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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 2003, 23(7):2591
GABA Is Dispensable for the Formation of Junctional GABA Receptor
Clusters in Caenorhabditis elegans
Christelle
Gally and
Jean-Louis
Bessereau
Laboratoire de Biologie Cellulaire de la Synapse Normale et
Pathologique, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale, Unité 497, Ecole Normale Supérieure, 75005 Paris, France
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ABSTRACT |
At GABAergic synapses, GABA receptors form high-density clusters
opposite GABA release sites. Whether GABA release per se plays a role
in the formation of GABA receptor clusters remains uncertain. To
address this question in vivo, we characterized GABA
receptor clustering in the nematode Caenorhabditis
elegans. In C. elegans, body wall muscles
receive excitatory inputs from cholinergic motor neurons and inhibitory
inputs from GABAergic neurons. Using immunohistochemistry and green
fluorescent protein-tagged proteins, we observed that the muscle
GABA receptor UNC-49 is precisely clustered opposite GABA
release sites. During development, these clusters appear slightly after
the detection of presynaptic vesicles. If motor axons are mislocalized
as in unc-5 mutants, GABA receptors cluster opposite
ectopic axons at GABA release sites. Together, these data imply that a
motor neuron-derived factor is instructing GABA receptor clustering.
Presynaptic localization of this clustering activity requires the
neuronal kinesin UNC-104, suggesting that release of GABA from synaptic
vesicles may represent the clustering signal. However,
unc-25 mutants do not synthesize GABA but do cluster
postsynaptic GABA receptors indistinguishably from the wild type.
Therefore, at GABAergic neuromuscular junctions, GABA receptor
clustering requires nerve-muscle interaction but not GABA neurotransmission.
Key words:
GABA receptor; synaptogenesis; neuromuscular
junction; C. elegans; receptor clustering; activity-dependent mechanism
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Introduction |
In the cerebral cortex, a single
pyramidal cell receives thousands of inputs from distinct classes of
excitatory and inhibitory neurons. At each of these synapses,
appropriate neurotransmitter receptors are clustered opposite the site
of neurotransmitter release. How does the postsynaptic cell cluster
receptors to match the presynaptic input? One possibility is that the
neurotransmitter itself acts as a trans-synaptic signal to
cluster or stabilize the appropriate receptors opposite
neurotransmitter release sites. The release of neurotransmitter by
embryonic growth cones before the formation of synaptic contacts (Young
and Poo, 1983 ) is consistent with such a hypothesis. Despite the appeal
of this model, molecular evidence demonstrates that it is not a general
mechanism for receptor clustering (for review, see Craig and Boudin,
2001 ). For example, at the vertebrate neuromuscular junction,
acetylcholine receptors cluster in response to agrin, an extracellular
matrix protein secreted by motor neurons (for review, see Ruegg and
Bixby, 1998 ; Sanes and Lichtman, 2001 ). In contrast, choline
acetyltransferase mutant mice that do not synthesize any acetylcholine
do form neuromuscular synapses that contain high-density clusters of
acetylcholine receptors (Misgeld et al., 2002 ).
However, the role of neurotransmitter in the differentiation of
inhibitory synapses remains unclear. In cultured spinal cord neurons,
chronic application of the glycine receptor blocker strychnine inhibits
the formation of glycine receptor clusters (Kirsch and Betz, 1998 ; Levi
et al., 1998 ). These results suggest that the activation of the
receptors by the neurotransmitter glycine is required to initiate or
stabilize glycine receptor clusters. However, the effect of strychnine
might be attributable to a block of glycine receptor recycling
after endocytosis, resulting in a subsequent depletion of receptors at
postsynaptic domains (Rasmussen et al., 2002 ). In contrast to the
glycine receptor clustering studies, initial reports indicate that
GABAA receptor expression and clustering do not
require neurotransmitter release. Specifically, blocking the electrical
activity of hippocampal neurons using tetrodotoxin (TTX) does not
prevent the formation of GABA receptor clusters (Craig et al., 1994 ).
However, TTX does not block spontaneous synaptic release. Therefore, it
is still possible that small amounts of GABA released at presynaptic
sites may be sufficient to trigger receptor clustering. In a different
experimental paradigm using TTX on cultured cortical neurons, blocking
activity resulted in a ~50% decrease in the number of synaptic sites
with detectable GABAA receptors (Kilman et al.,
2002 ). To evaluate the role of GABA in the formation of GABAergic
synapses in vivo, we analyzed the formation of GABAergic
neuromuscular junctions in the nematode Caenorhabditis
elegans.
