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The Journal of Neuroscience, February 1, 2003, 23(3):758
Ca2+ Signaling in Mouse Cortical Neurons Studied by
Two-Photon Imaging and Photoreleased Inositol Triphosphate
Grace E.
Stutzmann,
Frank M.
LaFerla, and
Ian
Parker
Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, University of California,
Irvine, Irvine, California 92697-4550
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ABSTRACT |
IP3-mediated Ca2+ release is a
crucial neuronal signaling mechanism that has not been extensively
characterized in the mammalian cerebral cortex. We used two-photon,
video-rate microscopy to image Ca2+ signals evoked
by photoreleased IP3 in pyramidal neurons of mouse prefrontal cortex. Ca2+ responses to photoreleased
IP3 varied greatly between different neurons; however,
within IP3-responsive neurons, the soma invariably showed
highest sensitivity, with signals increasing nonlinearly with
[IP3]. Responses to paired photorelease displayed
inhibition, whereas IP3-evoked Ca2+
liberation was potentiated by Ca2+ entry during
action potentials and vice versa. IP3-mediated
Ca2+ signals strongly inhibited spike firing through
activation of K+ membrane conductance. Metabotropic
signaling via the phosphoinositide pathway thus serves as a powerful
and sustained modulator of excitability in cortical neurons and
displays complex reciprocal interactions between electrical and
chemical signals.
Key words:
calcium signaling; coincidence detection; electrophysiology; flash photolysis; modulation; prefrontal cortex
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Introduction |
Intracellular
Ca2+ ions play vital roles in regulating
numerous aspects of neuronal signaling (Berridge, 1998 ). This
Ca2+ arises from two sources: influx of
extracellular Ca2+ through voltage- and
ligand-gated plasma membrane channels, and liberation from
intracellular stores, such as the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Although
much is known about the influx pathways (Berridge et al., 2000 ;
Sabatini et al., 2001 ), the importance of
Ca2+ liberation from intracellular stores
has only recently become apparent (Meldolesi, 2001 ; Rose and Konnerth,
2001 ). Ca2+ liberation from the ER is
mediated through ryanodine receptors (RyR) and inositol trisphosphate
(IP3) receptors
(IP3Rs) (Berridge, 1998 ). Both function as
Ca2+-permeable channels in the ER
membrane, the opening of which is promoted by cytosolic
Ca2+, leading to a phenomenon of
Ca2+-induced
Ca2+ release (CICR) (Friel and Tsien,
1992 ; Nakamura et al., 1999 ). Moreover, in addition to
Ca2+, the gating of
IP3Rs requires IP3, an
intracellular messenger that is generated through a
Gq-coupled signal transduction pathway. Ca2+ and IP3 can
thus function as "chemical" computational signals, mediating
complex, bidirectional interactions between the plasma membrane and ER
that underlie diverse processes, including excitability, neurotransmitter release, plasticity, and gene transcription (Berridge, 1998 ).
Despite the fact that the phosphoinositide system is particularly well
developed in brain (Berridge, 1998 ), most of our knowledge of its
functioning derives from studies in nonexcitable cells. Key findings
include the inhibitory and excitatory influences of cytosolic
Ca2+ on Ca2+
liberation through IP3Rs (Iino, 1990 ;
Bezprozvanny et al., 1991 ; Finch et al., 1991 ; Yao and Parker, 1992 ;
Ilyin and Parker, 1994 ) and the hierarchical spatial arrangement of
Ca2+ liberation as "elementary" events
that can serve both as local signals and become coordinated to
propagate global Ca2+ waves (Yao et
al., 1995 ; Berridge, 1997 ).
The dual requirement for IP3 and cytosolic
Ca2+ to promote additional
Ca2+ liberation (Bezprozvanny et al.,
1991 ; Finch et al., 1991 ) suggests that the IP3
receptor may serve as a coincidence detector (Berridge, 1998 ; Rose and
Konnerth, 2001 ) and therefore play a role in synaptic plasticity (Fujii
et al., 2000 ; Miyata et al., 2000 ; Nishiyama et al., 2000 ).
Ca2+ released from intracellular stores
can also have short-term effects on membrane excitability (Morikawa et
al., 2000 ; Yamamoto et al., 2002 ), as well as potential long-term
implications by regulating gene transcription (Mellstrom and Naranjo,
2001 ).
Although it is clear that IP3-sensitive
Ca2+ stores are involved in many aspects
of neuronal functioning, little is known regarding its role in the
frontal and prefrontal cortex, despite that fact that this region
contains a significant level of IP3 receptors (Sharp et al., 1999 ), Gq-coupled receptors
(Wilson and Minneman, 1989 ; Levey, 1993 ), and
Ca2+-activated conductances (Markram and
Sakmann, 1994 ; Seamans et al., 1997 ). We thus studied the dynamics of
IP3-evoked Ca2+
release in layer V pyramidal neurons in the prefrontal cortex, using
whole-cell electrophysiological recordings combined with video-rate
two-photon imaging from neurons filled with fura-2 and caged
IP3. Our results show that
Ca2+ liberated from
IP3-sensitive stores directly affects neuronal excitability and interacts with other Ca2+
sources to modulate signaling in cortical neurons.
