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The Journal of Neuroscience, February 15, 2003, 23(4):1142
Postsynaptic Application of a Peptide Inhibitor of cAMP-Dependent
Protein Kinase Blocks Expression of Long-Lasting Synaptic Potentiation
in Hippocampal Neurons
Steven N.
Duffy1, 3 and
Peter V.
Nguyen1, 2, 3
Departments of 1 Physiology and
2 Psychiatry, 3 Centre for
Neuroscience, University of Alberta School of Medicine, Edmonton,
Alberta, T6G 2H7, Canada
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ABSTRACT |
Multiple trains of high-frequency synaptic stimulation evoke
long-term potentiation (LTP) of synaptic transmission in hippocampal area CA1, which has been correlated with hippocampal long-term memory
and requires the activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). To
assess whether postsynaptic PKA is necessary for the expression
of LTP, we made prolonged whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings
from CA1 pyramidal neurons in mouse hippocampal slices during
postsynaptic infusion of cell-impermeant modulators of PKA. Repeated
stimulation (four 100 Hz trains at 5 min intervals) of the Schaffer
collateral pathway increased synaptically evoked EPSCs for up to
2 hr. The postsynaptic infusion of either a cell-permeant PKA inhibitor
(Rp-cAMPS) or a cell-impermeant PKA inhibitor (PKI6-22) did not alter post-tetanic peak potentiation, but it caused significant decay of EPSCs to pretetanization amplitudes within 1.5 hr. In contrast, postsynaptic infusion of PKI6-22 did not alter a
more modest, decaying form of LTP evoked by a single 100 Hz train.
Paired-pulse facilitation was unchanged during most of the
duration of LTP, suggesting that postsynaptic mechanisms, including PKA
activation, are involved in the expression of LTP induced by multitrain
stimulation. The postsynaptic infusion of a constitutively active
isoform of the PKA catalytic subunit (C ) into CA1 pyramidal neurons
increased EPSC sizes to elicit long-lasting synaptic facilitation.
Thus, mimicking the activation of PKA in postsynaptic CA1 pyramidal
neurons is sufficient for inducing persistent synaptic facilitation.
Activation of apostsynaptic PKA is necessary for the expression of LTP
in CA1 pyramidal neurons and is sufficient for initiating persistent
synaptic facilitation.
Key words:
synaptic plasticity; hippocampus; LTP; cAMP-dependent protein kinase; catalytic subunit; PKI; whole-cell
recording; postsynaptic; pyramidal neurons; protein kinases
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Introduction |
Protein kinases critically modulate
synaptic plasticity in the mammalian hippocampus (Malinow et al., 1989 ;
Nguyen and Kandel, 1996 ; Kameyama et al., 1998 ; Lee et al., 2000 ; for
review, see Meffert et al., 1991 ; Soderling and Derkach, 2000 ).
Hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) is an enhancement of synaptic
transmission that may be important for regulating neural information
storage (Bliss and Lømo, 1973 ; Bliss and Collingridge, 1993 ; Martin et al., 2000 ; Abraham et al., 2002 ). One particular protein kinase that is
critical for hippocampus-dependent long-term memory and for
long-lasting LTP in the Schaffer collateral pathway is
cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) (Frey et al., 1993 ; Abel et
al., 1997 ). Pharmacological and genetic inhibition of PKA blocks both
long-lasting LTP in area CA1 of hippocampal slices and the formation of
long-term memory (Frey et al., 1993 ; Huang and Kandel, 1994 ; Blitzer et al., 1995 ; Impey et al., 1996 ; Abel et al., 1997 ; Bernabeu et al.,
1997 ; Nguyen and Kandel, 1997 ; Otmakhova et al., 2000 ). PKA activation
by a cell-permeant cAMP agonist (Frey et al., 1993 ) or activation of
adenylate cyclase (AC) by a cell-permeant compound, forskolin (FSK)
(Chavez-Noriega and Stevens, 1992 ), elicits synaptic facilitation that
occludes LTP induced by tetanization (Frey et al., 1993 ; Huang and
Kandel, 1994 ).
PKA is activated after high-frequency stimulation that elicits synaptic
potentiation (Roberson and Sweatt, 1996 ), but the exact cellular locus
of PKA activation necessary for the expression of long-lasting LTP is
unclear. The postsynaptic injection of a cell-impermeant inhibitor of
either AC or PKA only slightly reduced the magnitude of LTP without
erasing it (Otmakhova et al., 2000 ). Because these recordings were
followed for only 40 min after tetanization (Otmakhova et al., 2000 ),
it remains unclear whether postsynaptic PKA is necessary and sufficient
for establishing long-lasting LTP (1-2 hr). The injection of Sp-cAMPS
(a cAMP agonist that activates PKA) into postsynaptic CA1 pyramidal
neurons elicits mild synaptic facilitation (Blitzer et al., 1995 ),
whereas postsynaptic injection of Rp-cAMPS, a PKA inhibitor, blocks
long-lasting LTP in the Schaffer collateral pathway (Blitzer et al.,
1995 ). However, both of these compounds are cell-permeant; thus, a
presynaptic site of action for PKA cannot be excluded in experiments
using an intracellular injection of these compounds. Indeed, Sp-cAMPS can recruit presynaptic release sites in hippocampal neurons
(Bolshakov et al., 1997 ; Carroll et al., 1998 ; Ma et al., 1999 ).
Also, Rp-cAMPS and some cAMP analogs may affect other postsynaptic
molecular targets in addition to PKA (Otmakhov and Lisman, 2002 ).
To date, no study has definitively identified postsynaptic CA1
pyramidal neurons as sites of PKA activation critical for long-lasting LTP (1-2 hr duration). In the present study, we asked the following question: Is activation of postsynaptic PKA necessary for establishing long-lasting LTP in CA1 pyramidal neurons? To address this question directly, we used whole-cell patch-clamp recording methods to apply a
cell-impermeant, highly specific inhibitor of PKA
(PKI6-22 amide), or a catalytic subunit of PKA
(to mimic PKA activation), into CA1 pyramidal neurons in mouse
hippocampal slices before the induction of LTP by electrical stimulation.
