The Journal of Neuroscience, July 23, 2003, 23(16):6660-6670
Previous Article
Distribution and Properties of Functional Postsynaptic Kainate Receptors on Neocortical Layer V Pyramidal Neurons
Matthias Eder,1
Klaus Becker,1
Gerhard Rammes,1,2
Anja Schierloh,1
Shahnaz Christina Azad,1,3
Walter Zieglgänsberger,1 and
Hans-Ulrich Dodt1
1Clinical Neuropharmacology, Max-Planck-Institute
of Psychiatry, 80804 Munich, Germany, 2Department of
Anesthesiology, Technical University of Munich, 81675 Munich, Germany, and
3Clinic for Anesthesiology, Pain Treatment Unit,
Ludwig-Maximilians-University, 81377 Munich, Germany
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Abstract
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The distribution of glutamate receptor subtypes on the surface of neurons
is highly relevant for synaptic transmission and signal processing. In the
present study we investigated the location and properties of functional
kainate receptors (KARs) on the somatodendritic membrane of rat neocortical
layer V pyramidal neurons. Infrared-guided laser stimulation was used to apply
glutamate photolytically to the soma and various sites along the apical
dendrite. Electrical currents, resulting from the activation of
pharmacologically isolated KARs, were measured by whole-cell patch-clamp
recording. In addition, KARs on somatic and dendritic outside-out patches were
activated while still within the brain tissue. We found that functional KARs
are located on the entire somatodendritic membrane that was examined. Fast
kinetics, a linear I-V relationship, and a relatively high
single-channel conductance are characteristic features of these receptors. We
provide evidence that the unitary properties of somatic and dendritic KARs are
identical. Regarding the subcellular distribution of KARs, our results
indicate that the density of these receptors increases toward the distal
dendrite. They are located mainly at extrasynaptic sites but also mediate fast
synaptic signaling triggered by afferent stimulation. The differential
distribution speaks in favor of a selective targeting of KARs on central
neurons and may reflect a mechanism for a location-dependent regulation of
synaptic efficacy. Furthermore, it is feasible to assume that extrasynaptic
KARs could be activated by a "spillover" of synaptically released
glutamate, ambient glutamate in the CSF, or glutamate released from adjacent
astrocytes.
Key words: AMPA receptors; brain slices; caged glutamate; dendrite; distribution; extrasynaptic; kainate receptors; layer V; neocortex; photostimulation; pyramidal neuron; rat; somatosensory; synaptic
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Introduction
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Ionotropic glutamate receptors are divided into three main classes: NMDA,
AMPA, and kainate receptors (KARs). KARs are composed of five subunits
(GluR5-GluR7, KA1-KA2), which can assemble to form functional channels. Most
of our knowledge about the properties of KARs (e.g., kinetics and composition
of subunits) comes primarily from studies on recombinant KARs. A general
feature of these receptors is their fast kinetics, similar to those determined
for AMPA receptors. KAR subunit genes are expressed throughout the brain
(Wisden and Seeburg, 1993
),
but little is known about the properties, the subcellular distribution, and
the functional roles of native postsynaptic KARs. It has been shown only
recently that postsynaptic KARs contribute to the EPSC at different types of
synapses (Frerking and Nicoll,
2000
; Lerma et al.,
2001
).
Synaptic activation of postsynaptic KARs sometimes requires repetitive
synaptic stimulation (Castillo et al.,
1997
; Vignes and Collingridge,
1997
), and the KAR-mediated EPSCs have small amplitudes and show
mostly slow kinetics. These observations have raised the following questions.
(1) Are postsynaptic KARs located extrasynaptically? (2) If so, are KARs
activated by a "spillover" of synaptically released glutamate? (3)
Are the slow kinetics of native KARs an intrinsic property of heteromers, the
exact subunit composition of which is unknown? (4) Do postsynaptic KARs play
only a minor role in fast synaptic transmission? The studies addressing these
questions in the recent past have yielded conflicting results
(Min et al., 1998
;
Swanson and Heinemann, 1998
;
Bureau et al., 1999
;
DeVries and Schwartz, 1999
;
Kidd and Isaac, 1999
,
2001
;
Cossart et al., 2002
).
KAR subunits are expressed abundantly in the neocortex
(Wisden and Seeburg, 1993
).
However, studies on neocortical KARs at the level of single neurons or
synapses are scarce. KARs are located on presynaptic terminals of neocortical
interneurons (Ali et al., 2001
)
as well as on the postsynaptic membrane of layer IV pyramidal neurons
(Kidd and Isaac, 1999
). Layer
V pyramidal neurons also express KAR subunits
(Huntley et al., 1993
), but it
is still unclear whether these subunits form functional receptors inserted in
the somatodendritic membrane. In the present study we used a combination of
infrared-guided laser stimulation and electrophysiological techniques to
address this question. We found that functional KARs are located on the entire
somatodendritic membrane that was examined. Furthermore, we characterized the
intrinsic properties of these receptors and report that they are distributed
differentially at the apical dendrite and located mainly at extrasynaptic
sites.
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Materials and Methods
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Slice preparation. Parasagittal neocortical slices (300 µm
thick) were prepared from 42 male Sprague Dawley rats (postnatal days 14-21).
Before decapitation the rats were anesthetized very shortly and slightly to
reduce stress response and for better handling while their heads were placed
under an animal guillotine. Fluid isoflurane (0.2 ml) was dropped on a piece
of fleece placed on the bottom of a vessel (volume, 3.5 l). After 3 min the
animals were put into the closed vessel for 5-7 sec to make them numb.
Afterward, they were taken out rapidly, and the neck was fixed under the
animal guillotine. In this position the animals were kept until their initial
numbness was abolished completely. In particular, it was strictly observed
that the animals were breathing spontaneously and deeply the whole time to
ensure that isoflurane was eliminated completely from the CNS before
decapitation. This is of major importance because there is evidence that
isoflurane may influence KAR function
(Dildy-Mayfield et al.,
1996
).
After we removed the brain from the skull, a tissue block containing the
somatosensory cortex was trimmed, glued to an acrylic glass cuboid
(Histoacryl, Braun, Tuttlingen, Germany), and transferred to the chilled
specimen holder of a vibratome (Vibracut 3, FTB, Weinheim, Germany). All steps
of the preparation were performed in ice-cold artificial CSF (ACSF) oxygenated
with carbogen (95% O2/5% CO2). The ACSF consisted of (in
mM): 125 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 2
CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 25 NaHCO3, and 25 glucose, pH
7.4 (all substances were from Merck, Ismaning, Germany). The slices were
transferred to glass vials containing oxygenated ACSF, incubated for 30 min at
34°C, and subsequently were stored at room temperature (22-24°C) for
at least 30 min (Dodt et al.,
1998
).