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Materials and Methods |
Slice preparation. Brain slices were prepared as
described previously (Aghajanian and Marek, 1997 ) and in adherence with
protocols approved by the University of California, Irvine
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. All efforts were made to
minimize the number of animals used and their suffering. Briefly, 2.5- to 3.5-week-old FVB/N mice were deeply anesthetized with halothane and
decapitated. The brains were quickly removed and placed in ice-cold
artificial CSF (aCSF) bubbled with
95%O2-5% CO2. A
300-µm-thick coronal section containing the prefrontal cortex was
blocked and glued to the stage of a Vibroslice (Campden Instruments,
Loughborough, UK) oscillating microslicer. The standard aCSF
used in the recording chambers was composed of the following (in
mM): 125 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 10 D-glucose, 25 NaHCO3, 2 CaCl2, and 1.2 MgSO4, pH
7.3-7.4. Flow rate for aCSF was ~3 ml/min. There was at least a 1 hr
recovery period before the initiation of experiments. Layer V pyramidal
neurons were selected in a region approximately one-half of the
distance between the pial surface and the subcortical white matter in
the medial prefrontal cortex.
Whole-cell recordings and solutions. Visualized whole-cell
patch-clamp recordings were performed using an infrared-differential interference contrast setup. Slices were placed in a custom-made perfusion chamber mounted on a movable stage assembly on an upright microscope (BX50WI; Olympus Optical, Tokyo, Japan). Patch
pipettes (4-5 M ) were pulled from boroscillicate glass tubing
(World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL) using a Brown
and Flaming horizontal puller (model P-97; Sutter
Instruments, Novato, MA) and were filled with a solution
containing the following: 135 mM
K-methlysulfonate, 10 mM HEPES, 10 mM Na-phosphocreatine, 2 mM
MgCl2, 4 mM NaATP, and 0.4 mM NaGTP, pH adjusted to 7.3-7.4 with KOH, as
well as 50 µM fura-2 (Molecular
Probes, Eugene, OR) and 50 µM caged
IP3 (Molecular Probes). Signals were
acquired at 1 kHz using an Axopatch 1C amplifier (Axon
Instruments, Union City, CA), and analyzed using Clampex 8.1 and
Clampfit 8.1 software. Access resistance was continually monitored, and
cells were used for recording only if the access resistance was
maintained <7 M .
For local agonist stimulation, a puffer pipette filled with 100 µM 1-aminocyclopentane-trans-1S3R-dicarboxylic
acid (1S3R-ACPD) (Sigma, St. Louis,
MO) was positioned directly over various regions of the cell, including
the base and apical regions of the soma, and proximal and distal
dendrites. The agonist was ejected using 100 msec pneumatic pressure
pulses (PV 800 pneumatic pump; World Precision
Instruments).
Ca2+ imaging and flash
photolysis. Imaging was performed using a home-made video-rate
two-photon microscope, as described previously (Nguyen et al., 2001 ).
In brief, excitation was provided by trains (80 MHz) of ultra-short
(~100 fsec) pulses at 780 nm from a Ti/sapphire laser (Tsunami;
Spectra-Physics, Mountain View, CA) pumped by a
solid-state laser (Millenia 5X;
Spectra-Physics). The laser beam was scanned by a resonant
galvanometer (General Scanning Lumonics, Waterton, MA)
allowing rapid (7.9 kHz) bidirectional scanning in the
x-axis and by a conventional linear galvanometer in the
y-axis, to provide a frame-scan rate of 30 frames per
second. The scanned beam was introduced into the microscope
through a custom port mounted between the trinocular head and
epifluorescence illuminator and focused onto the specimen through a
40× water-immersion objective (numerical aperture, 0.8). Emitted
fluorescence light was collected through the same objective and, after
passing through a short-pass filter ( < 650 nm) to block laser
light, was detected by a wide-field photomultiplier (R5929;
Hamamatsu, Bridgewater, NJ) mounted on the photo-port of
the trinocular head. Luminance and synchronization signals were sampled
by a computer equipped with a frame-grabber board (DT3152; Data
Translation, Marlborough, MA), and a custom software routine
appropriately flipped and interlaced alternate lines of the
bidirectional scan to display images (450 × 400 pixels) at 30 Hz.
Finally, a video signal derived from the computer display was
redigitized by a second computer running the MetaMorph image analysis
and processing package (Universal Imaging, Westchester, PA).
All results presented here were obtained using fura-2 as the
Ca2+ indicator because, in preliminary
trials, we found it to offer advantages over visible-wavelength
indicators such as Calcium Green-1. Most significantly, two-photon
excitation of fura-2 at 780 nm is equivalent to conventional
(one-photon) excitation at 380 nm, in that it shows a decrease
in fluorescence on binding Ca2+ rather
than an increase as with most other indicators. The basal fluorescence
is thus high, facilitating identification of cellular structures and
measurement of small Ca2+ increases over
the resting level. Second, fura-2 showed a large dynamic range, with
the fluorescence intensity changing >10-fold from resting to
saturating [Ca2+]. For clarity of
presentation, images and traces of fura-2 fluorescence are expressed as
a pseudoratio F0/ F
(where F0 is resting fluorescence and
F is the decrease of fluorescence on stimulation), so
that increases in [Ca2+] correspond to
increasing ratios.