The GABA nervous system of C. elegans is composed of 26 neurons, 23 of which are inhibitory motor neurons that innervate body wall muscles (McIntire et al., 1993b ). Muscle cells in C. elegans are mononucleate and send dendrite-like extensions, called
muscle arms, to the axons of the motor neurons in the ventral and
dorsal nerve cords (White et al., 1984 ). At the nerve cord, muscle arms elongate and form en passant synapses with motor axons.
Muscle cells receive innervation from both cholinergic motor neurons that cause muscle contraction and GABAergic neurons that cause muscle
relaxation (for review, see Jorgensen and Nonet, 1995 ). Thus, the
muscles of the worm represent a simple system to study multi-innervation and receptor sorting.
Jin et al. (1999) demonstrated that presynaptic differentiation of
GABAergic neuromuscular junctions is normal in the absence of GABA. In
fact, GABAergic transmission is dispensable in C. elegans,
and null mutations in unc-25, the single gene that encodes the glutamic acid decarboxylase, the biosynthetic enzyme for GABA, cause the animals to become uncoordinated, although they are fully viable (Jin et al., 1999 ). These data suggested that the number of
synapses was not regulated by activity-dependent feedback from the
muscle. However, these experiments could not evaluate whether presynaptic contacts or GABA secretion were involved in clustering receptors on the muscle. In this study, we analyze the differentiation of the postsynaptic domain of GABAergic neuromuscular junctions by
visualizing GABA receptors in muscle. The subunits that comprise the
GABAA-type receptor expressed in the body muscles
are generated by alternative splicing from a single locus called
unc-49 (Bamber et al., 1999 ). Our results demonstrate that
innervation from motor neurons is necessary to induce and maintain
UNC-49 clusters. Moreover, differentiation of GABA receptor
clusters requires transport of vesicular components to the synapse.
However, GABA neurotransmission per se is dispensable for the formation
of GABA receptor clusters.
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Materials and Methods |
C. elegans handling. Worms were cultured using
standard methods (Brenner, 1974 ). L1 and L2 worms were obtained by
moving gravid adults every 60 min to a fresh plate at 25°C. Embryos
and larvae were cultured at 25°C. Cohorts of synchronized worms were
obtained by harvesting the larvae at defined time points (12-22 hr
after egg laying to isolate L1 larvae; 23-28 hr for L2 larvae).
The wild strain N2 and the following mutant alleles were used:
unc-49(e407), lin-6(e1466),
unc-25(e156), unc-5(e152), unc-5(e53), unc-104(e1265), unc-31(e928),
unc-13(e51), and unc-18(e81).
UNC-49 antibodies. A DNA fragment encoding UNC-49 amino
acids 23-67 was inserted into pGEX-3X (Amersham
Biosciences, Uppsala, Sweden). The
glutathione-S-transferase (GST)-UNC-49 fusion protein was
expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. Rabbits
were injected with 100 µg of fusion protein and boosted three times
with 100 µg each. Antibodies were then purified as described
previously (Miller et al., 2000 ) using the fusion protein GST-UNC-49
blotted on nitrocellulose.
Immunofluorescence staining. Worms were permeabilized using
freeze-fracture (Duerr et al., 1999 ) and then fixed in 20°C
methanol for 5 min and in 20°C acetone for 5 min. Samples were
blocked for 1 hr at room temperature with 0.2% bovine gelatin.
Purified UNC-49 antibodies were diluted 1:300 and incubated overnight
at 4°C, and the secondary antibody Cy3-labeled goat anti-rabbit IgG (heavy and light) (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West
Grove, PA) was diluted 1:900 and incubated 2.5-3 hr at room
temperature. Worms were mounted in Vectashield medium (Biovalley,
Marne-la-Vallee, France) on slides and imaged using fluorescence microscopy.