Electrophysiology. Brain slices were placed in the recording
chamber of an "infrapatch" set-up (Luigs & Neumann, Ratingen,
Germany) and submerged in oxygenated ACSF (flow rate, 2-3 ml/min). Individual
layer V pyramidal neurons of the somatosensory cortex were identified visually
via infrared videomicroscopy and the "gradient contrast" system
(Dodt et al., 2002
).
Whole-cell recordings (seal resistance, >1 G
) from somata and apical
dendrites were performed in voltage-clamp mode (-60 mV holding potential),
using a dSEVC (discontinuous single-electrode voltage-clamp) amplifier
(SEC-10LX, npi Electronics GmbH, Tamm, Germany). Recordings were accepted only
if the holding current was <100 pA. The current was low-pass filtered (1-3
kHz). The patch-clamp electrodes (open-tip resistances, 4-9 M
) were
pulled from borosilicate glass capillaries (1.5 mm outer diameter, 0.86 mm
inner diameter; Harvard Apparatus, Kent, UK) on a DMZ-Universal puller (Zeitz
Instruments, Munich, Germany). The patch pipettes were filled with a solution
consisting of (in mM): 105 K-gluconate (Merck), 30 KCl, 4 Mg-ATP
(Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany), 10 phosphocreatine (Sigma), 0.3 GTP (Sigma),
and 10 HEPES (Biomol GmbH, Hamburg, Germany); pH 7.3-adjusted with KOH
(osmolarity, 305 mOsm). In some experiments spermine (60 µM;
Sigma) also was included. The cells were characterized electrophysiologically
by recording the membrane potential in bridge mode. I-V relationships
and spike trains were obtained by injecting hyperpolarizing and depolarizing
current pulses. From 104 recorded neurons 96 cells were of the "regular
spiking" and 8 cells of the "intrinsically bursting" type
(Connors and Gutnick, 1990
).
It is feasible to assume that the properties and/or the subcellular
distribution of KARs vary between these physiologically and morphologically
different types of neurons. Therefore, only the regular spiking cells were
included in this study. They had an average resting potential of -60 ±
0.5 mV and an input resistance of 99 ± 3 M
. No correction for
the junction potential between the bath and pipette solutions was made. Full
correction for this junction potential would make all membrane potential
measurements
13 mV more negative than indicated. The series resistance
[15 ± 0.2 M
for somatic (n = 81) and 23 ± 0.9
M
for dendritic (n = 15) whole-cell recordings] was monitored
continuously during the recordings. Recordings were terminated if the series
resistance changed >10%. After seal formation and patch rupture the
outside-out patches were obtained by slowly withdrawing the patch pipette from
the cell. Outside-out patches were accepted only if the resistance of the
patch was
1 G
and the holding current <10 pA. Bipolar electrical
stimulation of synapses was performed by using pipettes (
2 µm tip
diameter) pulled from borosilicate glass theta-capillaries (1.5 mm outer
diameter, 1.05 mm inner diameter, 0.16 mm thickness of partition wall;
Hilgenberg, Malsfeld, Germany). Both tubes of the theta-capillary were filled
with ACSF and connected via Ag/AgCl wires to an isolated stimulus generator
(type 2533, Devices Instruments LTD, Hertfordshire, UK). The stimulation
electrode was placed near the apical dendrite (
5 µm lateral distance).
In this way the synapses, located in a defined region of the dendrite, could
be activated reliably. Duration of the electrical stimuli was 0.2 msec. Data
were digitized at 3-9 kHz via an ITC-16 interface (Heka Elektronik,
Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany) and stored by a Macintosh-based recording system
with the standard software Pulse 8.00 (Heka Elektronik). All experiments were
performed at room temperature (22-24°C).
Photostimulation. Glutamate was applied to visually identified
somata and apical dendrites by UV flash photolysis (wavelength, 351-364 nm) of
-CNB (
-carboxy-2-nitrobenzyl)-caged glutamate (0.5 or 1
mM; Molecular Probes, Leiden, The Netherlands). The beam of a UV
laser (Enterprise II, Coherent, Dieburg, Germany) was coupled into the
epifluorescence port of the microscope (Axioskop FS, Zeiss, Jena, Germany) via
a quartz fiber (Luigs & Neumann) and focused by the objective (60x,
numerical aperture, 0.9; Olympus, Hamburg, Germany) onto a 1 µm spot in the
specimen plane. Using a caged glutamate concentration of 0.5 mM, we
determined in previous studies the site of glutamate release as a spot with a
diameter of
10 µm (Dodt et al.,
1999
; Eder et al.,
2002
). The duration of the shuttered light pulses (Uniblitz
shutter, Vincent Associates, Rochester, NY) was 3 msec. The output power of
the argon ion laser (maximum, 90 mW) was adjusted by a remote control unit in
increments of 1 mW. The caged glutamate used in this study has a quantum yield
of 0.14, and the half-life of the major component of the photolytic reaction
is in the microsecond range (Wieboldt et
al., 1994
). A concentration of 0.5 mM does not
desensitize glutamate receptors by spontaneous hydrolysis and/or contamination
with free glutamate (Eder et al.,
2002
). Furthermore, it also has been shown that 1 mM
-CNB-caged glutamate neither desensitizes glutamate receptors in
cultured hippocampal neurons (Wieboldt et
al., 1994
) nor influences the properties of layer V pyramidal
neurons of 2- to 3-week-old rats (Schubert
et al., 2001
). To make sure that this is also valid for our
experiments in which 1 mM caged glutamate was used, we performed
additional control experiments. We tested whether 1 mM caged
glutamate affects the amplitude of glutamate receptor-mediated EPSCs (for a
detailed description of the methods used, see
Eder et al., 2002
). Consistent
with the results from Wieboldt et al.
(1994
) and Schubert et al.