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Materials and Methods |
Slice preparation. Transverse hippocampal slices from
C57BL/6 mice (6-12 weeks of age; Charles River,
Montréal, Canada) were prepared as described previously
(Nguyen and Kandel, 1997 ); they were initially incubated in a
humidified interface chamber at 28°C. The slices were superfused (1.5 ml/min) with artificial CSF (ACSF) containing (in
mM): 124 NaCl, 5 KCl, 10 dextrose, 1.3 MgSO4, 2 CaCl2, 1 NaH2PO4, and 26 NaHCO3, pH 7.35. For whole-cell voltage-clamp
recordings, individual slices were transferred to a
temperature-controlled submerged chamber (Warner
Instruments , Hamden, CT) mounted on an upright microscope
(Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) and maintained at 28°C. All data
reported were acquired at 28°C; however, we have obtained
qualitatively similar results at 32°C (data not shown). Slices were
superfused with ACSF bubbled with a gaseous mixture of 95%
O2 plus 5% CO2, pH 7.4. The microscope was equipped with infrared differential interference
contrast optics for visualization of pyramidal neurons in the
stratum pyramidale layer of area CA1. Recordings were obtained from
cell bodies ~50-70 µm beneath the slice surface.
Whole-cell recording and stimulation. Patch pipettes
(resistance, 5-6 M ) were pulled from 1.5 mm thin-walled
borosilicate glass (World Precision Instruments, Sarasota,
FL) on a horizontal puller (model P-87; Sutter
Instruments, Novato, CA). The pipette solution contained (in
mM): 120 potassium gluconate, 25 HEPES, 10 NaCl,
5 MgCl2, 5 K-ATP, 0.3 Na-GTP, 0.2 EGTA, and 2 phosphocreatine, pH 7.35. The initial experiments were performed with
cesium-filled electrodes in an attempt to reduce space clamp errors; we
found that we could induce robust, long-lasting LTP with this cation (data not shown). However, because cesium increases the activity of
mouse PKA catalytic subunits by twofold (Vargas et al., 1999 ) and
elicits prolonged membrane depolarization immediately after tetanic
stimulation, we have not used cesium-filled electrodes for our present
experiments. The osmolarity of the electrode solution was balanced to
294-298 mOsm with 1 M potassium gluconate.
Pipettes were tip-filled with this solution and then back-filled with
this same solution plus 10 U/ml creatine phosphokinase and (in some cases) chemical regulators of the cAMP-PKA kinase pathway (see below).
A bipolar nickel-chromium stimulating electrode (diameter, 131 µm),
placed in the stratum radiatum, was used to evoke whole-cell EPSCs in
CA1 pyramidal neurons. The stimulation intensity was adjusted to evoke
EPSCs that were 40% of maximal evoked amplitudes ("test
intensity"). EPSCs were evoked at a stimulation rate of 0.033 Hz. For
clarity, our LTP graphs depict data points at 30 sec intervals and
SEs of the means at 2 min intervals. An Axopatch-1D voltage-clamp amplifier (Axon Instruments, Union City, CA)
controlled by pClamp-8 software (Axon Instruments) was
used to record evoked EPSCs. These were acquired at a holding potential
of 90 mV.
In control experiments, 5-10 min after membrane rupture,
"baseline" EPSCs were recorded for 20 min at a test stimulation
intensity that produced currents of 40% maximum. Long-lasting LTP
was induced by switching the amplifier to current-clamp mode and
delivering four 1 sec, 100 Hz trains at a 5 min intertrain interval
(Abel et al., 1997 ; Nguyen et al., 2000 ; Woo et al., 2000 ). In some experiments, only a single 1 sec, 100 Hz train was used to elicit a
more modest, decaying form of LTP (Huang and Kandel, 1994 ). For
experiments using PKA blockers, the delay between patch rupture and
baseline recording was 10-15 min, to allow 30-35 min of intracellular drug infusion. The recording period for experiments using PKA catalytic
subunit (C ) began right after patch rupture (1-3 min). In each
protocol, individual baseline EPSC amplitudes were normalized against
the mean of the baseline EPSC amplitudes. LTP was plotted as the
percentage increase in EPSC amplitude relative to this average
pretetanization EPSC amplitude (% initial in all figures).
Control LTP experiments (no PKA modulators in the patch pipette) were
rejected if the post-tetanization increase in the EPSC amplitude
decayed to pretetanization values within 15 min. These LTP failures
constituted 18% of the total cells stimulated with the multiburst LTP
induction protocol. Potentiated EPSCs were recorded for 2 hr after
tetanization or until voltage-clamp fidelity was lost by electrode
clogging, membrane resealing, or loss of tight seals. The initial
holding current (Ihold) varied from
cell to cell ( 150 to 300 pA; the holding potential was 90 mV in these experiments) and was monitored continuously during recording to
detect electrode blockage, membrane resealing, or loss of tight seals.
Series and input resistances were assessed every 5 min by measuring the
steady-state currents in response to 5 mV, 50 msec hyperpolarizing
steps. An initial series resistance of 11-15 M was deemed
acceptable to begin baseline data acquisition; no electronic series
resistance compensation was used. For this reason, we terminated
experiments that showed a rise or fall in series resistance >15% of
the value observed during baseline acquisition.
For cells in which the PKA inhibitors Rp-cAMPS and
PKI6-22 were included in the patch pipette, data
were rejected by the same criterion. However, the rate of LTP failures
was not markedly different from controls (4 of 29 cells), so an
increase in failures cannot account for the data presented. For these
figures, only cells held for at least 1 hr were included, and all
showed a slow return of EPSC amplitude to the pretetanic
baseline. In experiments using the catalytic subunit C , a slow rise
in holding current was always observed that ceased within 10-20 min.
