, 85, and 95 mV.
B, Effects of 1 hr bicuculline application on the average burst
duration in the same experiments as shown in A (n = 35
slices). C, Average frequencies of bursting activity in the
hippocampus and entorhinal cortex before and after their separation (as
indicated at the top) followed by bicuculline washout (n = 15
slices). Example traces show CA3 and EC bursting activity before and after
separation. Notice the lower frequency in the EC after its separation from the
CA3 area and the loss of synchrony with CA3 bursts.
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Washout of bicuculline from the slice preparation started 1 hr after the
beginning of its application. An immediate effect of the bicuculline washout
was a decrease in the duration of the bursts, accompanied by a transient
increase in their frequency (Fig.
1, middle column). Maximum average bursting frequencies were
reached 3040 min after bicuculline washout (20 ± 0.9 and 19.8
± 0.8 bursts per minute in the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex,
respectively) (Fig.
2A). Prolonged washout of bicuculline over a period of 2
hr resulted in a decrease in the bursting frequency in the CA3 region to the
mean value of 9 ± 1.2 bursts per minute. Bursting in this region
persisted at this level for as long as we could measure (
8 hr). In the
entorhinal cortex, the average burst frequency decreased to a lower steady
level of 3.4 ± 1.2 bursts per minute. All bursts that could still be
detected in this structure were synchronous with the bursts in the CA3 region.
The changes in burst frequencies after bicuculline washout were accompanied by
decreases in the average burst duration to 195 ± 66 msec in the
hippocampus and 74 ± 33 msec in the entorhinal cortex
(Fig. 2B,
Table 1).
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Table 1. Average burst durations and frequencies of bicuculline-provoked bursts
in CA3 region of the ventral hippocampus (CA3) and layers IIII of the
entorhinal cortex (EC) under different conditions
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To test the effects of bicuculline washout on GABAergic inhibition, we
recorded IPSPs intracellularly from CA3 pyramidal cells. The IPSPs were evoked
by stimulation in the CA3 stratum radiatum, close to the recording site. They
were measured from the same cell before and after bicuculline application and
pharmacologically isolated by the application of 10 µM NBQX and
100 µM AP-5 throughout the recording
(Fig. 2A, top traces).
The IPSPs were similar before and 2 hr after bicuculline washout. Their mean
amplitudes, measured at a holding potential of 55 mV, were 6.1
± 1.1 mV before bicuculline washout and 5.9 ± 0.6 mV
after bicuculline washout (p > 0.05; ANOVA; n = 8 cells).
The data indicate that the washout of bicuculline leads to a full recovery of
GABAergic inhibition.
CA3 as the source of persistent bursting
To assess whether the connection between the CA3 hippocampal region and
entorhinal cortex plays a role in the maintenance of the persistent bursting,
we separated the CA3 from the entorhinal cortex 1 hr after bicuculline
application. Two cuts were made with the tip of a fine syringe needle that led
to complete isolation of the CA3 region
(Fig. 2C, inset).
Extracellular bursts were recorded from the isolated CA3 region and layers
IIII of the entorhinal cortex in the remaining part of the slice
preparation. The separation did not affect the burst appearance in CA3
(Fig. 2C, top right
trace). Neither the average burst frequency
(Fig. 2C, graph) nor
the average burst duration was changed
(Table 1). However, in the
entorhinal cortex, the bursts started to appear at a lower frequency
(Fig. 2C, graph).
Moreover, they no longer synchronized with the CA3 bursts, resulting in a
total loss of the previous temporal relationship between bursting in the CA3
and entorhinal cortex (EC) (Fig.
2C, bottom right trace). The average bursting frequency
in this region decreased immediately after separation to a value of 4 ±
0.6 bursts per minute (Fig. 2C)
(n = 15), whereas the average burst duration increased to 950
± 42 msec (Table 1).
Fifteen minutes after separation, bicuculline washout was started from both
regions. As shown in Figure
2C (graph), bicuculline washout resulted in a gradual
decrease in the frequency of the bursts in the entorhinal cortex. They
disappeared completely after
3 hr of washout. In contrast, bursting
continued in the CA3 region (Fig.