(2001
), the amplitude does not
change significantly after the addition of caged glutamate [98 ± 4% as
compared with control; p = 0.72 (15 EPSCs in the absence and presence
of caged glutamate were averaged for 4 neurons/3 animals)]. Furthermore,
exposure of the cells to the brief periods of uncaging light used in our
experiments has no effect on neuronal activity
(Dodt et al., 1999
). During
the application of caged glutamate a total amount of 4 ml of ACSF containing
the caged compound was recirculated continuously and oxygenated. The following
drugs were added to the ACSF: CdCl2 (Sigma),
p-(3-aminopropyl)-p-diethoxymethyl-phosphinic acid
(CGP35348, kind gift from Ciba-Geigy AG, Basel, Switzerland), cyclothiazide
(Sigma), D-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoate acid (D-AP-5,
Sigma), GYKI 53655 (LY300168, kindly provided by Merz & Company,
Frankfurt, Germany), 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX, Sigma),
NS-102 (Sigma), picrotoxin (Sigma), and tetrodotoxin (TTX; Sigma). Depending
on the substance, complete wash-in lasted 10-30 min. Data were collected as
soon as complete wash-in was confirmed by a stable baseline.
Data analysis. Analysis of amplitudes, charges, kinetics, and
single-channel conductance (
) was performed by using a software written
in the IgorPro 4.01 programming language (WaveMetrics, Lake Oswego, OR) by Dr.
K. Becker.
was estimated by using peak-scaled nonstationary
fluctuation analysis (non-SFA). For non-SFA, sets of 50 subsequently measured
glutamate responses (interstimulus interval, 45 sec) were used. From each
glutamate response a segment of a fixed length was selected, ranging from the
peak of the current to past the end of the decay phase (total length, 150
msec). The average current over all segments was calculated and scaled to the
peak of the individual glutamate responses; then the variance of each
glutamate response around the scaled average curve was computed
(Traynelis et al., 1993
;
Silver et al., 1996
). Current
traces showing a variance larger than approximately three times the mean
variance were excluded from the calculations. Because of the highly precise
onset of the laser stimulus, the subsequently measured current traces already
were aligned precisely. An additional manual alignment therefore was not
necessary. The computed variances were divided into 50 equally sized bins on
the amplitude scale and were plotted against the mean current value within
each scaled average current bin. These data points were fit with the
relationship:
 |
by a least-square algorithm.
2 is the variance;
Im is the mean current over the membrane; N is
the total number of channels activated at the peak of the mean current;
i is the unitary current of a single channel; and
b2 is the background variance, i.e., the average
variance of the baselines (Sigworth,
1980
; Traynelis et al.,
1993
). From the computed single-channel current (i)
was calculated according to the relationship:
where Eclamp is the holding potential used in the
experiments and Erev is the reversal potential derived in
previous experiments (7 mV).
For spectral analysis the scaled average current was subtracted from each
single current, and the variance was calculated as described above. Data
segments of 1024 points in length were transformed into the frequency domain
by a discrete fast-Fourier transformation (FFT), and the single-sided power
spectrum was computed. To avoid frequency leakage errors, we Parzen-windowed
data before transformation. The power spectrum, calculated from the binned FFT
values (20 bins), was fit by the sum of n Lorentzian functions:
where L(f) is the spectral density at frequency f,
Si is the power of the spectrum at f = 0, and
fci is the cutoff frequency at which the spectral power is
half-maximal. The time constants of the Lorentzian functions were calculated
via the relationship:
according to De Koninck and Mody
(1997
). The power of the
spectrum was not corrected for the power of the mean time course as described
in Sigworth (1981
), because
the aim of the present study was to derive only the corner frequencies.
was derived from non-SFA analysis as described above. The necessity to
introduce additional Lorentzian functions into the fits was judged visually by
comparing the calculated curves with the respective data points
(De Koninck and Mody,
1997
).
All values are expressed as the mean ± SEM. In every brain slice
only one neuron was recorded, and measurements from not more than two neurons
from one animal were used for the calculation of a particular mean value.
Statistical evaluation was performed with the paired or unpaired Student's
t test (SigmaStat 2.03).
 |
Results
|
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Neocortical layer V pyramidal neurons express functional KARs on the
somatodendritic membrane
To investigate whether neocortical layer V pyramidal neurons express
functional KARs on the somatodendritic membrane, we applied glutamate
photolytically to the soma and to sites 20 µm apart along the apical
dendrite (up to 300 µm from the center of the soma). Caged glutamate (0.5
mM) was photolyzed by 3 msec light pulses of a UV laser. The electrical
currents resulting from the activation of glutamate receptors were recorded
from the neuronal soma. In all experiments NMDA receptors were blocked by the
addition of D-AP-5 (100 µM), and TTX (1 µM) was added to isolate the
neuron being investigated from synaptic inputs.
Glutamate also was applied photolytically to outside-out patches obtained
from the soma or apical dendrite. It reliably evoked currents in the
outside-out patch, which does not have to be transferred to an application
system outside the slice, thus ensuring more physiological conditions. To
evoke more prominent glutamate responses, we increased the concentration of
caged glutamate to 1 mM in these experiments.
In the presence of the NMDA receptor antagonist D-AP-5, glutamate-activated
currents could be elicited at all of the somatic and dendritic sites that were
stimulated. At all sites the selective and noncompetitive AMPA receptor
(AMPAR) antagonist GYKI 53655 (50 µM)
(Vignes and Collingridge,
1997
) blocked only apart of the glutamate response [49 ±
2%; p < 0.001; n = 175 stimulation sites, 12 neurons/10
animals (8 of these neurons were stimulated up to 300 µm from the center of
the soma, 1 neuron up to 260 µm, and 3 neurons up to 200 µm)]. This
finding suggests that this remarkably large GYKI 53655-resistant component is
mediated by KARs. Further experiments confirmed this suggestion. First, an
increase of the concentration of GYKI 53655 to 100 µM did not lead to a
further decrease of the glutamate response amplitude (103 ± 3% as
compared with 50 µM GYKI; p = 0.38; n = 7 neurons/6
animals; Fig. 1A,C).
This indicates a complete block of AMPARs by GYKI 53655 (50 µM). Second,
the AMPA/KAR antagonist CNQX (50 µM)
(Kidd and Isaac, 1999
)
completely blocked the GYKI 53655-resistant component (reduction of the
amplitude to 1 ± 1% as compared with 50 µM GYKI; p <
0.001; n = 6 neurons/6 animals;
Fig. 1B,C). Third, in
the presence of GYKI 53655 (100 µM) the selective AMPAR potentiator
cyclothiazide (8 µM) had no effect on the amplitude and kinetics of the
glutamate response (Fig.