Drugs. The non-NMDA glutamate receptor antagonist
6,7-dinitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (DNQX; Sigma, St. Louis,
MO) was added to a final concentration of 20 µM
from 200 mM stocks in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO;
Sigma). The NMDA receptor antagonist
2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (APV; Sigma) and the
GABAA antagonist bicuculline methiodide (Sigma) were added to superfusate from 50 mM aqueous stocks to final concentrations of 50 and 10 µM, respectively. The AC activator FSK
(Sigma) was added to ACSF from a 50 or 100 mM stock in DMSO together with the cyclic
nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitor 3-isobutyl-1-methyl-xanthine
(IBMX; Sigma) from a freshly prepared 10 mM stock in water. PKA inhibitors Rp-cAMPS
(Sigma) and PKI6-22 (6-22 amide;
Biomol, Plymouth Meeting, PA) (Glass et al., 1989 ; Dostmann, 1995 ) were added from concentrated aqueous stock solutions to
the pipette solution for final concentrations of 50 and 20 µM, respectively.
PKI6-22 was kept frozen in small aliquots at
20°C before use, and the pipette solution with
PKI6-22 was back-filled into patch pipettes. To
inactivate the inhibitory peptide PKI6-22, we
pretreated 20 mM stocks with 300 µM trypsin for 12 hr and then heated the
mixture to 95°C in sealed tubes for 2 hr. The PKA catalytic subunit
C (Sigma) was first dissolved at 500 U/ml in ice-cold
distilled water with 3 mg/ml dithiothreitol and stored at 4°C in
accordance with the manufacturer's instructions. No loss of activity,
as indicated by a rise in EPSC amplitude after patch rupture, was noted
over 2-3 weeks. The C stock solution was then diluted in an
ice-cold pipette solution to a final concentration of 5 U/ml before
back-filling the patch pipettes. Inactivated catalytic subunit was
prepared by heating aliquots to 90°C for 90 min (Castellucci et al.,
1980 ). In some paired-pulse facilitation (PPF) recordings,
cyclothiazide (CTZ; Sigma), an inhibitor of AMPA receptor
inactivation (Colquhoun et al., 1992 ; Trussell et al., 1993 ), was added
to ACSF from a 100 mM stock in methanol (50 µM final concentration). The matching control
experiments were performed in 0.02% methanol. PPF was elicited by the
delivery of twin stimulus pulses spaced 100 msec apart.
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis for paired data
sets (control LTP vs LTP in the presence of postsynaptic PKA
modulators) used Student's t test. To compare multiple data
sets, we used two-way ANOVA and a subsequent post hoc
Tukey-Kramer test.
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Results |
Evaluation of glutamatergic and GABAergic contributions to
postsynaptic currents evoked by Schaffer collateral
stimulation
Stimulation of the CA1 Schaffer collateral pathway with multiple
trains of 100 Hz (spaced 5-10 min apart) induces long-lasting LTP that
requires activation of the cAMP-PKA pathway for its full expression
and persistence (Huang and Kandel, 1994 ; Blitzer et al., 1995 ; Impey et
al., 1996 ; Abel et al., 1997 ; Wong et al., 1999 ; Nguyen et al., 2000 ;
Otmakhova et al., 2000 ; Woo et al., 2000 , 2002 , 2003 ). There is genetic
and pharmacological evidence that this spaced stimulation protocol
preferentially engages PKA-dependent, long-lasting LTP in area CA1 (Woo
et al., 2003 ), and that hippocampal long-term memory in mice is
strongly correlated with this type of LTP in area CA1 (Abel et al.,
1997 ). The PKA dependence of LTP has been studied almost exclusively by
measuring extracellular field potentials under conditions that
preserve the electrophysiological properties of CA3 and CA1 neurons. In
this study, we used whole-cell patch clamping and intracellular
perfusion of various PKA modulators to examine the role of postsynaptic
PKA in long-lasting LTP of glutamatergic transmission. Because the
induction of PKA depends on the temporal pattern of presynaptic
activity and postsynaptic depolarization, we sought to preserve
physiological conditions by using multiple bursts of 100 Hz stimulation
in the absence of GABA receptor antagonists, with
K+ as the dominant intracellular cation.
Indeed, we found that the blockade of
GABAA-mediated inhibition with the antagonist
bicuculline (10 µM) greatly potentiated the peak
magnitude of the postsynaptic depolarization evoked by 100 Hz
stimulation (46 ± 5 mV, n = 4 cells in
bicuculline; 22 ± 3 mV, n = 5 cells under control
conditions) (Fig. 1A).
This result underscores the importance of intact inhibition in reducing
the postsynaptic response to LTP-inducing presynaptic stimulation.

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Figure 1.
GABAA currents reduce the
depolarization in CA1 neurons resulting from high-frequency (100 Hz)
stimulation of the Schaffer collaterals, but whole-cell currents in
response to low-frequency test stimulation are mediated primarily by
glutamate receptors. A, Extracellular bicuculline
greatly amplified the postsynaptic depolarization measured under
current clamp in response to 100 Hz synaptic stimulation, indicating
that GABAA activity reduces the depolarization that induces
LTP. B, Postsynaptic currents evoked by low-frequency
test stimulation were reduced by 81% after the application of the
glutamate receptor antagonist DNQX. The NMDA antagonist APV and the
GABAA antagonist bicuculline (Bic.) blocked
the remaining current. The GABAA-mediated IPSC comprises
only a small fraction (15%) of the total current. C,
Postsynaptic currents evoked by test stimulation after LTP induction (4 trains of 1 sec and 100 Hz separated by 5 min) were almost completely
blocked by the glutamatergic antagonist DNQX and APV (average, 89%),
whereas the remaining current was blocked by bicuculline.
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To determine whether GABAergic IPSCs contaminate EPSCs, we measured
evoked currents in the presence of glutamate and GABA receptor
antagonists (Fig. 1B,C). Application of the non-NMDA glutamate receptor antagonist DNQX (20 µM)
reduced the amplitude of the inward current by >80%, and
coapplication of DNQX and the NMDA receptor antagonist APV (50 µM) reduced currents by 85%. The remaining
current was blocked by the GABAA receptor
antagonist bicuculline (average of five cells) (Fig.
1B). Ten minutes after the last of four trains used
to induce LTP (1 sec, 100 Hz, 5 min apart), this
GABAA component was only 11 ± 4% of the
peak (average from four cells; sample recording shown in Fig.
1C). Thus, the underlying IPSCs made only a small
contribution to the peak current and did not confound interpretation of
the results presented in the following sections. In subsequent figures,
evoked currents are referred to as EPSCs.