2C). These findings suggest that in the intact slice
preparation, the persistent bursting originates in the CA3 region from where
it drives the bursting in the entorhinal cortex. Therefore, in the following
experiments, recordings were made only from the CA3 region.
Induction of persistent bursting requires activation of NMDA
receptors
The enhanced excitability of the hippocampus resulting in a persistent
bursting activity could be a direct result of underlying changes in synaptic
strength. We studied whether NMDA receptor activation, often implicated in
modifications of synaptic strength (Bliss
and Collingridge, 1993
), was needed to induce persistent bursting.
To this purpose, the NMDA receptor antagonist AP-5 (100 µM) was
added before and during bicuculline application
(Fig. 3A, filled
circles) (n = 15 slices). After bicuculline application,
interictal-like bursting developed, although at somewhat higher frequency
(11.5 ± 1.7 bursts per minute) compared with control (6.6 ± 0.7
bursts per minute; n = 35; p < 0.05)
(Table 1,
Fig. 2). The bursts were of
shorter duration (115 ± 21 msec; n = 15 slices) compared with
control (331 ± 47 msec; n = 35 slices; p < 0.05),
similar to previous findings in rat horizontal slices
(Stoop and Pralong, 2000
).

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Figure 3. Requirement of NMDA receptor activation and effects of different time spans
of bicuculline application on the induction of persistent bursting.
A, Application of an NMDA receptor blocker AP-5 (100
µM) during (black bar; filled circles; n = 15 slices)
or after (white bar; open circles; n = 17 slices) bicuculline
application (BIC; 20 µM; gray bar). Notice that AP-5 prevents
the persistence of the bursting only when applied during bicuculline
application (filled circles), indicating the need for NMDA receptor activation
for the induction but not for the expression of the persistent bursting
activity. B, Average burst frequencies before, during, and after 15,
30, and 60 min of bicuculline application (white, gray, and black bars
corresponding with open, gray, and filled circles in n = 8, 15, and
35 slices, respectively); the dotted line indicates the average frequency
reached during 60 min bicuculline incubation.
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In the slices pretreated with the NMDA receptor antagonist AP-5 (100
µM), the interictal-like bursting activity disappeared within 60
min after the start of bicuculline washout
(Fig. 3A, filled
circles). In contrast, when AP-5 was applied only after the start of
bicuculline washout, bursting activity continued
(Fig. 3A, open
circles). In this case, a gradual increase in frequency was seen that reached
a final level of 11.9 ± 1.6 bursts per minute after 120 min of
bicuculline washout (Fig.
3A, open circles) (n = 17 slices). Thus, it
appears that NMDA receptor activation is a necessary condition for the
induction of the permanent bursting activity but not for its final
expression.
A known type of persistent synaptic plasticity, hippocampal long-term
potentiation (LTP), has been shown to have a certain threshold in terms of the
strength and duration of challenges used for its induction
(Bliss and Collingridge, 1993
).
Therefore, we explored the effects of different time periods of bicuculline
application. We found that its 15 min application was sufficient to cause a
development of bursting activity but was insufficient to induce a persistent
bursting. Bursting in this case completely disappeared 3 hr after the start of
bicuculline washout (Fig.
3B, open circles). Although 30 min of bicuculline
application was able to induce a persistent bursting, the resulting final
level after bicuculline washout (4.5 ± 1.9 bursts per minute;
n = 15 slices) (Fig.
3B, gray circles) was lower than that resulting from 1 hr
of bicuculline application (9 ± 1.2 bursts per minute; n = 35
slices; p < 0.05). These findings indicate that a process taking
at least 30 min needs to be activated to induce the permanent hippocampal
bursting activity.