Photolysis of caged IP3 was accomplished by
flashes of UV light (340-400 nm) derived from a 100 W Hg arc lamp in a
standard Olympus Optical lamphousing and epifluorescence
attachment, modified to accept an electronically controlled shutter
(Uniblitz, Rochester, NY). The irradiance at the specimen was ~51 mW
mm 2, focused as a uniform circle
(radius, ~50 µm) centered on the imaging field. No attenuation was
used in the light path, and the stimulus strength was regulated by the
flash duration. On the basis of previous calibration (Parker and
Ivorra, 1992 ), a flash of 10 msec duration would have photolysed ~4%
of the total caged IP3, resulting in
an intracellular concentration of free IP3 of
~2 µM.
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Results |
IP3-evoked Ca2+
release was imaged in layer V pyramidal neurons within the anterior
cingulate/infralimbic regions of the medial prefrontal cortex.
Morphologically identified pyramidal neurons (n = 106)
were selected in an area approximately one-half of the distance between
the pial surface and the subcortical white matter and had
electrophysiological properties consistent with regularly spiking
pyramidal neurons in the neocortex (McCormick et al., 1985 ), with
resting membrane potentials of 63.7 ± 0.4 mV, input resistance
of 201.1 ± 6.3 M , and displayed spike frequency adaptation with suprathreshold depolarizing current injections.
Imaging Ca2+ signals evoked by IP3
and by action potentials
In this study, we explored the dynamics and functional roles of
Ca2+ liberation through
IP3 receptor-channels in cortical neurons. Figure 1 illustrates many of the key
spatial and temporal Ca2+ characteristics
we describe and shows representative Ca2+
signals in a neuron that responded strongly to photoreleased IP3 together with signals arising from
Ca2+ entry through voltage-gated
Ca2+ channels (VGCC) during trains of
action potentials.

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Figure 1.
Spatial and temporal dynamics of
Ca2+ signals evoked in a cortical pyramidal neuron
by action potentials and photoreleased IP3.
A, Two-photon image showing resting fluorescence of a
fura-2-loaded neuron, with regions of interest used to measure
Ca2+ signals marked in different
colors. B, Ca2+
transients resulting from a train of action potentials evoked by
depolarizing current injection (400 pA for 500 msec; marked by
bar). Image shows fluorescence changes during the spike
train, expressed as a ratio
(F0/ F) of
the mean resting fluorescence at each pixel
(F0) to that at the same pixel during
stimulation ( F). Increasing ratios
(corresponding to increasing [Ca2+] and decreasing
fluorescence of fura-2 with 780 nm femtosecond excitation) are depicted
as increasingly warm colors, as denoted
by the color bar. The ratio image was formed from four
averaged video frames during stimulation and four control frames.
Traces show measurements of fura-2 fluorescence ratios
from the regions marked in A. C,
D, Ca2+ signals imaged in the same
neuron in response to photorelease of IP3 by photolysis
flashes with respective durations of 6 and 20 msec, delivered when
indicated by the arrowheads. E, Image
sequence showing the spatial distribution of Ca2+
fluorescence signal at different times after the 20 msec photolysis
flash. Panels show the mean fluorescence ratio averaged
over 66-198 msec (2-6 video frames) before stimulation
(pre) and at the specified times (in
milliseconds) after the photolysis flash.
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Patterns of Ca2+ signaling varied
significantly across cellular regions (soma vs dendrite) and by means
of activation (photolysis of caged IP3 vs action
potentials). Signals evoked by action potentials were relatively small
and slow in the soma, whereas larger and more rapidly decaying signals
were observed in the dendrites (Fig. 1B). In
contrast, large Ca2+ signals were evoked
in the soma by brief photolysis flashes (Fig. 1C), whereas
in the dendrite the threshold for evoking a response was higher and, in
many cells, signals could not be evoked at all. In those cells showing
dendritic IP3-evoked
Ca2+ responses, the decay rates of
dendritic Ca2+ signals were markedly
faster than in the soma (Fig 1C,D).
IP3-evoked Ca2+
signals in the dendrite did not result simply from passive diffusion of
Ca2+ from the soma, because responses to
suprathreshold flashes began abruptly after an initial latency, whereas
no responses were seen to subthreshold flashes that nevertheless evoked
large Ca2+ signals in the soma (Fig.
1C-E). We did not observe propagating Ca2+ waves, as have been described in
hippocampal neurons (Nakamura et al., 1999 ); instead, heterogeneous
patterns of Ca2+ responses were observed
within the soma and proximal dendrite, suggesting that
Ca2+ liberation occurs autonomously in
discrete subcellular regions. Signals in the nucleus were smaller, and
slower, in both rise and decay times than adjacent regions of the
cytoplasm, indicating that the nucleoplasm acts merely as a passive
sink for Ca2+ diffusion.
Cortical pyramidal neurons show widely varying sensitivities
to IP3
Fluorescence signals evoked by a train of action potentials (0.5 sec depolarizing pulse evoking spikes at ~20 Hz) were consistently observed in the soma of all neurons, and their amplitudes varied between cells in an approximately Gaussian manner (Fig.
2A,B). In contrast, responses to photoreleased IP3
varied enormously between cells: many showed strong signals as in
Figure 1, but others showed only weak responses or failed to respond at
all (Fig. 2A). To quantify these differences, we
measured the distribution of fluorescence signals evoked in 72 neurons
by UV flashes of fixed (20 msec) duration (Fig. 2C). Many
cells showed no detectable response, whereas the remainder exhibited
peak fluorescence signals varying continuously over a >10-fold range.
For additional analysis, we grouped cells into three categories (Fig.