1D). In contrast, in the absence of GYKI 53655,
cyclothiazide caused an increase in amplitude and prolonged the decay phase by
diminishing the rate of AMPAR desensitization
(Fig. 1E). To detail
both of these effects, we evaluated the charge transfer [98 ± 2% in the
presence of GYKI 53655 (p = 0.73; n = 5 neurons/5 animals;
Fig. 1G, first
column); 211 ± 14% in the absence of GYKI 53655 (p < 0.01;
n = 5 neurons/5 animals; Fig.
1G, second column)]. The high concentration of GYKI 53655
and the low concentration of cyclothiazide were used for the following reason.
It has been shown that cyclothiazide at high concentrations reverses AMPAR
antagonism of GYKI 53655 by an allosteric mechanism
(Palmer and Lodge, 1993
;
Rammes et al., 1996
). This
effect might interfere with the pharmacological isolation of KAR-mediated
responses by GYKI 53655, thereby causing a potentiation of the glutamate
response in the presence of GYKI 53655. We observed this effect. In the
presence of 50 µM GYKI 53655 cyclothiazide (100 µM) increased the
amplitude and prolonged the kinetics of the glutamate response
(Fig. 1 F). The
increase of the charge transfer was 375 ± 25% for somatic glutamate
responses (p < 0.001; n = 5 neurons/4 animals;
Fig. 1G, third column)
and 354 ± 24% for responses elicited at the dendrite (200 µm from
the center of the soma; p = 0.001; n = 5 neurons/4 animals;
Fig. 1G, fourth
column). The increase of the charge transfer at the soma and the increase at
the dendrite were not different (p = 0.64).

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Figure 1. Neocortical layer V pyramidal neurons express functional KARs on the
somatodendritic membrane. A, In the presence of D-AP-5
(control) photolytic application of glutamate to the somatodendritic membrane
elicited inward currents, which were blocked only partially by GYKI 53655 (50
µM). The remaining glutamate responses, mediated by KARs because
they were not affected by an increase in the concentration of GYKI 53655 to
100 µM, were blocked completely by CNQX (50 µM;
B, C) and not potentiated by cyclothiazide (8 µM;
D). In contrast, cyclothiazide (8 µM) potentiated mixed
AMPA/KAR-mediated responses (in the absence of GYKI 53655; E).
Because of an allosteric reversion of AMPAR antagonism of GYKI 53655 by
cyclothiazide at a high concentration (100 µM), the glutamate
responses were also potentiated in the presence of GYKI 53655 (50
µM; F). A, B, D-F show single
representative experiments. C, G, Statistical evaluation of the
experiments shown in A, B, D-F. A significant difference (p
< 0.01) is indicated by two asterisks.
|
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Although presented in more detail in the next sections, it should be noted
at this point that photolytic application of glutamate to somatic or dendritic
outside-out patches also evoked reliably KAR-mediated currents
(Fig. 1B).
Properties of KARs activated by photolytically applied glutamate
Kinetics
KARs in cultured cells and heterologous expression systems show fast
kinetics similar to those determined for AMPARs
(Lerma et al., 2001
). However,
KAR-mediated EPSCs mostly show markedly slower kinetics [rise time, 10-20
msec; decay time constant (
), >100 msec]. To investigate whether KARs
of layer V pyramidal neurons share the characteristic features of fast
activation and desensitization, we determined the rise time (10-90%) and
of glutamate responses that were evoked and recorded at the soma.
For the interpretation of the following results, it has to be noted that
the kinetics of photolytically evoked glutamate responses are two to three
times as long as those of synaptically evoked glutamate responses
(Dodt et al., 1999
;
Eder et al., 2002
). Because
the rise time of a photolytically evoked current is equal to the length of the
uncaging pulse plus the time during which any agonist that is produced can
diffuse to additional receptors, we can make a rough estimate of this kinetic
parameter but probably have not the necessary resolution to detect small
differences among the rise times of responses elicited at different
stimulation sites. Thus
of photolytically evoked currents is the more
significant parameter when comparing the kinetics of ion channels located at
different sites of the neuronal membrane.
Mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated currents had, on average, a rise time of 4.0
± 0.1 msec and
of 18.9 ± 1.4 msec (n = 15 sweeps,
15 neurons/13 animals; Fig.
2A,D). The respective values determined for pure
KAR-mediated currents were 3.9 ± 0.2 and 18.5 ± 1.2 msec
(n = 15 sweeps, 15 neurons/13 animals;
Fig. 2A,D). Similar
values were obtained from KAR-mediated responses, which were elicited at
somatic outside-out patches (rise time, 3.8 ± 0.6 msec;
, 17.2
± 1.4 msec; n = 7 sweeps, 7 patches/7 animals;
Fig. 2C,D).

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Figure 2. Properties of KARs. A-D, KARs on layer V pyramidal
neurons show fast kinetics similar to those of AMPARs. Statistical evaluation
revealed no difference between the rise time values of mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated
responses (control) and pure KAR-mediated currents that were evoked at the
soma (A). This is also the case for the decay time constant ( ).
Comparison of the kinetics of KAR-mediated responses, which were elicited at
somata (A), somatic outside-out patches (C), apical
dendrites (B), and dendritic outside-out patches (no example shown;
see Figs. 1B,
4C) revealed no
significant differences (D). This result refers to identical unitary
properties of somatic and dendritic KARs. A-C show single
traces. The current decay was best fit monoexponentially (smooth lines).
E, KAR-mediated responses, which were evoked at somatic outside-out
patches, showed a linear I-V relationship and had a mean reversal
potential of 7 ± 2 mV (n = 6 patches). A single experiment is
shown. F, The GluR5/GluR6 antagonist NS-102 decreased the amplitude
of KAR-mediated currents that were elicited at the soma and apical dendrite.
This result refers to an involvement of GluR5 and/or GluR6 in the formation of
KARs on layer V pyramidal neurons.
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Figure 4. Subcellular distribution of KARs and AMPARs. A, Glutamate was
applied photolytically to sites 20 µm apart along the apical dendrite. The
profile of the dendritic glutamate sensitivity does not change after the
addition of GYKI 53655. This result strongly suggests that the relative ratio
of the number of KARs to AMPARs does not change toward the distal dendrite.
B, Voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels do not
affect the amplitude of mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated currents in our experiments.