Induction of persistent bursting requires protein synthesis
It is possible that the establishment of persistent bursting requires
de novo protein synthesis. To determine the involvement of protein
synthesis, we preincubated slices from wild-type mice with either the mRNA
translation inhibitor cycloheximide (50 µM)
(Fig. 4A) or DNA
transcription inhibitor actinomycin D (25 µM)
(Fig. 4B). The
incubation started 30 min before and continued throughout the 1 hr bicuculline
application. Preincubation with neither of these two inhibitors blocked the
development of bursting activity during bicuculline application. Although in
the presence of cycloheximide the average frequency of bursting was somewhat
elevated and the individual burst duration was shorter compared with the
untreated slices, these values were unaffected by actinomycin D
(Fig. 4,
Table 1). Either treatment
completely prevented the development of persistent bursting so that washout of
bicuculline resulted in a rapid decrease in bursting frequency and led to a
disappearance of the bursting after a 2 hr washout
(Fig. 4A,B). It
therefore appears that protein synthesis constitutes an essential step in the
development of the persistent bursting activity.

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Figure 4. Requirement of protein synthesis for bicuculline-induced persistent
bursting activity. Protein translation inhibitor cycloheximide (50
µM) (A, black bar) and mRNA transcription inhibitor
actinomycin D (25 µM) (B, black bar) added to the
slices 30 min before and kept throughout the bicuculline application (BIC; 20
µM; gray bar) inhibited the induction of the persistent bursting
activity by bicuculline (n = 8 and 9 slices, respectively) (compare
Fig. 2A).
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Induction of persistent bursting requires mGlu5 receptor activation
Activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors, group I (mGluR1 and mGluR
5) in particular, has been implicated in the induction of hippocampal
long-term synaptic plasticity (Conquet et
al., 1994
; Lu et al.,
1997
). To test the involvement of mGluR5 in the development of
persistent bursting, we used slices from a recently generated strain of
transgenic mice lacking these receptors
(Chiamulera et al., 2001
). We
found that the bursting activity developed normally after bicuculline
application and was indistinguishable in both extracellular and intracellular
recordings from the activity in slices of wild-type mice
(Fig. 5A). The average
bursting frequency was 5.9 ± 0.4 bursts per minute and the average
burst duration was 298 ± 67 msec (n = 15 slices), which is not
significantly different from the wild-type values
(Table 1) (p >
0.05).

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Figure 5. Requirement of mGlu5 receptor activation for bicuculline induced persistent
bursting activity. A, Examples of bursts in the CA3 region of slices
from mGluR5-KO (left) and wild-type (right) mice. Top and middle traces
represent simultaneous extracellular and intracellular recordings,
respectively. Insets below show respective bursts on an expanded time scale.
B, Bicuculline (BIC; 20 µM) applied during the period
indicated by the gray bar did not induce persistent bursting activity in
slices of either mGluR5-KO mice (left graph; n = 15 slices) or
wild-type mice treated with MPEP (50 µM; right graph, black bar;
n = 12 slices).
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When bicuculline was washed from the slices lacking mGluR5, an immediate
decrease of bursting frequency followed, leading to a total suppression of the
bursting activity after a 2 hr washout
(Fig. 5B, left graph).
This behavior did not result from unspecific developmental or compensatory
changes caused by the absence of mGluR5. Indeed, slices from wild-type mice
that were preincubated with the mGluR5 antagonist MPEP
(Gasparini et al., 1999
)
showed a similar rapid decrease of the bursting frequency and total halt of
bursting aftera2hr bicuculline washout
(Fig. 5B, right
graph). Neither the average frequency nor duration of the bursts during
bicuculline application was affected by the preincubation with MPEP
(Table 1). Furthermore, when
MPEP was applied only after bicuculline application, bursting activity
persisted as in untreated wild-type slices (data not shown). Thus, it appears
that the activation of mGluR5 is essential for the induction of the persistent
bursting activity, but that it is not needed for its expression.