Repeated stimulation elicits LTP of EPSCs that is attenuated
by a membrane-permeant inhibitor of PKA
The cellular locus of PKA activation critical for the expression
of long-lasting LTP remains unidentified. As an initial step toward
this end, we first tested the effects of postsynaptic application of a
widely used cell-permeant inhibitor of PKA, Rp-cAMPS (Dostmann, 1995 ).
Previous studies have shown that Rp-cAMPS inhibits the expression of
long-lasting LTP in area CA1 when it is either bath-applied (Frey et
al., 1993 ; Blitzer et al., 1995 ; Woo et al., 2000 ) or injected into
postsynaptic CA1 pyramidal neurons (Blitzer et al., 1995 ; Otmakhov and
Lisman, 2002 ). We found that four 100 Hz trains, separated by 5 min
(4 × 100 Hz in all figures), evoked a large, nondecaying
potentiation of EPSC amplitudes (Fig. 2,
circles). When Rp-cAMPS (50 µM) was
included in the patch pipette, LTP decayed to near the pretetanization
baseline in every cell held for at least 1.5 hr (Fig. 2,
triangles). At 1.5 hr after the last 100 Hz train, mean EPSC
sizes were as follows: controls, 200 ± 17%, n = 10 cells; Rp-cAMPS, 119 ± 16%, n = 7 cells
(p < 0.01). Postsynaptic infusion of Rp-cAMPS
did not reduce baseline EPSC amplitudes (Fig. 2, squares)
(n = 5) or the initial magnitude of the potentiation (Fig. 2, triangle at 35 min). Mean EPSC sizes measured
immediately after the last 100 Hz train were as follows: controls,
212 ± 18%; Rp-cAMPS, 218 ± 32% (p > 0.1). Thus, Rp-cAMPS inhibits the expression of long-lasting LTP
without significantly altering the magnitude of initial potentiation in
CA1 pyramidal neurons. For cells treated with Rp-cAMPS, the
Ihold during the first 110 min after
the fourth 100 Hz train was 110 ± 3% (147 measurements in
n = 7 cells) of pretetanization baseline values
(p < 0.05). This small but statistically significant increase in Ihold
by Rp-cAMPS is consistent with similar effects reported by Otmakhov and
Lisman (2002) . In contrast, Rp-cAMPS did not significantly alter input
resistance: treated cells had a mean input resistance during the first
110 min after tetanization that was 108 ± 7% (147 measurements
in n = 7 cells) of pretetanization baseline values
(p > 0.2). The series resistance also did not change significantly in drug-treated cells during the post-tetanization period: the mean value in treated cells was 102 ± 1% (147 measurements in n = 7 cells) of pretetanization
baseline values (p > 0.2).

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Figure 2.
Postsynaptic application of a cell-permeant PKA
inhibitor blocks the expression of long-lasting LTP. Four 100 Hz trains
5 min apart evoked potentiation of EPSCs in CA1 pyramidal neurons
(circles). Inclusion of a PKA inhibitor, Rp-cAMPS, in
the patch pipette caused EPSCs to decay to pretetanization amplitudes
within 2 hr after tetanization (triangles). The
postsynaptic application of Rp-cAMPS had no significant effect on EPSC
amplitudes evoked at test stimulus strength (0.033 Hz;
squares). Sample paired EPSC traces from two experiments
(top) were measured 20 min before and 1.5 hr after the
final 100 Hz train. Rp-cAMPS was applied for the duration of these
experiments.
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These results show that stable LTP, lasting for >100 min and elicited
by repeated high-frequency tetanization of the Schaffer collateral
pathway, can be recorded in the whole-cell configuration in mouse
hippocampal slices, and that a cell-permeant PKA inhibitor blocks
expression of persistent LTP when it is perfused into postsynaptic CA1
pyramidal neurons (Blitzer et al., 1995 ).
Activation of postsynaptic PKA is necessary for long-lasting LTP in
area CA1
Because Rp-cAMPS is cell-permeant, leakage of this drug out of the
postsynaptic cell can affect presynaptic and glial PKA activity. Also,
there is evidence that the inhibitory effect of Rp-cAMPS on LTP
expression in hippocampal slices may occur through its actions on
molecular targets that are independent of PKA (Otmakhov and Lisman,
2002 ). Thus, definitive identification of the cellular locus of PKA
activation that is critical for the expression of long-lasting LTP
requires the use of a cell-impermeant, highly specific inhibitor of PKA.
To determine whether the activation of postsynaptic PKA is necessary
for the expression of long-lasting LTP, we infused
PKI6-22, a cell-impermeant and highly specific
inhibitory peptide that binds to catalytic subunits of PKA (Glass et
al., 1989 ), into CA1 pyramidal cells (Fig.
3A,B). We found that in all
experiments that included 20 µM
PKI6-22 in the pipette and that were maintained
for at least 1.5 hr after tetanic stimulation, the LTP evoked by four
100 Hz trains decayed to near pretetanization baseline levels
(mean EPSC sizes at 1.5 hr: controls, 208 ± 18%, n = 7; PKI6-22, 105 ± 15%, n = 6; p < 0.01).
PKI6-22 did not affect LTP when it was
pretreated with trypsin, a protease that cleaves the peptide (Fig.
3C). Mean EPSC sizes measured 40 min after tetanization were
as follows: controls, 198 ± 16%; intact PKI6-22, 154 ± 13%; digested
PKI6-22, 231 ± 21% (n = 7; p > 0.05 for comparison between digested PKI and
controls). Intact PKI6-22 did not significantly
alter EPSCs in cells that were not tetanized (Fig. 3B,
squares) (n = 6; p > 0.1).