2B): "strong responders" (38%), "weak
responders" (21%,) and "nonresponders" (41%). Strongly responding cells showed large, rapidly rising signals in the soma after
brief ( 10 msec) photolysis flashes and usually elicited signals in
the proximal dendrite with longer flashes. Nonresponders gave no
detectable Ca2+ signals in either the soma
or dendrites, even with flash durations 10 times greater than those
evoking large responses in responding cells. Weakly responding cells
showed small, slowly rising Ca2+ signals,
usually restricted to the soma, and required longer (30 msec) flashes
to evoke threshold responses.

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Figure 2.
Variability in responses to photoreleased
IP3. A, Examples from three neurons that
typify the three classes of Ca2+ signals evoked
among different neurons by photoreleased IP3. Gray
traces show responses to trains of action potentials (500 pA
depolarizing current for 500 msec), and black traces are
responses to photolysis flashes of varying durations. All cells showed
large fluorescence signals to spike trains, but nonresponding cells
failed to give detectable responses even to long photolysis flashes
(left; 20, 100, and 150 msec flashes). Weakly responding
cells showed only small, slowly rising signals with long flashes
(middle; 10 and 100 msec flashes), whereas even brief
photolysis flashes evoked large, rapid signals in strongly responding
cells (right; 7 and 30 msec flashes). B,
C, Histograms showing, respectively, the distributions
of peak somatic fluorescence signals evoked in different neurons
(n = 72) by trains of action potentials (7-10
spikes per 500 msec train) and photolysis flashes (20 msec duration).
Measurements were obtained as in A. D,
Black traces show Ca2+ responses
evoked in the soma (left) and proximal dendrite
(right) by local application of the group I metabotropic
glutamate receptor agonist, 1S3R-ACPD,
via a puffer pipette placed near the base of the soma in the same cell.
Gray traces show, for comparison, signals evoked by
photoreleased IP3. Arrows indicate timing of
agonist application (100 msec pressure pulse) and photolysis flashes
(20 msec). Similar results were obtained in a total of four neurons, in
which the magnitudes and kinetics of agonist-evoked responses matched
closely those evoked by photoreleased IP3.
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Photolysis flashes that evoked just suprathreshold
Ca2+ signals in strongly responding
neurons (<10 msec duration, 51 mW mm 2)
resulted in intracellular IP3 concentrations of
~2 µM (see Materials and Methods), whereas
concentrations >20 µM failed to give signals in
nonresponding cells.
Ca2+ signals mediated via
metabotropic receptors
The above experiments used flash photolysis to directly elevate
intracellular [IP3] and demonstrate the
presence of functional IP3 receptors in cortical
pyramidal neurons. To further establish the physiological involvement
of these receptors in signaling via Gq-coupled
metabotropic receptors, we imaged Ca2+
signals evoked by local application of a metabotropic glutamate agonist
(1S3R-ACPD) from a puffer pipette placed directly
over specific cell regions. Ca2+ signals
were evoked only when the pipette was positioned near the basal region
of the soma. As illustrated in Figure 2D,
metabotropic receptor activation elicited
Ca2+ signals in both soma and proximal
dendrite that closely matched responses evoked in the same neuron by
photoreleased IP3.
Dose-response relationship of IP3-evoked
Ca2+ signals in the soma and dendrite
We quantified the magnitude and kinetics of
IP3-evoked Ca2+
signals evoked by UV flashes in 11 neurons characterized as
strong-responders. Figure 3, A
and B, shows representative
Ca2+ responses evoked by UV flashes of
increasing durations in the soma, apical dendrite, and distal dendrite
regions of two cells: the cell in Figure 3B showed responses
in the distal dendrite, whereas that in Figure 3A did not.
Figure 3, C and D, shows, respectively, the mean
peak amplitude and rate of rise of Ca2+
signals in the soma and proximal dendrite as functions of UV flash
duration. In both the soma and proximal dendrite, the relationships were nonlinear, in that a threshold duration of the photolysis flash
was required to evoke detectable Ca2+
signals. The amplitude and rate of rise of the
Ca2+ signals, however, then increased
progressively with longer flash durations.

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Figure 3.
Ca2+ signals evoked by
photorelease of increasing amounts of IP3.
A, Records from a strongly responding neuron,
illustrating different spatial patterns of Ca2+
signals evoked by photorelease of increasing amounts of
IP3. Superimposed traces in the first
three panels show fluorescence signals recorded from the soma
(a; excluding nucleus), proximal dendrite
(b; within 10 µm of the soma), and distal dendrite
(c; 50 µm from soma), in response to photolysis
flashes with durations of 7, 10, 15, and 20 msec. The right
panel (d) shows corresponding responses
in each region to trains of action potentials. B,
Similar records from another neuron, in which large responses were
observed in the distal dendrite. Flash durations were 7, 10, 20, and 50 msec. C, Mean peak amplitude of fluorescence signals in
the soma (filled circles) and proximal dendrite
(open triangles) of 11 strongly responding neurons,
plotted as a function of photolysis flash duration. Amplitudes of
signals evoked by spike trains in the same neurons are shown at the
right. Error bars indicate 1 SEM. D,
Corresponding measurements of rate of rise
(F0/ F
sec 1) of the fluorescence signals. Only
suprathreshold Ca2+ responses were included in
calculating the averaged values. E, Time constants of
decay of fluorescence signals in the same neurons, derived from
single-exponential fits to the decay phase of the
IP3-evoked Ca2+ responses.