Bursting increases pyramidal cell excitation and decreases that of
interneurons
It follows from the previous findings that several signaling pathways often
implicated in long-term synaptic plasticities in the hippocampus are also
necessary for the induction of the persistent bursting. To determine which
synaptic changes could underlie the persistent bursting, we performed
whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from CA3 neurons in the pyramidal cell layer
as well as from interneurons close to stratum pyramidale on either stratum
radiatum or stratum oriens side. Examples of spontaneous postsynaptic currents
recorded from a pyramidal cell and an interneuron are shown in
Figure 6A and
B. Spontaneous EPSCs appeared at a holding potential of
70 mV as downward inflections with average intervals of 2.4 ±
0.5 sec in pyramidal cells and 2.8 ± 0.4 sec in interneurons
(n = 30 neurons of each type recorded from a total of 18 slices).
Compared with EPSCs of the pyramidal cells, EPSCs of the interneurons
exhibited shorter rise and decay times
(Table 2). These values did not
significantly change in slices that were still bursting after a 3 hr
bicuculline washout.

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Figure 6. Spontaneous postsynaptic current amplitudes before and 3 hr after
bicuculline washout. A, B, Examples of spontaneous EPSCs recorded
from CA3 pyramidal cells (A) and interneurons (B) before
bicuculline application. Insets show sample traces on an expanded time scale.
C, D, Cumulative amplitude distributions of spontaneous EPSCs
(negative values) and IPSCs (positive values) in pyramidal cells (C)
and interneurons (D) before (solid line) and 3 hr after washout of
bicuculline applied for 1 hr (dotted line). E, F, Mean amplitudes of
EPSCs and IPSCs recorded from pyramidal cells (E) and interneurons
(F) before (black columns) and 3 hr after bicuculline (20
µM) washout (gray columns). Each column represents the means
from 1020 cells. Recordings were made from slices of wild-type and
mGluR5-KO (m5KO) mice. Recordings from slices of wild-type mice were made
under control conditions and after treatments with AP-5 (100 µM)
and MPEP (50 µM) as indicated. The drugs were applied 30 min
before and subsequently throughout the 1 hr bicuculline incubation. All
experiments were performed at a holding potential of 70 mV, except for
the positive IPSCs, which were recorded at 40 mV. The IPSCs recorded at
70 mV were pharmacologically isolated by adding AP-5 (100
µM) and NBQX (10 µM); recording electrodes filled
with KCl-based solution were used (see Materials and Methods). Their GABAergic
identity was confirmed by the application of bicuculline (20 µM)
at the end of the recordings. Notice the lack of persistent effects of
bicuculline on IPSCs recorded under both conditions and significant effects on
EPSC amplitudes (*p < 0.05; ANOVA test).
|
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View this table:
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|
Table 2. Characteristics of spontaneous EPSCs recorded from CA3 pyramidal cells
and interneurons before bicuculline application was started (before
bicuculline) or 3 hr after beginning its washout (after bicuculline)
| |
However, the amplitudes of EPSCs recorded at 3 hr after bicuculline washout
increased in pyramidal cells and decreased in interneurons
50% of control
in pyramidal cells and decreased to approximately one-half of their initial
amplitude in interneurons (Table
2). We also measured IPSCs in the pyramidal cells at 40 mV,
which appeared as upward inflections at this holding potential. The average
interval between these currents was 10.3 ± 3.1 sec and the average
amplitude was 11.7 ± 2.2 pA (n = 21 neurons). Neither the
amplitude distributions (Fig.
6C, positive values) nor the mean amplitudes changed
after a 3 hr bicuculline washout (Fig.
6E, positive values). Neither of the postsynaptic
response characteristics depended on the time of the response relative to the
interictal bursts.
In another series of experiments, we measured pharmacologically isolated
spontaneous IPSCs under conditions when glutamatergic synaptic transmission
was blocked by an addition of AP-5 (100 µM) and NBQX (10
µM). The blockers were added to the ACSF either before or 3 hr
after bicuculline application. KCH3SO3 in the patch
pipette was replaced with KCl (see Materials and Methods). This allowed a
measurement of these currents at a holding potential of 70 mV and
provided a better signal-to-noise ratio and improved IPSC detection. The mean
average IPSC amplitude in the control was 35.9 ± 3.9 pA and the mean
interval between IPSCs was 0.5 ± 0.2 sec (n = 10 neurons).