Molecular biology. In UNC-49B-GFP (green fluorescent
protein), GFP is inserted in frame in the M3-M4 cytoplasmic
loop of the UNC-49B subunit in a genomic fragment that contains all
three GABA receptor subunit open reading frames plus 400 nt of the
unc-49 promoter (Bamber et al., 1999 ). In this construct, we
replaced GFP with YFP (yellow fluorescent protein) to generate
pJL41. To construct pJL37, a 1.1 kb promoter fragment of
unc-47 (nucleotides 1195 to 3 relative to the
translation start site) was inserted upstream to the translational
fusion SNB-1 (synaptobrevin-1)-GFP derived from pSB120.65 (gift
from M. Nonet, St. Louis, MO) (Nonet, 1999 ). The fragment
encoding amino acids 58-225 in the GFP was replaced by the
homologous CFP (cyan fluorescent protein) coding sequence
PCR-amplified from the cameleon 2 cDNA (Miyawaki et al., 1997 ).
C. elegans transformation. Transformation was performed by
microinjection of plasmid DNA into the gonad (Mello et al., 1991 ). unc-49(e407);lin-15(n765ts) worms were injected with a DNA
mixture containing pJL37 (Punc-47:: snb-1-CFP) (20 ng/µl), a gel-purified AflII-MluI fragment of
pJL41 (unc-49B-YFP missing the 5' end of the gene) (20 ng/µl) and a 110/38 unc-49 PCR fragment (10 ng/µl) containing a 4 kb promoter fragment plus 2 kb of the 5' coding sequence, as described by Bamber et al. (1999) . pEKL15, a plasmid that
contains the wild-type lin-15 gene (Clark et al., 1994 ), was
coinjected at 40 ng/µl as a cotransformation marker. Progeny of
injected animals were raised at the restrictive temperature for
lin-15(n765ts). A rescued (non-Lin non-Unc) strain
(oxEx171) was generated. This array was integrated by
UV-4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen exposure (Yandell et al., 1994 ) to
generate the stable transgenic marker krIs1.
Microscopy. Animals were anesthetized with M9 buffer
containing (in mM): 3.8 tricaine, 0.42 tetramisole, and 20 sodium azide; mounted on 1× M9, 2% agarose pads;
and examined using a Leica (Nussloch, Germany) SP2
confocal microscope equipped for sequential scan of the emission lines.
CFP was detected by using the 458 nm line, and YFP was excited by the
514 nm line. Confocal image reconstruction and merges were obtained
with Metamorph image analysis system. Quantitative analysis of
immunofluorescence was performed on confocal image reconstructions
using Metamorph. For each image, background fluorescence level was
based on fluorescence intensities outside of the nerve cord and used as
a threshold to measure GABA receptor cluster size. Average fluorescence
density per cluster was quantified by centering over each cluster a
circle of 0.62 µm diameter in size and integrating the total
fluorescence in this area.
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Results |
GABA receptors form postsynaptic clusters at
neuromuscular junctions
The distribution of GABA neuromuscular junctions was initially
described in C. elegans using electron microscopy (White et al., 1976 , 1984 ). Synapses were identified on the basis of the accumulation of synaptic vesicles and the presence of an electron-dense presynaptic specialization at the membrane juxtaposed to the muscle. However, it was not possible to observe electron-dense postsynaptic densities. To test whether GABA receptors accumulated in specialized domains or were distributed more loosely in the muscle membranes, we
analyzed the distribution of the UNC-49 GABA receptor by
immunofluorescence. An antibody was raised against the N-terminal
region of the UNC-49 receptor. This fragment is present in all
predicted UNC-49 subunits that are generated by alternative splicing
from the unc-49 gene (Bamber et al., 1999 ). Antibody
staining of wild-type animals generated a punctate pattern along the
ventral and dorsal nerve cords and two large spots in the nerve ring
where the muscle cells in the head are innervated (Fig.
1A). These puncta were
absent in unc-49(e407) null mutants; however, some
nonspecific staining was seen in the pharynx and above the preanal
ganglia in the null mutant (data not shown). At high magnification,
GABA receptor clusters could be visualized as individual spots
measuring ~0.7 µm in diameter (Fig. 1B). Between
clusters, weak diffuse staining was detected along the cord, and this
staining was absent in unc-49(e407) mutants. Because
muscle cells were permeabilized during the staining procedure, we do
not know whether these receptors were inserted in the plasma membrane
or were part of an intracellular pool. No UNC-49 labeling could be
detected in body wall muscle cell somas or in muscle arms. Therefore,
UNC-49 antibody staining demonstrated that muscle GABA receptors are
clustered in discrete domains along the nerve cords.