Inset shows the Ca2+ decay time
constants for a single spike and a train of 10 spikes, measured in both
the soma and dendrite of a separate population of neurons
(n = 5).
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The rates of decay of both IP3-evoked and
spike-evoked Ca2+ signals were markedly
faster in the dendrites compared with the soma (Fig.
3A,B,E), indicating a
faster rate of dendritic Ca2+ clearance
that may arise as a result of the differing geometries (ratio of
surface area to volume) of these regions. Interestingly, the decay of
IP3-evoked Ca2+
signals became more rapid with progressively stronger stimuli, although
their peak amplitude increased. This change in decay rate was not
observed for Ca2+ signals evoked by spike
trains of varying durations (Fig. 3E, inset),
indicating that it does not arise through varying rates of
Ca2+ clearance at differing intracellular
Ca2+ concentrations. Instead, a likely
mechanism is that Ca2+ signals at low
IP3 concentrations are prolonged because of
sustained liberation of Ca2+ from
intracellular stores, whereas liberation at high
[IP3] is more transient, because of either
rapid inactivation of release channels or depletion of intracellular stores.
Responses to paired photolysis flashes
In nonexcitable cells, Ca2+
liberation evoked by photoreleased IP3 is
depressed for several seconds after a preceding suprathreshold UV light
flash (Parker and Ivorra, 1993 ), probably as a result of feedback
inhibition by Ca2+ on the
IP3R (Bezprozvanny et al., 1991 ; Finch et al.,
1991 ). To examine whether a similar phenomenon occurs in pyramidal
neurons, we delivered paired, identical flashes at varying intervals in strongly responding cells. As illustrated in Figure
4A, the
Ca2+ signal evoked by a second,
suprathreshold flash was strongly reduced at an interval of 1 sec
but subsequently recovered over several seconds. These effects cannot
be attributed to dye saturation or consumption of caged
IP3, because flashes of twice the test duration
produced appreciably larger signals than each individual flash.

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Figure 4.
Inhibition and summation of
IP3-evoked Ca2+ release with
paired-flash protocols. A, Fluorescence signals in the
soma of a strongly responding neuron evoked by paired photolysis
flashes (both 50 msec duration) delivered at varying intervals, as
indicated by the arrows. Inset plots the
size of the second response relative to the first response in each
pair, as a function of interflash interval. Data are mean ± 1 SEM
from six neurons. B, Data from a different neuron, in
which additive responses were observed with pairs of brief UV flashes
(15 msec) at short intervals.
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In contrast to the paired-flash inhibition seen with
suprathreshold stimuli, Ca2+ liberation in
Xenopus oocytes is greatly potentiated with paired flashes
that are individually too weak to evoke signals (Parker and Ivorra,
1992 ), suggesting that a chemical summation of
IP3 levels might serve as the basis for a novel
form of synaptic facilitation (Parker and Miledi, 1989 ). However,
experiments in cortical neurons (n = 6), using paired
photolysis flashes that were individually near the threshold required
to evoke detectable somatic Ca2+ signals,
failed to reveal any marked potentiation of responses to the second
flash. Most cells showed a suppression, as in Figure 4A, but one neuron displayed an additive effect with
photolysis flashes at intervals <2 sec (Fig. 4B).
Bidirectional interactions between IP3-evoked
Ca2+ release and extracellular
Ca2+ influx
To study the interactions between
Ca2+ signals arising from extracellular
and intracellular sources, we first examined the effects of
Ca2+ influx during action potentials on
subsequent Ca2+ liberation evoked by
photorelease of IP3 ("spike-flash" paradigm). In all strongly responding neurons examined (n = 9),
IP3-evoked Ca2+
signals were unaffected by a preceding train of action potentials. However, in many weak-responding or nonresponding neurons, a preceding train of action potentials (~18 Hz, 0.5 sec) strongly potentiated or
"rescued" IP3-evoked
Ca2+ signals (11 of 21 cells tested) (Fig.
5A,B,D).
The rescued neurons displayed two different temporal patterns of
potentiation, suggesting different underlying mechanisms. Most (9 of
11) displayed a short-lasting potentiation of the
IP3 response (Fig. 5A, filled
symbols in C), which was maximal near the peak of the
spike-evoked Ca2+ signal and decayed by
50% within ~4 sec. This decline approximately mirrored the fall in
cytosolic [Ca2+] after the spike train,
suggesting that Ca2+ liberation may have
been potentiated by a facilitatory action of
Ca2+ on the IP3
receptor. In contrast, two other neurons displayed a prolonged
potentiation that remained evident for tens of seconds after the
spike-evoked Ca2+ signal had decayed to
baseline (Fig. 5B, open symbols in C)
and was strongly dependent on the duration of the preceding spike train
(Fig. 5D,E,). These properties
appear consistent with a mechanism by which
Ca2+ influx during action potentials
results in increased filling of leaky
IP3-sensitive stores.

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Figure 5.
Reciprocal facilitation between
Ca2+ signals arising from extracellular influx and
liberation from IP3-sensitive stores. A,
Transient rescue of IP3 response in a nonresponding neuron
after Ca2+ entry during trains of action potentials.