However, 1 hr bicuculline incubation also had no statistically significant
effect on the average amplitudes of these pharmacologically isolated IPSCs.
After a 3 hr bicuculline washout, the mean amplitude was 32.8 ± 2.6 pA
and the mean interval was 0.6 ± 0.2 sec, also demonstrating that the
long-term effects of bicuculline application are specifically related to
changes in the excitatory rather than inhibitory circuitry
(Fig. 6E, negative
values). Together, these findings indicate that the effect of bicuculline
treatment on the synaptic circuitry in the CA3 region is twofold, namely, a
persistent increase in the excitatory drive on pyramidal cells and a
persistent decrease in the excitatory drive on interneurons.
The activation of mGlu5 and NMDA receptors appeared necessary also for the
observed changes in EPSC amplitudes. To establish the involvement of mGluR5,
we measured the amplitudes of spontaneous EPSCs in both pyramidal cells and
interneurons recorded in slices from mGluR5-KO mice. Before bicuculline
application, there were no significant differences in the EPSC amplitude, rise
time, decay time, and intervals compared with respective values obtained from
wild-type slices (Table 2).
However, in the slices from mGluR5-KO mice in distinction from the wild-type
slices, no significant changes in EPSC amplitudes occurred 3 hr after
bicuculline washout. Moreover, no significant changes could be seen in slices
obtained from wild-type mice but incubated either with MPEP or AP-5 during
bicuculline application (Fig.
6E,F). These findings suggest that both NMDA and mGlu5
receptors are essential for the induction of the permanent changes in the
synaptic drives provoked by bicuculline application.
Minimal stimulation reveals changes in recurrent collateral input
To determine which pathways are responsible for the observed changes in the
amplitudes of spontaneous EPSCs, we performed a series of experiments with
stimulation of two different pathways. The minimal stimulation protocol
(Raastad, 1995
) was used (see
Materials and Methods). Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were made from CA3
pyramidal cells and interneurons, whereas stimulation was given to either the
commissuralassociative pathway (recurrent collateral) or the mossy
fiber pathway (Fig.
7A). Specificity of the pathway stimulation was verified
by comparison of the EPSC kinetics (Henze
et al., 2000
; our observations) and by the addition of the type II
mGluR agonist DCG-IV (1 µM) (data not shown), which is known to
block mossy fiber-evoked responses (Kamiya
et al., 1996
; Maccaferri et
al., 1998
).
Minimal stimulation was first established in the different pathways by
varying stimulus intensities in such a way that measurable responses
(successes) (Fig. 7C)
showed no changes in amplitudes over changes in stimulus intensities of 5%
(Fig. 7B). This
corresponded to 4050% failure rates as illustrated in the amplitude
distribution (Fig. 7D)
(n = 100 trials at 0.1 Hz). In most experiments, stimulus intensities
were therefore chosen at the level that corresponded to failure rates of
4050%, from which point the stimulus intensity was varied in both
directions to verify that indeed no significant changes in failure rate or
amplitude resulted from small changes in intensity. Post hoc analysis
showed that these values did not vary as a function of the time of their
occurrence relative to the interictal bursts.
Figure 7C shows
several example traces that resulted from minimal stimulation of the recurrent
collateral pathway. It shows one sweep with response failure and four with
successes. The response latency was stable within <1 msec in each cell. It
ranged from 2 to 7 msec for different cells with most typical values of
34 msec (Fig.
7C). Successes were used for kinetic analysis and
amplitude measurements. The mean rise and decay times were 2.9 ± 0.5
and 9.6 ± 1.1 msec (n = 19), respectively, after recurrent
collateral stimulation and 1.6 ± 0.2 and 5.8 ± 0.9 msec
(n = 10) after mossy fiber stimulation.