It also did not significantly alter
Ihold, input resistance, or series resistance during the first 100 min after tetanization (means: Ihold, 104 ± 26%; input
resistance, 107 ± 8%; series resistance, 104 ± 5% of
pretetanization values; p > 0.1 for all parameters; 120 measurements for each parameter from n = 6 cells
treated with intact PKI6-22). Finally, the
incidence of LTP failures (LTP not lasting 15 min after tetanus; see
Materials and Methods) that were excluded from the data pool was not
markedly different for either Rp-cAMPS or
PKI6-22 (4 of 29 recordings, or 14%, with
inhibitors; 18% for controls). Therefore, the reduced stability of
long-lasting LTP in the presence of PKA inhibitors represents a
disruption of LTP maintenance rather than reduced induction probability. These data provide definitive evidence for a critical requirement for activation of postsynaptic PKA in the expression of
stable LTP of excitatory synaptic transmission lasting for up to 100 min in CA1 pyramidal neurons.

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Figure 3.
Expression of long-lasting LTP is impaired by the
postsynaptic application of a cell-impermeant inhibitory peptide of
PKA, PKI6-22 (20 µM). A, Plot
of LTP data from two cells, recorded in the absence
(circles) and presence (triangles) of
postsynaptically applied PKI6-22. B,
Averaged data from all experiments. In the presence of postsynaptic
PKI6-22, EPSC amplitudes after tetanization decayed to
pretetanization values within 100 min after tetanization
(triangles). Postsynaptic PKI6-22 did not
significantly affect EPSCs evoked at 0.033 Hz, elicited at test
stimulus strength (squares). C, Digestion
of PKI6-22 with trypsin blocked its inhibition of
long-lasting LTP. The average EPSC amplitude measured 40 min after
tetanization in the presence of intact PKI6-22 was
significantly smaller than that measured with digested
PKI6-22 (*p < 0.05; post
hoc Tukey-Kramer test).
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The requirement for activation of postsynaptic PKA is
activity dependent
Studies with cell-permeant inhibitors of PKA have suggested that
PKA activation is necessary for the expression of long-lasting forms of
LTP induced by multitrain stimulus protocols (Frey et al., 1993 ; Huang
and Kandel, 1994 ; Woo et al., 2000 ), whereas a more rapidly decaying
form of LTP, elicited by a single 100 Hz train ("single-train
LTP"), is believed to be less dependent on PKA (Huang and Kandel,
1994 ; Blitzer et al., 1995 ; Otmakhova et al., 2000 ; Duffy et al.,
2001 ). It is unclear whether the dependence of LTP on activation of
postsynaptic PKA is activity dependent. Indeed, Blitzer et al. (1995)
have shown that postsynaptic injection of Rp-cAMPS did not affect
single-train LTP. However, as stated above, Rp-cAMPS is cell-permeant,
and it may affect other cellular loci and processes independent of
postsynaptic PKA (Otmakhov and Lisman, 2002 ). Therefore, like our
experiments on multitrain LTP, we used the highly specific and
cell-impermeant PKA inhibitor PKI6-22 to test
the hypothesis that the activation of postsynaptic PKA is not needed
for the expression of single-train LTP.
In support of this idea, we found that infusion of
PKI6-22 did not reduce LTP induced by a single
100 Hz train. There was no significant difference between mean EPSC
sizes measured in control and PKI-treated cells: 1 hr after
tetanization, the mean EPSC amplitude in control cells was 114 ± 12% (n = 5), whereas the mean EPSC size in cells
injected with PKI was 121 ± 16% (n = 6;
p > 0.1). Moreover, no significant effects on
potentiation immediately after tetanization were seen (data not shown).
Thus, the dependence of LTP on postsynaptic PKA is activity dependent. Our data are consistent with previous studies showing a relative insensitivity of single-train LTP to inhibitors of PKA (Huang and
Kandel, 1994 ; Blitzer et al., 1995 ; Otmakhova et al., 2000 ; Duffy et
al., 2001 ); they provide definitive evidence that activation of
postsynaptic PKA differentially regulates the expression of two key
forms of LTP in an activity-dependent manner.
PPF is reduced only during the first 5 min of long-lasting LTP
It is unclear whether enhanced presynaptic transmitter release
contributes to long-lasting LTP induced by multiple trains of 100 Hz
stimulation. It is possible that enhanced presynaptic transmitter
release may be evident for only a limited time after repeated
tetanization. There is evidence that the induction of a long-lasting
LTP by chemical activation of the cAMP-PKA pathway is associated with
an increase in the probability of transmitter release and an
enhancement of the number of active presynaptic terminals (Bolshakov et
al., 1997 ; Ma et al., 1999 ; Sokolov et al., 2002 ). However, these
studies did not address the question of whether alterations in the
probability of presynaptic transmitter release contribute to
PKA-dependent, tetanus-induced LTP.
To address this issue, we examined PPF after the induction of
multitrain LTP. PPF is an increase in the amplitude of the second of
two EPSCs evoked by closely spaced stimuli; it is believed to result
from an increase in presynaptic transmitter release (Zucker, 1999 )
[for PPF data during LTP, see Zalutsky and Nicoll (1990) , Christie and
Abraham (1994) , Kuhnt and Voronin (1994) , Schulz et al. (1994) , and
Weisskopf et al. (1994) ]. PPF should decrease if the probability of
presynaptic transmitter release increases. We observed that PPF was
significantly reduced during the first 5 min after repeated 100 Hz
stimulation (Fig.
4A,B), suggesting that
presynaptic transmitter release increased during this period. However,
PPF returned to pretetanization ratios thereafter (Fig.
4A,B). The mean ratios of paired EPSC sizes measured
at 0-5, 5-10, and 10-15 min after tetanization were 49 ± 10%
(n = 11 cells; 10 paired-pulse measurements per cell),
83 ± 10% (n = 10 cells), and 89 ± 8%
(n = 10 cells), respectively, of mean pretetanization
ratios (Fig. 4A) (p < 0.05 for the 0-5 min time bin only). At time points after 5 min
post-tetanization, no significant differences were observed between
mean PPF ratios measured before and after tetanization (Fig.
4A) (n = 7 cells per point;
p > 0.1).

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Figure 4.
PPF is transiently depressed immediately after
tetanization. A, Measurements of PPF before and
after tetanization (4 × 100 Hz, 5 min between trains). PPF is
transiently depressed during the first 5-10 min after tetanization but
recovered to pretetanization amplitudes within 15 min after
tetanization. The dotted line indicates the level of PPF
before tetanization. B, Sample EPSC traces from one cell
showing PPF before (a) and 30 min after
(b) induction of multitrain LTP.