In the presence of D-AP-5 (control) mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated
responses were evoked by glutamate application to the most distal part of the
dendrite that was examined (300 µm from the center of the soma). To block
voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels, we added
CdCl2 (200 µM) to the superfusion medium. This
pharmacological treatment changed neither the amplitude nor the size of the
glutamate responses. C, Glutamate responses, which were evoked at
somatic outside-out patches, showed smaller amplitudes on average than
glutamate responses that were elicited at dendritic outside-out patches.
Because of the evidence for identical unitary properties of somatic and
dendritic KARs, this finding indicates an increasing density of KARs toward
the distal dendrite.
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In additional experiments we examined the kinetics of dendritic KARs. To
avoid electrotonic slowing of the glutamate response kinetics by a likely loss
of spatial control of the dendritic membrane potential during somatic
whole-cell recording, we recorded the cells at the dendrite (at a distance of
200 µm from the center of the soma) and photolytically applied
glutamate close to the patch pipette. The responses mediated by dendritic KARs
showed fast kinetics similar to those mediated by somatic KARs (rise time, 4.2
± 0.4 msec;
, 19.8 ± 1.5 msec; n = 8 sweeps, 8
neurons/7 animals; Fig.
2B,D). Similar values were obtained from KAR-mediated
responses, which were elicited at dendritic outside-out patches (rise time,
4.5 ± 0.7 msec;
, 19.1 ± 1.9 msec; n = 7 sweeps, 7
patches/7 animals; Fig.
2D). The current decay of all sweeps was best fit
monoexponentially. Statistical evaluation revealed no significant differences
among all mean rise time values (p = 0.24-0.83). This was also the
case for
(p = 0.31-0.85).
The results described above indicate that KARs on layer V pyramidal neurons
have fast kinetic properties resembling those of AMPARs. Furthermore, the
kinetics of somatic and dendritic KARs are identical.
Reversal potential
To characterize KARs on layer V pyramidal neurons further under the best
possible control of voltage, we applied glutamate in the presence of D-AP-5
and GYKI 53655 to somatic outside-out patches at different holding potentials.
Measured at the peak, the KAR-mediated responses showed a linear I-V
relationship and had a reversal potential close to 0 mV (7 ± 2 mV;
n = 6 patches/6 animals; Fig.
2E). This finding indicates that the KARs involved in
these responses belong predominantly to the
Ca2+-impermeable form, because
Ca2+-permeable KARs show strong inward rectification
caused by a voltage-dependent block by polyamines
(Burnashev et al., 1996
). To
exclude the possibility that the linear I-V relationship results from
washout of polyamines, we performed control experiments in which spermine (60
µM) was added to the internal solution. These experiments also revealed a
linear I-V relationship (n = 3 patches/3 animals; data not
shown).
The expression of GluR5 and GluR6 seems to be characteristic for
neocortical pyramidal neurons (Huntley et
al., 1993
; Kidd and Isaac,
1999
). To test whether GluR5 and/or GluR6 subunits also are
involved in the formation of functional KARs on layer V pyramidal neurons, we
applied NS-102 (5 µM), an antagonist of GluR5 and GluR6
(Verdoorn et al., 1994
;
Wilding and Huettner, 1996
),
to the superfusion medium. NS-102 indeed decreased the amplitude of
KAR-mediated currents, which were evoked either at the somata (15 ± 2%
decrease; p = 0.002; n = 5 neurons/5 animals) or at the
apical dendrites (200 µm from the center of the soma; 14 ± 1%
decrease; p < 0.001; n = 5 neurons/5 animals;
Fig. 2F). Statistical
evaluation revealed no significant difference between the decrease at the soma
and the decrease at the dendrite (p = 0.54). KARs containing edited
GluR5 and/or GluR6 subunits are impermeable for Ca2+
ions and show a linear I-V relationship
(Lerma et al., 2001
). Thus our
data strongly suggest that edited GluR5 and/or GluR6 subunits are involved in
the formation of functional postsynaptic KARs on layer V pyramidal
neurons.
Infrared-guided laser stimulation: a new method to examine
single-channel properties of ligand-gated ion channels
To reveal
of somatic and dendritic KARs, we performed whole-cell
recording and glutamate application either at the soma or at the dendrite (at
a distance of
200 µm from the center of the soma), respectively. The
recorded glutamate responses were analyzed by using non-SFA. Both somatic and
dendritic KARs showed nearly identical values of
[7.7 ± 0.7 pS
for somatic KARs; n = 6 neurons/5 animals
(Fig. 3A,C); 8.1
± 0.9 pS for dendritic KARs; n = 6 neurons/6 animals
(Fig. 3B,C);
p = 0.78].
We also investigated the kinetics of the KAR-mediated currents by spectral
analysis. Fitting sums of Lorentzian functions to the power spectra of the
measured current noise showed that the course of these spectra can be
described best by a single Lorentzian function
(Fig. 3D). This is
consistent with our observation that the decay phase of the evoked currents
can be well fit by a single exponential function
(Fig. 2A-C). Our
results, therefore, provide evidence that the kinetics of KARs on neocortical
layer V pyramidal neurons can be described by a single time constant. As shown
in Figure 2D, the
kinetics of somatic and dendritic KARs do not differ significantly. We
obtained the same result by spectral analysis. For this reason the time
constants for all data sets were pooled. The mean time constant is 22.7
± 2.1 msec (n = 12 neurons/11 animals). This agrees with the
time constant of the exponential curves fit to the evoked currents (
20
msec; Fig. 2D).
Subcellular distribution of KARs and AMPARs
Location-dependent ratio of the number of KARs to AMPARs
To examine the distribution of KARs and AMPARs on the somatodendritic
membrane of layer V pyramidal neurons, we applied glutamate photolytically to
sites 20 µm apart along the apical dendrite (up to 300 µm from the
center of the soma). Glutamate application to the soma reaches a much larger
membrane area than glutamate application to the dendrite. To avoid this
influence of the geometry of the neuron on the profile of the dendritic
glutamate sensitivity, we started dendritic stimulation at a distance of 40
µm from the center of the soma. The tapering of the soma into the dendrite
ends approximately at this distance (Eder
et al., 2001
). In the presence of D-AP-5 the glutamate sensitivity
of each site stimulated was measured before and after the addition of GYKI
53655 (50 µM). The amplitudes of the inward currents were expressed in
percentage of the response evoked 40 µm from the center of the soma.