The top trace shows the fluorescence signal evoked by a
photolysis flash (arrow; 100 msec duration) alone. The
bottom superimposed traces show responses to photolysis
flashes of the same duration delivered at varying times
(arrows) after a spike train (bar; 500 msec, 500pA). B, Longer-lasting facilitation in a
different neuron. Superimposed traces show responses to
photolysis flashes of fixed duration (100 msec) delivered at varying
times (marked by arrows) after a spike train (indicated
by bar; 500 msec, 500 pA). The rightmost
response was evoked by a flash applied 60 sec after the spike train.
C, Time course of decay of facilitation of
IP3-evoked response as a function of the interval after
preceding spike trains. Filled symbols are mean
measurements with SEM from nine neurons like that in A,
in which facilitation decayed rapidly. Open triangles
are means from two neurons displaying a more sustained facilitation, as
in B. D, The facilitation of
IP3-evoked Ca2+ release increases with
increasing duration of a preceding spike train. Superimposed
traces show fluorescence signals evoked by constant photolysis
flashes (50 msec duration) delivered at a fixed interval (4 sec;
arrow) after spike trains with durations of 0, 250, 500, and 1000 msec. E, Mean peak amplitude of
IP3-evoked fluorescence signal measured in two neurons as a
function of duration of a preceding spike train from records like those
in D. F, Ca2+ signals
evoked by a brief train of action potentials are facilitated after
photorelease of IP3. Traces show (from
top to bottom) a train of four action
potentials and Ca2+ signals evoked by the action
potential train with and without a photolysis flash (200 msec duration;
delivered at arrow).
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We then looked for the inverse interaction, by using a flash-spike
paradigm in which action potentials were evoked by injecting depolarizing current pulses after photolysis flashes. In three neurons
examined, we observed a consistent potentiation, in which submaximal
Ca2+ signals evoked by a few action
potentials (~4 spikes) were greatly enhanced (272 ± 41.1% of
control; n = 7 trials) when preceded by photolysis
flashes that, themselves, failed to evoke strong responses (Fig.
5F).
IP3-evoked Ca2+ release reduces
membrane excitability
Cortical pyramidal neurons exhibit a characteristic spike
frequency adaptation, whereby Ca2+ entry
during action potentials leads to activation of a
Ca2+-dependent outward
K+ current
(IAHP) that, in turn, reduces membrane
excitability and increases the interspike interval (McCormick et al.,
1985 ; Sah, 1996 ). We examined whether Ca2+
liberated from IP3-sensitive intracellular stores
could similarly modulate spiking patterns.
Trains of spikes were induced by injecting depolarizing currents
(300-500 pA, 0.5-2 sec) through the patch pipette in current-clamp mode. Photorelease of IP3 in strongly responding
cells during these spike trains resulted in an incremental increase in
Ca2+ signal and a strong suppression of
action potentials (n = 6) (representative example shown
in Fig. 6A). To measure
the duration for which photoreleased IP3 could
depress neuronal excitability, we applied brief depolarizing current
pulses of constant amplitude and duration at varying times after a
photolysis flash and counted the number of spikes evoked during each
pulse (Fig. 6B). Spike frequency was depressed to
approximately one-third of the control level 2 sec after photorelease
of IP3 and had not fully recovered even after 16 sec (Fig. 6C).

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|
Figure 6.
Suppression of action potential spiking by
photorelease of IP3. A, Top
traces show action potentials evoked by fixed depolarizing
current pulses (200 pA, 4 sec; bar), and bottom
traces show corresponding Ca2+ fluorescence
signals recorded in the soma. A photolysis flash was delivered when
marked by the arrow in the records on the
right, resulting in a transient suppression of spikes
and a larger Ca2+ signal (black
trace) than evoked by the spike train alone
(superimposed gray trace). B, Sustained
depression of membrane excitability after photorelease of
IP3. The neuron was stimulated by repeated depolarizing
current pulses (120 pA, 800 msec), and a photolysis flash was delivered
when indicated by the arrow. C, Mean
measurements from 10 neurons, showing the number of action potentials
generated during fixed depolarizing pulses delivered at varying
intervals after a UV flash. The experimental protocol was the same as
in B.
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|
IP3-evoked Ca2+ release activates an
outward membrane current
The depression of spike firing after photorelease of
IP3 likely involves activation of a
Ca2+-dependent outward current. In
agreement, photolysis flashes evoked small hyperpolarizations of graded
amplitude from a resting membrane potential of approximately 60 mV,
with time courses approximately paralleling accompanying
Ca2+ signals recorded in the soma (Fig.
7A). Furthermore,
voltage-clamp experiments (n = 10; holding potential,
60mV) demonstrated the activation of a transient outward current, the
peak amplitude of which was graded with the flash duration (Fig.
7B) and increased after an approximately second-power
relationship with the peak of the corresponding
Ca2+ signal (Fig. 7C).

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|
Figure 7.
Photorelease of IP3 produces membrane
hyperpolarization and associated outward membrane currents,
proportional to the magnitude of the IP3-evoked
Ca2+ signal. A, Changes in membrane
potential (top traces) and fluorescence
Ca2+ signal (bottom traces) evoked by
photolysis flashes with durations of 20 and 100 msec. Resting potential
was 60 mV. B, Outward membrane currents and
fluorescence signals evoked in a voltage-clamped neuron at a potential
of 60 mV by photolysis flashes with durations of 25, 50, 75, and100
msec. C, Relationship between peak amplitude of the
IP3-evoked Ca2+ signal and the
corresponding peak outward membrane current, measured from
voltage-clamp experiments in nine neurons. Curve is a
second-power relationship fitted to the data.
|
|
 |
Discussion |
Although neurons in the prefrontal cortex express a high density
of IP3Rs and use calcium signaling for mediating
complex cognitive and behavioral functions, surprisingly little is
known regarding IP3 signaling in cortical
neurons. We therefore undertook these studies to elucidate the basic
properties of the
IP3-Ca2+ signaling
pathway in layer V pyramidal cortical neurons.