C, Comparison of post-tetanization PPF in the presence
of bath-applied CTZ or vehicle (0.05% methanol). CTZ had no
significant effect on PPF after repeated tetanization, compared with
controls treated with vehicle (p > 0.05).
|
|
These findings suggest that the enhanced probability of presynaptic
transmitter release contributes to the first 5 min of long-lasting LTP
induced by multitrain stimulation, and that the maintained potentiation
of EPSCs seen thereafter may result from postsynaptic mechanisms. The
time course of decay of LTP seen after the postsynaptic infusion of
PKI6-22 (Fig. 3) supports the latter hypothesis:
The potentiation started to decay ~3-8 min after tetanization in the
presence of postsynaptically infused PKI6-22.
It is possible that PPF may be reduced during LTP because of an
increase in postsynaptic AMPA receptor desensitization, with little or
no increase in the probability of presynaptic transmitter release
(Colquhoun et al., 1992 ; Arai and Lynch, 1996 ). To address this
hypothesis, we examined PPF in the presence of 50 µM CTZ, an inhibitor of AMPA receptor desensitization (Trussell et al., 1993 ).
In the presence of CTZ, the PPF seen within the first 5 min after
tetanization (n = 6) was not significantly different from PPF in drug-free vehicle (n = 8) (Fig.
4C, striped and graybars at 0-5 min)
(p > 0.1), suggesting that the post-tetanic
reduction in PPF did not result from the desensitization of
postsynaptic AMPA receptors. In the presence of CTZ, PPF at 0-5 min
after tetanization was still significantly less than pretetanic
PPF in CTZ (61 ± 4%; n = 6; p < 0.05) (Fig. 4C, stripedbar at 0-5 min). In
contrast, PPF measured in CTZ 15-20 min after tetanization
(112 ± 15%; n = 4) was not significantly
different from either pretetanic PPF in CTZ (Fig. 4C,
15-20 min, stripedbar) (p > 0.1) or
PPF measured at 15-20 min after tetanization in drug-free
vehicle (92 ± 10%; n = 5; p > 0.1) (Fig. 4C, graybar). Thus, AMPA receptor
desensitization does not significantly contribute to the depression of
PPF seen during the first 5 min of long-lasting LTP induced by
multitrain stimulation.
Maintenance of synaptic facilitation evoked by FSK is attenuated
by PKI6-22
The results presented above indicate that postsynaptic PKA
activation is necessary for the maintenance of long-lasting LTP. Coapplication of the adenylyl cyclase activator FSK and the cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitor IBMX can occlude long-lasting LTP evoked by subsequent tetanic stimulation (Frey et al., 1993 ; Huang
and Kandel, 1994 ), suggesting that PKA activation is both necessary and
sufficient to induce long-lasting LTP. However, the extracellular
application of FSK and IBMX could activate PKA both presynaptically and
postsynaptically, and FSK has been shown to enhance non-NMDA
receptor-mediated currents in cultured hippocampal neurons (Greengard
et al., 1991 ; Wang et al., 1991 ). To determine the locus of the FSK
response, we compared the response of evoked EPSCs to FSK and IBMX
coapplication in the presence or absence of intracellular postsynaptic
PKI6-22.
In control neurons, the application of FSK and IBMX evoked a large
increase in the EPSC that was maintained after washout of the drugs
(Fig. 5A, circles)
(n = 5 cells). In CA1 neurons in which
PKI6-22 was infused for 30-35 min before the
application of FSK/IBMX, the initial rise in EPSC amplitude was
unaffected, whereas its persistence was significantly attenuated
(n = 4 cells). In agreement with previous studies
(Bolshakov et al., 1997 ; Carroll et al., 1998 ), this result suggests
that FSK increases the EPSC amplitude by activating predominantly, but
not exclusively, postsynaptic PKA [see Woo et al. (2002) for Rp-cAMPS
block of FSK-induced facilitation].

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|
Figure 5.
Activation of PKA in postsynaptic CA1 pyramidal
neurons is sufficient to elicit persistent synaptic facilitation.
A, Infusion of PKI6-22 into the
postsynaptic CA1 pyramidal neuron attenuates persistence of the
increase in evoked EPSCs induced by bath application of FSK and IBMX.
Under control conditions, FSK and IBMX caused a rapid increase in EPSC
amplitude that was maintained after drug washout. The infusion of
PKI6-22 had no effect on the early increase, but it
attenuated persistence of the facilitation of EPSCs. B,
Postsynaptic application of constitutively active PKA catalytic
subunits (C ) caused a rapid increase in the amplitude of EPSCs
(circles) that was not seen in the presence of 20 µM DNQX and 50 µM APV
(squares), indicating that C augmented the EPSC and
not the smaller underlying IPSC. Heat-denatured C had no significant
effect on EPSC amplitudes (diamonds). The facilitation
was independent of the strength of the test stimulation used to elicit
EPSCs that were 20 or 40% of maximum evoked amplitudes
(circles, triangles). The first point on
the graph was measured 1 min after break-in, and the first four EPSCs
measured thereafter were used as baseline control amplitudes. This was
necessitated by the rapidity of onset of EPSC facilitation seen after
break-in with pipettes containing active catalytic subunits. Each pair
of sample EPSC traces was measured at 2 and 24 min. The last two pairs
of traces share the same calibration bars: 200 pA, 20 msec.
|
|
Postsynaptic application of the catalytic subunit of PKA induces
facilitation of EPSCs
We have shown that postsynaptic infusion of a cell-impermeant PKA
inhibitor blocks the expression of long-lasting LTP. It is unclear
whether postsynaptic protein phosphorylation mediated by PKA alone is
sufficient for eliciting long-lasting synaptic facilitation. One way to
mimic PKA phosphorylation is to infuse catalytic subunits of PKA into
neurons (Castellucci et al., 1980 ). We observed that infusion of
constitutively active PKA catalytic subunits (type C ) into CA1
pyramidal neurons evoked a large and sustained increase in EPSC sizes
(Fig. 5B, circles) (n = 9) but had no effect on the IPSC seen in the presence of DNQX and APV (Fig.