Interestingly, the amplitudes of the mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated responses showed
nearly the same profile as the amplitudes of the pure KAR-mediated responses
(p
0.18 for all stimulation sites; n = 12 neurons/9
animals; Fig. 4A).
This result suggests that the relative ratio of the number of KARs to AMPARs
does not change toward the distal dendrite. This conclusion presupposes that
the glutamate sensitivity of the stimulated membrane area is directly
proportional to the number of activated receptors. Such a correlation can be
assumed for the following reasons. (1) The kinetics of AMPARs and KARs are
nearly identical (Fig.
2A,D). Thus the peak current of mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated
responses represents for both glutamate receptor subtypes the time point of
maximum channel opening. Furthermore, we can exclude a differential dendritic
low-pass filtering of AMPAR- and KAR-mediated currents that could arise from
imperfect spatial control of membrane potential during our voltage-clamp
measurements. (2) Loss of voltage control with distance could result in the
activation of dendritic voltage-dependent conductances that can affect the
amplitude and shape of neuronal responses to glutamate
(Johnston et al., 1996
). Such
effects on the photolytically evoked glutamate responses can be excluded
because voltage-dependent Na+ channels were blocked in all
experiments by the addition of TTX. Furthermore, blocking of
Ca2+ channels by the addition of CdCl2 (200
µM) does not affect the amplitude of mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated responses,
which were elicited at the most distal part of the dendrite that was examined
(300 µm from the center of the soma; 102 ± 4% as compared with
control; p = 0.99; n = 5 neurons/4 animals;
Fig. 4B). This
observation can be explained by the fairly uniform distribution of
voltage-dependent Ca2+ conductances across the
somatodendritic axis of layer V pyramidal neurons
(Markram et al., 1995
;
Oakley et al., 2001
;
Migliore and Shepherd, 2002
).
Such a uniform distribution also has been found for KA channels
(Migliore and Shepherd, 2002
).
(3) It is possible that local differences in the glutamate affinity of the
receptors, rather than in the absolute number of these receptors, are
responsible for the profiles of glutamate sensitivity observed. However, the
nearly identical kinetics and values of
of somatic and dendritic KARs
(Figs. 2A,D,
3) are very indicative that
these receptors have similar intrinsic properties.
The results described above strongly suggest that the relative ratio of the
number of KARs to AMPARs does not change toward the distal dendrite. This
suggestion is strengthened further by the observation that cyclothiazide
exponentiates mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated responses at the soma and the dendrite
to the same degree (Fig.
1G, third and fourth column).
Estimation of the density of KARs
In addition to
, peak-scaled non-SFA also reveals the maximal number
(N) of activated channels at the peak of the mean current (see
Materials and Methods). In our experiments the mean values of N were
718 ± 79 for somatic stimulation (n = 6 neurons/5 animals) and
627 ± 90 for dendritic stimulation (at a distance of
200 µm
from the center of the soma; n = 6 neurons/6 animals). To obtain the
minimal density of KARs, we have to divide these values by the membrane
surface that was exposed to glutamate. In previous studies we estimated the
site of glutamate release as a spot of
10 µm diameter
(Dodt et al., 1999
;
Eder et al., 2002
). Thus the
stimulated dendritic membrane area was assumed to be the surface of a
10-µm-long cylinder of 1 µm radius (= 62.8 µm2). The
diameter of the somata of layer V pyramidal neurons was estimated as 10-15
µm. To consider the upper and lower side of the neuron, we calculated the
stimulated somatic membrane surface as two times the area of a circle of 10
µm in diameter (= 157 µm2). Using these values, we estimated
the minimal density of KARs at the soma as 4.5 receptors/µm2.
The respective value for the dendrite (at a distance of
200 µm from
the center of the soma) is 9.9 receptors/µm2. These results
indicate that the density of KARs is higher at the more distal dendrite (at a
distance of 200 µm from the soma
2x the density at the
soma).
Additional experiments provided more direct evidence for an increased
density of KARs at the more distal dendrite. In these experiments the
glutamate was applied photolytically to somatic and dendritic outside-out
patches. To achieve constant experimental conditions, we held constant the
following parameters: open-tip resistance of patch pipettes (8 M
),
concentration of caged glutamate (1 mM), intensity of laser light (5 mW
measured beyond the objective), stimulation duration (3 msec), and the depth
of the stimulation site within the brain slice (
30 µm). KAR-mediated
responses elicited at dendritic outside-out patches showed larger amplitudes
than those evoked at somatic outside-out patches (36.3 ± 4.6 pA for
dendritic outside-out patches, n = 7 patches/7 animals; 16.2 ±
2.5 pA for somatic outside-out patches, n = 7 patches/7 animals;
p < 0.01; Fig.
4C). Because of our evidence for identical unitary
properties of somatic and dendritic KARs, these results are consistent with an
increased density of KARs at the dendrite (also
2x the density at
the soma).
The results described in the previous section strongly suggest that the
relative ratio of the number of KARs to AMPARs does not change toward the
distal dendrite. As a consequence, an increased density of KARs at the more
distal dendrite implies that the density of AMPARs also is higher at dendritic
sites.
Evidence for a mainly extrasynaptic location of KARs
The slow kinetic properties of most KAR synapses described up to now and
the need for repetitive stimulation to open the KAR channels
(Castillo et al., 1997
;
Vignes and Collingridge, 1997
)
have been interpreted by some groups as evidence for their putative
extrasynaptic location (Benveniste et al.,
1984
; Lerma, 1997
;
Mayer, 1997
). To investigate
whether this holds true for KARs on neocortical layer V pyramidal neurons, we
performed the following experiment. Infrared-guided laser stimulation was used
to apply glutamate to the apical dendrite at a distance of 200 µm from the
center of the soma. In this region (layer IV) many afferents form
glutamatergic synapses with the apical dendrite of layer V pyramidal neurons
(Peters, 1987
). In the same
experiment, glutamatergic synapses, located in the region of photolytic
glutamate release, were stimulated electrically. For this purpose a small
theta-capillary (
2 µm tip diameter) was placed near the dendrite (also
200 µm from the center of the soma,
5 µm lateral distance). This
kind of stimulation allowed us to activate selectively those synapses located
in a defined region of the dendrite. Control experiments confirmed the high
spatial resolution of this stimulation technique
(Fig. 5D). Because
synaptic currents were blocked completely by TTX (1 µM), they had to be the
result of action potential generation in afferents (data not shown). In all
experiments with synaptic stimulation, potential GABAergic inputs were blocked
by specific antagonists: picrotoxin (75 µM) for GABAA receptors
and CGP35348 (200 µM) for GABAB receptors.