Variability in IP3-mediated
Ca2+ signals
A striking initial finding was the wide variability in
IP3-mediated Ca2+
signals between individual neurons. Although all pyramidal cells showed
strong Ca2+ signals during trains of
action potentials, some gave large Ca2+
responses with relatively weak photorelease of
IP3, whereas others failed to respond to even
strong stimuli. This variability does not appear to arise through
developmental differences between animals (Yamamoto et al., 2002 ),
because slices were obtained from relatively mature mice (2.5-3.5
weeks old) and, most significantly, responding and nonresponding cells
were found within the same slice. Instead, several mechanisms may
contribute to the varying IP3 responses. One
simply involves the numbers and type of IP3Rs present in individual cells. The density and distribution of the IP3Rs and IP3R subtypes
vary within the population of pyramidal cells (Worley et al., 1989 ;
Sharp et al., 1993 , 1999 ), and both the maximal response and threshold
sensitivity to IP3 are expected to depend on
IP3R density (Nakamura et al., 2002 ). A second
putative mechanism involves differential modulation of
IP3R function between cells. Finally,
IP3-evoked Ca2+
liberation depends on the state of ER Ca2+
stores, reflecting previous activity history and serving as an "activity memory bank" (Simpson et al., 1995 ; Garaschuk et al., 1997 ). The rescue of IP3 responses in apparently
weak-responding and nonresponding cells by
Ca2+ influx during tetanic stimulation
suggests that store filling may be a major regulatory mechanism.
These experiments were performed without blocking RyR, so it is
possible that Ca2+ signals may have been
amplified by subsequent CICR through RyR. Nevertheless, by virtue of
the use of photoreleased IP3, it is clear that
the primary signal reflects activation of
IP3R.
Spatial and temporal aspects of
Ca2+ signals
Photolysis of caged IP3 is expected to
result in a uniform elevation of intracellular
[IP3] throughout the irradiated region of the
cell. The observed spatial gradient in responses to photoreleased IP3 (with the soma showing the lowest threshold
for IP3 and progressively higher thresholds or
loss or response through the distal dendrites) thus reflects
differential sensitivity to IP3 that may result from the higher density of IP3 receptors in the
soma and proximal dendrites in these neurons (Sharp et al., 1999 ). In
contrast, Ca2+ signals generated by action
potentials were larger in the dendrites, consistent with the
distribution of VGCCs (Seamans et al., 1997 ), and the lower ratio of
cytosolic volume per unit area of plasma membrane in the dendrites. The
decay of Ca2+ signals evoked both by
IP3 and action potentials was consistently faster
in the dendrites than the soma, again likely attributable to the higher
surface-to-volume ratio in dendrites. Interestingly, in all subcellular
regions, the decay of IP3-evoked
Ca2+ signals became faster with
increasingly strong stimuli and approached that of signals evoked by
trains of action potentials. A likely explanation is that the decline
of cytosolic [Ca2+] is ultimately
limited by clearance mechanisms but that
IP3-evoked responses are further prolonged by
continued liberation through IP3R. Stronger
activation may result in more rapid termination of
Ca2+ liberation, either through
Ca2+ inhibition of
IP3R or simply because the ER
Ca2+ stores empty faster.
Ca2+ liberation in pyramidal cells showed
a nonlinear dose dependence at low [IP3], in
that a certain threshold flash duration was required to evoke
detectable signals. A similar nonlinearity has been described in
nonexcitable cells (Parker and Ivorra, 1992 ; Bootman et al., 1997 ) and
in Purkinje cells (Khodakhah and Ogden, 1993 ) and arises through the
threshold sensitization needed to induce regenerative CICR (Bootman et
al., 1997 ; Marchant et al., 1999 ). This nonlinearity could provide a
basis for "chemical integration" of IP3
signals, leading to facilitation of successive
Ca2+ responses; however, we were unable to
find convincing evidence for this phenomenon in pyramidal neurons.
Instead, responses to paired photolysis flashes showed at most only an
additive effect with weak stimuli, whereas the
Ca2+ response to an initial strong flash
resulted in a marked suppression of the response to a second flash.
Interactions between extracellular and intracellular
Ca2+ sources
The two Ca2+ sources for generating
cytosolic Ca2+ signals are the
intracellular stores and the larger reservoir of extracellular Ca2+. Interactions between these pathways
are expected to be complex, because of both the biphasic
facilitatory-inhibitory actions of Ca2+
on the IP3 receptor and because the extent of
store filling varies with the history of cytosolic
Ca2+ transients (Simpson et al., 1995 ;
Berridge, 1998 ).
Our principal finding was a bidirectional facilitation between
Ca2+ influx through VGCCs and
Ca2+ liberation through
IP3Rs. Thus, spike trains evoked before
photorelease of IP3 in a weak-responding or
nonresponding neuron could rescue an IP3-evoked
Ca2+ response, essentially converting that
neuron into a strong responder. The extent of facilitation increased
with increasing amount of Ca2+ influx
through VGCCs and, in different neurons, decayed with fast (a few
seconds) or slow (tens of seconds) time courses. These two kinetically
different responses may reflect different underlying mechanisms,
respectively, a direct agonist effect of
Ca2+ on the IP3R and
enhanced filling of ER Ca2+ stores.