5B, squares) (mean IPSC size, 100 ± 17%;
n = 7). Thus, postsynaptic perfusion of C
specifically augments the glutamatergic EPSC. In contrast,
significantly less enhancement of EPSCs was observed with
heat-denatured catalytic subunits (135 ± 24%; n = 9; p < 0.01), indicating that catalytic activity is
required for augmentation of the EPSCs (Fig. 5B,
diamonds). Moreover, the facilitation was not affected by
the strength of the test stimulation. With intact subunits, the mean
EPSC size measured 24 min after whole-cell break-in was 344 ± 52% (n = 9) using a stimulus strength that evoked
EPSCs that were 40% of maximum amplitudes. With evoked EPSCs that were
20% of maximum sizes, the mean size measured 24 min after break-in
with active catalytic subunits was 353 ± 17% (n = 8; p > 0.1). Moreover, the facilitations induced by
active catalytic subunits using both stimulus strengths were persistent (for 40% maximum amplitudes: 326 ± 55%, n = 9;
for 20% maximum amplitudes: 299 ± 22%, n = 5;
both measured at 45 min; data not shown). For both intact and denatured
catalytic subunits, no significant changes in
Ihold, input resistance, and series
resistance were seen during the first 20 min after whole-cell break-in
(mean values, 131 ± 29, 129 ± 32, and 105 ± 12%,
respectively, of mean preinfusion values; n = 9 cells;
20 measurements for each parameter).
Our collective data show that the activation of postsynaptic PKA in CA1
pyramidal neurons is necessary for maintaining long-lasting LTP, and
that it is sufficient for initiating persistent synaptic facilitation.
 |
Discussion |
Identifying the cellular locus of action of particular protein
kinases is an important step toward elucidating the molecular mechanisms of synaptic plasticity. Acute intracellular application of
cell-impermeant, highly specific modifiers of PKA has been used
successfully in other preparations to directly implicate protein
kinases in modulating synaptic plasticity. In Aplysia, injection of PKI into sensory neurons innervating the gill blocked presynaptic facilitation induced by serotonin (Castellucci et al.,
1982 ), whereas the injection of PKA catalytic subunits into the same
neurons simulated presynaptic facilitation (Castellucci et al., 1980 ).
In crayfish, injection of PKI into motoneurons blocked the late phase
of long-term facilitation of neuromuscular transmission induced by
tetanic stimulation (Dixon and Atwood, 1989 ). In rodent hippocampal
slices, injection of peptide inhibitors of PKC and
calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) into
postsynaptic CA1 pyramidal neurons blocked the induction of LTP
(Malinow et al., 1989 ). Postsynaptic injection of PKI also depressed
synaptic transmission and occluded the induction of long-term
depression (LTD) in CA1 pyramidal cells (Kameyama et al., 1998 ).
Ours is the first study to show that postsynaptic PKA is necessary for
the expression of a form of long-lasting LTP that appears to resemble a
late phase of LTP characterized previously by Kandel and colleagues
(for review, see Huang et al., 1996 ; Kandel, 2001 ). Our low success
rate in obtaining temporally extended whole-cell recordings in mouse
hippocampal slices (on the time scale of 90-150 min) is explained by a
number of serendipitous factors, including the obstruction of recording
pipettes and presumed electrode drift. Initially, we tried perforated
patch recording using nystatin, but we did not have significant success
with this technique, because electrode occlusion by nystatin often
occurred well before the planned end points of our recording sessions.
Wang et al. (1991) have shown that ATP-regenerating pipette solutions
are critical for maintaining robust whole-cell kainate-AMPA currents
in hippocampal neurons. Our electrode solution contained, in addition
to ATP and GTP, phosphocreatine and creatine phosphokinase, agents that were probably critical for recording over periods of 90-150 min. Indeed, we did not observe decreased baseline EPSC amplitudes when PKI
was infused postsynaptically, unlike in a previous study by Kameyama et
al. (1998) . In this latter study, the rundown of EPSPs was proposed to
result from the dephosphorylation of AMPA receptors (Rosenmund et al.,
1994 ). The sharp electrodes used by Kameyama et al. (1998) did not
contain ATP-regenerating agents. In our present study, we could
frequently maintain recordings for 60-80 min and, much less
frequently, for 90-150 min. Thus, despite our very low success rate
(12%) in whole-cell recording of EPSCs for 90-150 min, such
recordings are possible under certain conditions.
The blockade of PKA using PKI6-22 has been shown
to attenuate, but not block, LTP evoked by a stimulation protocol
consisting of only 40 pulses (Otmakhova et al., 2000 ). The
PKI6-22 concentration used in that study was
significantly higher than that used in our present experiments (2 mM vs 20 µM). The high potency of PKA
inhibition by PKI6-22
(Ki = 1.7 nM)
(Glass et al., 1989 ) suggests that, in both studies, there should be substantial inhibition of PKA activity in injected cells. Measuring PKA
activity in single cells is difficult, but PKI has been shown to
inhibit basal and cAMP-evoked PKA activity in mouse hippocampal slice
extracts by >90% (Abel et al., 1997 ). Our data reveal that a
relatively low concentration of PKI6-22 in the
pipette solution (20 µM) is sufficient for
assessing the necessity for postsynaptic PKA activation in long-lasting
LTP. It is noteworthy that Kameyama et al. (1998) also used 20 µM PKI6-22 to occlude LTD induction in postsynaptic CA1 neurons in slices. Diffusion of
PKI6-22 to the apical dendrites of pyramidal
cells has been estimated to take ~40 min or longer (Otmakhova et al.,
2000 ). This factor was considered in our experiments: our recording
period before the end of tetanization was 35 min in duration for the PKI6-22 experiments. Although the effective
concentration of applied PKI6-22 at synaptic
sites is unknown, it is clear that it is not necessary to use
millimolar pipette concentrations of PKI6-22 to
achieve inhibition of some types of synaptic modifications in
hippocampal neurons.