In the presence of D-AP-5 single electrical stimuli reliably evoked an EPSC
(n = 12 neurons/10 animals). The amplitude of this current was
strongly diminished by the addition of GYKI 53655 (50 µM; 9 ± 1% as
compared with control; Fig.
5A,C). Because the remaining component was blocked
completely by CNQX (50 µM; 2 ± 1% as compared with control), it
obviously was mediated by KARs. Interestingly, the mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated
EPSC (in the absence of GYKI 53655) and the isolated KAR-mediated EPSC showed
nearly identical fast kinetics (Fig.
5A). In contrast to the strong antagonistic effect of
GYKI 53655 on the EPSC, the application of GYKI 53655 led to a much smaller
decrease of the amplitude of the photolytically evoked glutamate response (61
± 6% as compared with control; p < 0.001;
Fig. 5B,C). Because
photolytically released glutamate has access to synaptic as well as to
extrasynaptic receptors (Pettit and
Augustine, 2000
; Frick et al.,
2001
; Matsuzaki et al.,
2001
) and a single electrical stimulus should not cause an intense
spillover of synaptically released glutamate to extrasynaptic sites, the most
likely explanation for this observation is a mainly extrasynaptic location of
KARs. Such a conclusion presupposes that the activated AMPARs and KARs have a
similar affinity to glutamate. To test this hypothesis, we elicited mixed
AMPA/KAR-mediated responses at different concentrations of caged glutamate
(0.5 and 1 mM) and compared the KAR components of these responses after the
addition of GYKI 53655. Figure 6,
A and B, shows that GYKI 53655 decreased the
amplitude of the mixed AMPA/KAR-mediated response by
60%, independently
of the concentration of caged glutamate [57 ± 2% for 0.5 mM caged
glutamate (n = 7 neurons/5 animals) and 58 ± 3% for 1 mM caged
glutamate (n = 7 neurons/6 animals)]. Statistical evaluation revealed
no significant difference between these values (p = 0.69). This
result indicates that AMPARs and KARs of layer V pyramidal neurons have
similar affinities to glutamate and strongly supports the assumption of a
mainly extrasynaptic location of KARs.

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|
Figure 6. KARs and AMPARs of layer V pyramidal neurons have similar affinities to
glutamate. A, Using two different concentrations of caged glutamate
(0.5 and 1 mM), we applied glutamate photolytically to the neuronal
soma. Independently from the concentration of caged glutamate, GYKI 53655
decreased the glutamate response amplitude by the same amount ( 60%). This
result indicates that the KARs and AMPARs mediating the glutamate responses
have similar affinities to glutamate. B, Statistical evaluation of
the experiments shown in A.
|
|
 |
Discussion
|
|---|
The present study describes the existence, properties, and spatial
distribution of functional postsynaptic KARs on neocortical layer V pyramidal
neurons. We show that KARs are located on the entire somatodendritic membrane
that was examined. We also show that laser photolysis of caged substances is
well suited to apply neurotransmitters to outside-out patches within a brain
slice and to examine single-channel properties of ligand-gated ion
channels.
Properties and subcellular distribution of postsynaptic KARs
Our results indicate that somatic and dendritic KARs have similar intrinsic
properties. This is consistent with studies showing that the unitary
properties of AMPA and NMDA receptors on the somata and dendrites of
hippocampal pyramidal neurons and cerebellar Purkinje cells are identical
(Spruston et al., 1995
;
Häusser and Roth, 1997
;
Andrásfalvy and Magee,
2001
).
The mostly slow kinetic properties of KAR synapses and the need for
repetitive stimulation to open the KAR channels have been interpreted by some
groups as evidence for an extrasynaptic location of KARs, which can be
activated by a spillover of synaptically released glutamate
(Lerma et al., 2001
). However,
there are also arguments against the spillover hypothesis
(Min et al., 1998
;
Kidd and Isaac, 2001
;
Cossart et al., 2002
). Two
additional models compete as an explanation, at least for the slow time course
of KAR-mediated EPSCs. First, intracellular signals and/or accessory proteins
of the SAP90/PSD-95 family have been suggested as modifying the kinetic
properties of KARs (Garcia et al.,
1998
; Swanson and Heinemann,
1998
; Kidd and Isaac,
2001
). Second, native KARs might be composed of heteromers with
different intrinsic properties from recombinant homomeric channels
(Frerking and Nicoll, 2000
).
Our data shed new light on the kinetic properties and subcellular distribution
of postsynaptic KARs. We provide strong evidence for a mainly extrasynaptic
and minor synaptic location of KARs, which can be activated without repetitive
stimulation. Furthermore, the fast kinetics seem to be a general feature of
extrasynaptic as well as synaptic KARs. Fast KAR-mediated EPSCs also were
observed in the retina (DeVries and
Schwartz, 1999
) and recently were recorded from CA1 interneurons
(Cossart et al., 2002
).
In summary, the discussion about the synaptic and/or extrasynaptic
localization, as well as about the reasons for fast/slow kinetics of KARs,
remains puzzling and raises the question whether general rules exist regarding
these issues. Therefore, it seems likely that the specific targeting of KARs
on the postsynaptic membrane of central neurons, as well as the intrinsic
properties of these receptors, depends on the brain region, type of neuron,
type of synapse, and age. This point of view is strengthened further by the
following observations. (1) KAR subunits are expressed in the brain in a
complex mosaic (Wisden and Seeburg,
1993
). (2) Quantal release of glutamate, which should not cause a
spillover of glutamate to extrasynaptic sites, evokes slow KAR-mediated EPSCs
in CA3 pyramidal neurons, fast KAR-mediated EPSCs in CA1 interneurons, but no
synaptic response in CA1 pyramidal cells
(Cossart et al., 2002
), which
also express functional KARs (Bureau et
al., 1999
). (3) Nonrepetitive stimulation of the thalamus evokes
KAR-mediated EPSCs in layer IV pyramidal cells of 3- to 8-d-old rats
(Kidd and Isaac, 1999
).