Ca2+ influx through VGCCs produced little
or no facilitation in cells that already showed strong responses to
IP3, but it is possible that the sensitivity of
IP3Rs and extent of store filling were already
near maximal. Conversely, previous photorelease of
IP3 potentiated Ca2+
signals during brief trains of action potentials, probably because Ca2+ entry through VGCCs was amplified by
subsequent CICR.
Consistent with our findings, metabotropic receptor activation enhanced
Ca2+ responses mediated through VGCCs in
hippocampus (Nakamura et al., 1999 ) and visual cortex (Yamamoto et al.,
2002 ). However, in Purkinje cells, Ca2+
influx suppressed subsequent liberation through
IP3Rs (Khodakhah and Ogden, 1993 ). The difference
likely lies in a different balance between facilitatory and inhibitory
effects of Ca2+. For example, closer
proximity of VGCCs to IP3Rs in the dendrites of
Purkinje cells might result in a higher local
[Ca2+], favoring binding to the
inhibitory Ca2+ site of the
IP3Rs.
IP3-evoked Ca2+ release reduces
membrane excitability
Photorelease of IP3 during a train of evoked
action potentials resulted in a transient increase in
Ca2+ levels, reduction in spike frequency,
and membrane hyperpolarization. The effect on action potential
generation mimics the spike frequency adaptation characteristic of
cortical pyramidal neurons, in which membrane excitability is reduced
by activation of the Ca2+-dependent
outward potassium current, IAHP (Sah,
1996 ). It is likely that Ca2+ released
from ER stores similarly activates K+
channels, and, in agreement, voltage-clamp recordings revealed a
transient outward membrane current after photorelease of
IP3, the amplitude of which varied as the second
power of the associated Ca2+ signal. The
depression of spike activity after photorelease of IP3 persisted as long as 15 sec and considerably
outlasted the Ca2+ transient and
associated hyperpolarization directly evoked by the flash. The decrease
in membrane excitability cannot, therefore, be explained simply by a
sustained Ca2+ activation of
K+ conductance. Instead, its prolonged
time course may mirror the decline of cytosolic
[IP3], which enables CICR so that
Ca2+ entry during a spike is amplified and
thereby tends to inhibit subsequent spike firing.
Physiological roles of IP3-Ca2+
signaling in cortical pyramidal neurons
By using caged IP3, we were able to
precisely regulate the relative levels and timing of
IP3 concentration changes in cortical neurons and
thereby examine the specific effects of IP3
signaling while circumventing the contributions of upstream
second-messenger components that arise via activation of membrane
Gq-coupled receptors (Nakamura et al., 1999 ;
Yamamoto et al., 2002 ). Furthermore, Ca2+
responses evoked by photoreleased IP3 resembled
those induced by local application of the metabotropic glutamate
agonist 1S3R-ACPD, indicating that they mimic
physiological signals.
In contrast to the dendritic localization of IP3
signaling in cerebellar Purkinje cells, the soma appears to be the
dominant compartment for IP3-mediated
Ca2+ signaling in cortical pyramidal
neurons. Local somatic applications of metabotropic agonist demonstrate
a functional input via neurotransmitter receptors, and one important
output is the modulation of electrical excitability through
Ca2+-activated
K+ channels. Furthermore, the strong
IP3-evoked Ca2+
signals in perinuclear regions raise the possibility for activation of
transcription factors and immediate early genes.
Layer V pyramidal neurons serve as crucial integrators of neuronal
circuits involved in many cognitive executive functions (Goldman-Rakic,
1995 ; Birrell and Brown, 2000 ). The IP3-mediated depression of spiking patterns may directly affect output signals to
downstream effector regions. Phosphoinositide-linked inputs to the soma
and proximal dendrites of pyramidal neurons are thus likely to serve as
powerful and sustained modulators of excitability, acting in a complex,
use-dependent manner via reciprocal interactions between electrical and
chemical signals.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 23, 2003; revised Nov. 1, 2002; accepted Nov. 5, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants GM48071
(I.P.) and AG16573 (F.M.F.). G.E.S. is supported by National Institute
on Aging Training Grant AG00096. We thank Jonathon Marchant, Candace Y. Hsieh, and Raju Metherate for technical assistance and intellectual support.
Correspondence should be addressed to Grace E. Stutzmann at the above
address. E-mail: grace{at}uci.edu.
 |
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S.-I. Yamada, H. Takechi, I. Kanchiku, T. Kita, and N. Kato
Small-Conductance Ca2+-Dependent K+ Channels Are the Target of Spike-Induced Ca2+ Release in a Feedback Regulation of Pyramidal Cell Excitability
J Neurophysiol,
May 1, 2004;
91(5):
2322 - 2329.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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G. E. Stutzmann, A. Caccamo, F. M. LaFerla, and I. Parker
Dysregulated IP3 Signaling in Cortical Neurons of Knock-In Mice Expressing an Alzheimer's-Linked Mutation in Presenilin1 Results in Exaggerated Ca2+ Signals and Altered Membrane Excitability
J. Neurosci.,
January 14, 2004;
24(2):
508 - 513.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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