The mean amplitudes of the minimal EPSCs recorded from the pyramidal cells
are shown in Figure
7E. On average, they were not significantly different for
EPSCs evoked by the mossy fiber or recurrent collateral stimulation. However,
after bicuculline application and its 3 hr washout, mossy fiber EPSCs showed
no significant amplitude change, whereas the amplitudes of collateral fiber
EPSCs significantly increased (from 22 ± 3 to 29 ± 4 pA;
p < 0.05; n = 19 cells before and 17 cells after
bicuculline application) (Fig.
7E). No changes in EPSC amplitudes were found in slices
pretreated with either AP-5 or MPEP, or in slices from mGluR5-KO animals
(Fig. 7E).
The same positions of the electrodes were used to evoke minimal responses
from CA3 interneurons (Fig.
7A). In the interneurons, the amplitudes of the EPSCs
resulting from recurrent collateral stimulation were also not significantly
different from those after mossy fiber stimulation
(Fig. 7F). Three hours
after bicuculline washout, the mean amplitudes of the mossy fiber EPSCs did
not change (Fig. 7F),
whereas the EPSCs evoked by recurrent collateral stimulation significantly
decreased (from 33 ± 4 to 19 ± 4 pA; p < 0.05;
n = 21 neurons from 10 slices). This decrease was prevented by
treatments with AP-5 or MPEP, and it was also absent in slices from mGluR5-KO
animals (Fig. 7F).
Together, these findings suggest that opposite changes in the synaptic inputs
from recurrent collaterals to the pyramidal cells and interneurons underlie
the maintenance of the bicuculline-induced persistent bursting activity.
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
The main findings of this study are threefold: (1) a persistent
interictal-like bursting that originates in the CA3 region of the ventral
hippocampus and spreads to the entorhinal cortex can be induced by a period of
1 hr bicuculline-mediated disinhibition, (2) underlying induction mechanisms
are similar to those typically implicated in long-term synaptic plasticity
involving NMDA and mGlu5 receptor activation and protein synthesis, and (3)
these changes are accompanied by increases in the excitatory synaptic input
from recurrent collaterals to CA3 pyramidal cells and decreases in recurrent
collateral input to CA3 interneurons.
Specific mechanisms underlie persistent burst induction
Previous experimental and modeling studies have described interictal-like
bursting in the hippocampal slice preparation under continued GABAA
receptor blockade (Miles and Wong,
1983
,
1987
). Under these conditions,
disinhibition of recurrent excitatory circuitry in the CA3 region leads to the
generation of synchronized bursts through the activation of recurrent
excitatory synapses on pyramidal cells and interneurons (for review, see
Traub and Jefferys, 1994
). We
show here that a 1 hr bicuculline application and ensuing interictal-like
bursting lead to a persistent bursting activity in the ventral hippocampus
that continues after bicuculline washout for as long as we could measure (8
hr) and is accompanied by specific changes in synaptic transmission. Several
findings suggest that this persistence is not caused by the presence of
residual bicuculline. First, an immediate decrease in burst duration was seen
after the start of bicuculline washout
(Fig. 2B). Second,
pharmacologically isolated monosynaptic IP-SPs that were recorded from CA3
pyramidal cells showed full recovery 12 hr after bicuculline washout
(Fig. 2A). Third,
shorter (15 min) incubations with bicuculline that still provoked a complete
bursting activity (indicating full bicuculline penetration) did not lead to
persistent bursting (Fig.
3B). Finally, bursting activity in slices pretreated with
pharmacological blockers (NMDA, mGlu5 receptor antagonists, and protein
synthesis inhibitors) or taken from mGluR5 knock-out mice came to an arrest
within 12 hr after bicuculline washout (Figs.
3,
4,
5).
Our findings point to specific changes that underlie the persistent
bursting. These changes are restricted to the CA3 region
(Fig. 2C) and
associated with a modified input from recurrent collaterals on CA3 pyramidal
cells and interneurons (Figs.
6,
7).