Single-train LTP was not blocked by postsynaptic application of
PKI6-22, whereas long-lasting LTP was impaired by the postsynaptic application of PKI6-22. This suggests
that activation of postsynaptic PKA is sensitive to the amount of
imposed stimulation. These findings are consistent with previous
studies that have shown selective impairment of multitrain LTP (but not
of single-train LTP) by pharmacological and genetic inhibition of PKA
(Frey et al., 1993 ; Matthies and Reymann, 1993 ; Huang and Kandel, 1994 ; Blitzer et al., 1995 ; Impey et al., 1996 ; Abel et al., 1997 ). In these
studies, the blockade of PKA by cell-permeant inhibitors, or genetic
inhibition of PKA in hippocampal neurons, did not permit definitive
identification of the critical cellular locus of PKA activation. Our
present findings with PKI6-22 suggest that the
critical site of PKA activation in these previous studies may likely be
the pyramidal cells of CA1. Also, Woo et al. (2003) have shown, by
using field recordings in combination with genetic and pharmacological
manipulations of PKA, that multitrain spaced stimulation (identical to
that used here) preferentially elicits PKA-dependent forms of
long-lasting LTP in mouse hippocampal slices. Thus, from a broader
perspective, the present data consolidate the idea that the engagement
of protein kinase-dependent forms of synaptic plasticity is sensitive
to specific amounts of synaptic stimulation.
Our data also underscore possible mechanistic differences between
chemically induced and tetanus-induced forms of hippocampal synaptic
potentiation. The pharmacological activation of PKA by FSK or by cAMP
analogs increases presynaptic transmitter release (Chavez-Noriega and
Stevens, 1992 ; Carroll et al., 1998 ). cAMP analogs that activate PKA,
such as Sp-cAMPS, can induce long-lasting LTP that correlates with the
recruitment of previously silent release sites in presynaptic terminals
of cultured hippocampal neurons (Bolshakov et al., 1997 ; Ma et al.,
1999 ; Bozdagi et al., 2000 ; Zakharenko et al., 2001 ). Also, chemical
activation of the cAMP-PKA pathway can directly modulate transmitter
secretion in a calcium-independent manner in hippocampal presynaptic
terminals (Trudeau et al., 1996 ). In the present study, we have
examined only tetanus-induced LTP and found that PPF was significantly depressed only during the first 5 min after tetanization. This suggests
that increased probability of transmitter release only briefly
contributes to the induction of long-lasting LTP induced by repeated
tetanization. This is consistent with published data supporting
postsynaptic mechanisms for LTP induction in CA1 (Malinow et al., 1989 ;
Wu and Saggau, 1994 ; for review, see Malenka and Nicoll, 1999 ). Our
data do not rule out presynaptic contributions to the expression of
tetanus-induced LTP at later time points after tetanization. For
example, the development of new boutons (Ma et al., 1999 ) could
increase total glutamate release without affecting PPF, and quantal
analysis of EPSPs has suggested some presynaptic contribution for late
LTP (Sokolov et al., 2002 ). In other hippocampal pathways, such as the
mossy fiber-CA3 pathway, tetanus-induced LTP is cAMP dependent and
appears to require presynaptic mechanisms (Weisskopf et al., 1994 ).
However, there is evidence to support a postsynaptic locus of
expression for PKA-dependent LTP induced by tetanization. Long-lasting
LTP, induced by a stimulation regimen similar to ours, was blocked when
apical dendrites were severed from the cell bodies of CA1 pyramidal
neurons in slices (Frey et al., 1989 ). Because LTP induced by this
multitrain stimulation regimen is PKA dependent (Frey et al., 1993 ;
Matthies and Reymann, 1993 ) and also requires the PKA-dependent
synthesis of postsynaptic AMPA receptors for its expression (Nayak et
al., 1998 ), these considerations support our hypothesis that
postsynaptic mechanisms, including the activation of postsynaptic PKA,
are critical for the expression of long-lasting, tetanus-induced LTP.
Which postsynaptic targets are phosphorylated by PKA and required for
long-lasting LTP? The list of potential candidates is long, but
PKA-mediated phosphorylation of glutamatergic receptor subunit 1 (GluR1) at serine-845 is important for the bidirectional regulation of
hippocampal synaptic plasticity (Banke et al., 2000 ; Lee et al., 2000 )
[for GluR4 data, see Carvalho et al. (1999) ], and PKA activators can
increase EPSC amplitudes by promoting PKA-mediated phosphorylation of
AMPA receptors (Wang et al., 1991 ). NMDA receptor-mediated currents are
also increased by PKA-mediated phosphorylation (Raman et al., 1996 ;
Leonard and Hell, 1997 ). PKA-mediated phosphorylation of a protein
phosphatase inhibitor, I-1, could allow for the suppression of protein
phosphatase-1, and the subsequent disinhibition of CaMKII may gate the
expression of long-lasting LTP at postsynaptic sites (Blitzer et al.,
1995 , 1998 ; Brown et al., 2000 ). Finally, fusion proteins, consisting
of PKI and nuclear localization signals, are capable of blocking
long-lasting LTP in hippocampal slices when they are delivered into the
nuclear compartment of neurons (Matsushita et al., 2001 ). This block of
LTP was caused by the inhibition of cAMP response element-binding
protein (CREB) phosphorylation (Matsushita et al., 2001 ). Thus, CREB
may be another postsynaptic target for PKA that is critical for the
expression of long-lasting LTP in CA1 pyramidal neurons (Impey et al.,
1996 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 17, 2002; revised Dec. 2, 2002; accepted Dec. 3, 2002.
This work was supported by equipment and operating grants from the
Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research (P.V.N.), the Canadian
Institutes of Health Research (formerly the Medical Research Council of
Canada) (P.V.N.), the Alberta Paraplegic Foundation (P.V.N.), and the
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (P.V.N.).
S.D. held a postdoctoral fellowship from the Alberta Heritage
Foundation for Medical Research (AHFMR). P.V.N. is an AHFMR
Scholar and a Medical Research Council Scholar.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. S. Duffy, Department of
Physiology, University of Alberta, Medical Sciences Building, Edmonton,
Alberta, T6G 2H7, Canada. E-mail: sduffy{at}ualberta.ca.
 |
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