However, these EPSCs show a slow time course and are mediated by receptors,
which probably contain unedited GluR5 and/or GluR6 subunits. In contrast, our
data strongly suggest that layer V pyramidal neurons of 14- to 21-d-old rats
express postsynaptic KARs, which contain edited GluR5 and/or GluR6
subunits.
The single-channel conductance of ligand-gated ion channels frequently is
estimated by non-SFA. Non-SFA usually is applied to synaptically evoked
currents or to currents that are elicited by application of the agonist to
outside-out patches. However, these two methods have the following problems.
First, synaptic currents can be evoked at the intact neuron in a physiological
environment but also reflect presynaptic influences that can distort the
estimated value of
(Robinson and
Kawai, 1993
; Silver et al.,
1996
). Second, agonist application to outside-out patches prevents
presynaptic influences but, with the use of a standard external application
system, cannot be performed within the slice. In the present study we show
that infrared-guided laser stimulation is a well suited and simple method to
estimate
of ligand-gated ion channels, circumventing these
problems.
Our estimation of
8 pS agrees well with other studies, which
determined the range of KAR single-channel conductances from very small values
(<1 pS) to values comparable to AMPARs (
10 pS)
(Frerking and Nicoll, 2000
).
However, there is evidence that high-conductance KARs contain unedited GluR5
and/or GluR6 subunits (Lerma et al.,
2001
). Therefore, our relatively high value of
8 pS, at first
glance, does not seem to be consistent with our evidence for edited GluR5
and/or GluR6 subunits. We cannot explain this discrepancy conclusively.
However, the subunit compositions and interactions of native KARs are nearly
unknown. Thus it would not be surprising if some features of native KARs
diverge from those of artificially composed KARs.
We provide strong evidence for a distance-dependent increase in the density
of KARs and AMPARs in the apical dendrites of layer V pyramidal neurons. Such
an increase also has been described for AMPARs on hippocampal CA1 pyramidal
cells (Andrásfalvy and Magee,
2001
) and seems to be responsible for counterbalancing some of the
filtering effects of dendrites (Stricker
et al., 1996
; Magee and Cook,
2000
). Interestingly, evidence for an increasing density toward
the distal apical dendrite also was provided for GABAA receptors
(Eder et al., 2001
). Thus our
results support the idea that an increasing density toward the distal dendrite
is a general principle for ligand-gated ion channels with fast kinetics.
Functional roles of postsynaptic KARs
The generally small amplitude and mostly slow kinetics of the KAR component
of EPSCs raise the question of whether these receptors play only a minor role
in fast synaptic transmission. But what is the physiological role for
postsynaptic KARs? An attractive hypothesis was postulated by Frerking and
Nicoll (2000
). In their model
the KARs are ideally suited for temporal summation of synaptic inputs at low
frequencies. In this way the information about the global afferent firing rate
may be transmitted.
Regarding extrasynaptic KARs, these receptors may be activated by a
spillover of synaptically released glutamate
(Scanziani, 2002
), glutamate
released from the somatodendritic membrane itself
(Ali et al., 2001
), or ambient
glutamate present in the extra-cellular fluid at persistent micromolar
concentrations (Lerma et al.,
1986
; Timmerman and Westerink,
1997
). Such concentrations are sufficient to activate NMDA
receptors tonically on pyramidal neurons
(Sah et al., 1989
). Also KARs
might be activated in this way. Such a mechanism would be attractive for a
fine tuning of the neuronal excitability. This hypothesis is strengthened by
the high sensitivity of KARs to resting levels of glutamate (
100 µM),
which are high enough to open the channels and, at the same time, low enough
to produce only an incomplete desensitization
(Paternain et al., 1998
;
Lerma et al., 2001
).
Furthermore, extrasynaptic KARs may mediate glutamatergic communication
between glial cells and neurons. Several observations support this hypothesis.
It has been shown that hippocampal and cortical astrocytes release glutamate
in a Ca2+-dependent process
(Parpura et al., 1994
;
Bezzi et al., 1998
).
Complementing this finding, spontaneous astrocytic Ca2+
oscillations propagate as waves to neighboring astrocytes and trigger
glutamate receptor-mediated excitation of neurons located along the wave path
(Parri et al., 2001
).
The epileptogenic action of kainate is a well known phenomenon. A direct
causation between the appearance of seizures and the activation of KARs has
been shown by Mulle et al.
(1998
). Although there is
evidence for a decrease of inhibition via presynaptic KARs located on
GABAergic terminals (Frerking and Nicoll,
2000
), the exact mechanisms underlying the epileptogenic action of
kainate are not yet clear. Besides an indirect excitation by a decreased
GABAergic inhibition, it is also conceivable that glial glutamate directly
excites the postsynaptic neuronal membrane by activating extrasynaptic KARs.
Several observations support such a glia-neuron interaction. It has been shown
that transients of Ca2+ oscillations in neocortical
astrocytes generalize under epileptiform conditions
(Tashiro et al., 2002
). Such
changes in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration can
cause glutamate release in cortical astrocytes. Interestingly, Bezzi et al.
(2001
) observed that
prostaglandins, which are often the product of altered CNS functions,
stimulate this kind of glial glutamate release. Probably in this way the
prostaglandins increase the concentration of extracellular glutamate
(Malmberg et al., 1995
). Such
enhanced levels of extracellular glutamate may be involved in the generation
of seizures and epileptiform activity
(Engstrom et al., 2001
).
Recent studies report physiological functions of extrasynaptic NMDA and
extrasynaptic metabotropic glutamate receptors
(Brasnjo and Otis, 2001
;
Li et al., 2002
). It is likely
also that the extrasynaptic KARs we found play a physiological role. It seems
worth clarifying whether indeed they represent an important target for
extrasynaptic glutamate and/or whether they provide a pool of glutamate
receptors that may be recruited to the synapse during activity-dependent or
developmentally regulated changes in synaptic strength.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Apr. 14, 2003;
revised May. 29, 2003;
accepted Jun. 6, 2003.
This study was supported by Sonderforschungsbereich Grant 391. S.C.A. is
grateful to Dr. H. C. K. Peter and the Claussen-Simon Stiftung des
Stifterverbandes der Deutschen Wissenschaft for supporting her scientific
work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Matthias Eder,
Max-Planck-Institute of Psychiatry, Kraepelinstrasse 2, 80804 Munich, Germany.
E-mail:
Eder{at}mpipsykl.mpg.de.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/236660-11$15.00/0
 |
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