Synaptic strength of CA3 recurrent collaterals affected by
bicuculline-induced inhibition
Previous studies have shown that the presence of bicuculline facilitates
LTP induction (Wigstrom and Gustafsson,
1983
; Bliss and Collingridge,
1993
). The induction conditions and underlying synaptic changes
that we found are analogous in some respects to those found for LTP induction
and maintenance (Bliss and Collingridge,
1993
). Rapid strengthening of CA3 pyramidal cell synapses may
occur after short electrical stimulation of the recurrent collateral pathway
(Zalutsky and Nicoll, 1990
).
However, the present model has advantages over the LTP paradigm as it studies
the mechanisms of long-lasting synaptic plasticity induced by intrinsic
(albeit pathological) activity of a neuronal network rather than by strong
artificial challenges (Buzsaki et al.,
1987
; Schneiderman,
1997
; Bains et al.,
1999
; Dobrunz and Stevens,
1999
).
It is of interest that manipulations affecting the afterdischarges in the
same preparation, namely NMDA receptor block
(Traub and Jefferys, 1994
) and
cycloheximide administration (Ogata,
1977
), prevented the persistent bursting (Figs.
3,
4). NMDA receptor activation
seems to be necessary only during bicuculline incubation, because AP-5
application after bicuculline did not prevent persistent bursting. In both
cases, AP-5 application caused an increase in bursting frequency, an effect
that has been observed previously (Neuman
et al., 1988
; Stoop and
Pralong, 2000
) and could reflect the inverse relationship between
burst duration and frequency (Tancredi and
Avoli, 1987
).
Rapid strengthening of CA3 pyramidal cell synapses after electrical
stimulation of the recurrent collateral pathway is known to be NMDA receptor
dependent (Zalutsky and Nicoll,
1990
) and may also be induced by kainic acid- or
potassium-provoked bursts (Ben-Ari and Gho,
1988
; Bains et al.,
1999
). LTP induction in the collateral pathway depends on the
precise time interval between the presynaptic stimulus and postsynaptic
depolarization (Magee and Johnston,
1997
; Markram et al.,
1997
; Debanne et al.,
1998
; Laezza et al.,
1999
). It is possible that the afterdischarges that appear at
regular intervals are important for the precise timing of the
voltage-dependent and NMDA receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx
in specific synaptic contacts (Traub and
Jefferys, 1994
) that are essential for the induction of synaptic
plasticity and persistent bursting.
To our knowledge, we show for the first time an involvement of mGluR5 in
the plasticity of synapses between CA3 pyramidal cells (cf.
Lu et al., 1997
). This
receptor is expressed in dendrites of CA3 pyramidal cells
(Shigemoto et al., 1997
) and
has also been found to interact directly with NMDA receptors
(Lüthi et al., 1994
;
Fitzjohn et al., 1996
).
Although activation of group I metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluR1 and
mGluR5) may affect bursting activity
(Merlin and Wong, 1997
;
Rutecki and Yang, 1997
;
Chuang et al., 2001
;
Lee et al., 2002
;
Merlin 2002
), we found no
immediate effects of mGluR5 blockade on burst characteristics
(Fig. 5). Merlin et al.
(1998
) and Galoyan and Merlin
(2000
) found that prolonged
(100 min) activation of group I metabotropic glutamate receptors can produce a
persistent increase in burst duration, which depends on protein synthesis but
not NMDA receptor activation. It is possible that mGluR5 indirectly affects
changes in synaptic plasticity through a slower acting signaling pathway
(e.g., through activation of hippocampal glial cells)
(Aronica et al., 2000
;
Haydon, 2001
). However, none
of the above findings indicate a direct interaction between mGlu5 and NMDA
receptors in their effects on interictal-like burst behavior.
Changes in recurrent collateral input on interneurons
Our recordings showed a reduction of excitatory input to hippocampal
interneurons (Fig. 6), lending
support to specific synaptic plasticity at these cells
(McBain and Maccaferri, 1997
).
Persistent bursting was expressed in the isolated CA3 region
(Fig. 2C), and the
results from the minimal stimulation experiments
(Fig. 7) indicate changes in
synaptic plasticity of recurrent collateral input to CA3 interneurons, rather
than synaptic plasticity at dentate gyrus interneurons
(Kapur and Macdonald, 1997
;
Doherty and Dingledine, 2001
)
or changes in the inhibitory synapses on pyramidal cells
(Fig. 6E). We cannot
exclude a reduction in inhibition attributable to a loss of inhibitory
neurons. However, interneurons can be fully preserved in epileptic tissue
(Babb et al., 1989
;
Sloviter, 1989
), and we found
obvious changes in neither the number of interneurons under infrared
microscopic inspection (data not shown) nor the inhibitory input to pyramidal
cells (Fig. 6E).
Synaptic plasticity of excitatory input to hippocampal interneurons has
become a recent focus of attention (McBain
et al., 1999
). Although LTP has not been consistently found at
these synapses, "interneuron long-term depression" was observed
after high frequency activation of excitatory synapses on basket cells
(McMahon and Kauer, 1997
). The
location of the interneurons from which we recorded (close to stratum
pyramidale) and their high-frequency firing pattern after current injection
are characteristic features of basket cells. These cells mediate the
synchronous firing of many pyramidal cells
(Cobb et al., 1995
), and
changes in their innervation may contribute to hippocampal disinhibition
during epilepsy (McMahon and Kauer,
1997
). Our findings may therefore be related to animal models of
epilepsy in which basket cells remain viable and can release GABA but are
functionally denervated or "dormant"
(Sloviter, 1987
).
Implications for epilepsy in vivo
The changes that we observed in the hippocampus may represent a specific
adaptive response to extensive bursting activity during bicuculline
application and may be part of a more general mechanism through which
interictal activity develops during temporal lobe pathology
(Avoli, 2001
;
de Curtis et al., 2001
). In
the intact horizontal slice preparation, the persistent bursting in the
hippocampal region spreads to and controls the bursting activity in the
entorhinal cortex for as long as we could measure
(Fig. 2A). It has been
shown in other models of epilepsy that bursts in the entorhinal cortex are
under direct control of hippocampal interictal-like activity
(Barbarosie and Avoli, 1997
).
If indeed such activity may be applied to control bursting activity in
adjacent regions in the temporal lobe of epileptic patients
(Avoli, 2001
), our experimental
paradigm may serve as a basis for the development of pharmacological tools to
control epileptiform activity.
However, our principal finding is that an endogenous activity associated
with the epileptic pathology can lead to specific changes in synaptic
transmission and a persistent epileptiform bursting activity in
vitro. Additional studies could be aimed at more precise analysis of the
synaptic mechanisms underlying the modifications in recurrent connections on
CA3 pyramidal cells and interneurons. A priori, they can be attributable to
activity-dependent scaling of quantal amplitude
(Van der Kloot, 1991
;
Turrigiano et al., 1998
),
appearance of additional clusters of glutamate receptors
(Malinow and Malenka, 2002
),
or increased transmitter release (Stevens,
1993
; Voronin,
1993
; Sokolov et al.,
2002
). At the same time, such studies could address the
relationship between the efficiency of endogenous epileptiform activity and
stimulation protocols that are more usually applied to induce synaptic changes
(Dobrunz and Stevens, 1999
).
Such findings could indicate how initial transient epileptiform bursts could
lead to progressive changes associated with epilepsy and provide new leads on
how to prevent or modify such changes in the treatment of epileptic
pathologies.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Dec. 9, 2002;
revised Apr. 17, 2003;
accepted Apr. 21, 2003.
This work was supported by INTAS and the Wellcome Trust. We thank Drs.
Marie-Christine Broillet, Peter Clarke, Muming Poo, and Egbert Welker for
their comments on this manuscript, and Daniel Huber for technical
assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ron Stoop, Institute of Cellular
Biology and Morphology, University of Lausanne, Rue du Bugnon 9, CH-1005
Lausanne, Switzerland. E-mail:
rstoop{at}ibcm.unil.ch.
F. Conquet's present address: Addex Pharmaceuticals, 1228 Plan-les-Ouates,
Geneva, Switzerland.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/235634-11$15.00/0
 |
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