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Figure 1.
UNC-49 GABA receptors form postsynaptic clusters
at neuromuscular junctions. A, Immunostaining of UNC-49.
Young wild-type adults were immunolabeled with rabbit anti-UNC-49
antibody. UNC-49 receptors are present in the nerve ring (open
arrowheads) and along ventral and dorsal nerve cords. In this
panel, as well as in all following figures, anterior is
to the left and ventral is down.
B, High magnification of the ventral nerve cord reveals
that UNC-49 clusters into individual puncta. C,
Visualization of GABAergic varicosities in the ventral nerve cord of a
transgenic worm expressing in GABAergic neurons the synaptic vesicle
protein synaptobrevin SNB-1 fused to CFP. Note that some SNB-1-CFP
accumulates in motor neuron soma (arrows).
D, In the same transgenic animal, muscle GABA receptors
are visualized by expressing UNC-49 fused to YFP. UNC-49-YFP
fluorescence is detected in muscle cells in a punctate pattern along
the nerve cord. Note that some weak UNC-49-YFP signal outlines muscle
cell membranes. E, Merging SNB-1-CFP and UNC-49-YFP
signals shows that UNC-49 clusters are localized opposite GABA release
sites (inset, detail of ventral cord labeling). Scale
bars, 20 µm (for all images).
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To evaluate whether GABA receptor clusters were juxtaposed to GABA
synapses, we visualized presynaptic and postsynaptic domains in the
same living animal. Presynaptic terminals were visualized using the
synaptic vesicle protein synaptobrevin, also called VAMP
(vesicle-associated membrane protein), tagged with the GFP variant CFP, and expressed in GABA neurons using the promoter of the
vesicular GABA transporter gene, unc-47 (McIntire et al., 1997 ) (Fig. 1C). Postsynaptic GABA receptor fields were
visualized by tagging the UNC-49B subunit with the GFP variant YFP.
Expression of the UNC-49B-YFP subunit from a modified
unc-49 genomic fragment (see Materials and Methods) was able
to rescue the uncoordinated phenotype of the unc-49(e407)
mutant. YFP fluorescence was detected in the nerve ring and along the
ventral and dorsal cords with a punctate pattern (Fig.
1D) very similar to what was observed with
anti-UNC-49 antibody staining. Transgenic worms expressing both
SNB-1-CFP and UNC-49-YFP were analyzed by confocal microscopy using
sequential excitation to avoid bleed-through between CFP and YFP
signals. After merging CFP and YFP images, we observed a one-to-one
association between presynaptic and postsynaptic clusters in the cords
and in the nerve ring. (Fig. 1E). These data indicate
that GABA receptors form high-density clusters opposite presynaptic
GABA release sites at neuromuscular junctions.
GABAergic innervation precedes GABA receptor clustering
Does innervation have a role in GABA receptor clustering? In the
simplest model, motor neuron innervation causes the GABA receptors to
cluster. Alternatively, clusters could be prepatterned on the surface
of the muscle. In this case, the muscle expresses positional cues that
drive the formation of synapses at specific positions. Such a mechanism
is used in certain neuromuscular junctions in vertebrate muscles where
acetylcholine receptors are distributed along a predetermined pattern
(Yang et al., 2000 , 2001 ; Lin et al., 2001 ). To address this question,
we analyzed the temporal relationship of presynaptic and postsynaptic
components during development.
In L1 larvae, the GABA DD motor neurons innervate the ventral body wall
muscles, but the dorsal muscles do not receive GABAergic innervation.
At the end of the L1 larval stage, the DD motor neurons rewire and
innervate dorsal muscles (White et al., 1978 ; Hallam and Jin, 1998 ).
Concurrently, the postembryonic GABA motor neurons, the VDs, are
generated and innervate the ventral muscles. Clusters of GABA receptors
were detected in the ventral muscles of L1 larvae by antibody staining
of the wild type (Fig.
2A,
arrowheads) or by fluorescence visualization of the
YFP-tagged receptor (Fig. 2B). These synapses were
formed in a highly reproducible pattern (n = 100 animals) with a gap containing no synapses in the segment of the axon
just anterior to each cell body. No GABA receptors were detected in the
dorsal muscles of L1 larvae (Fig. 2B,C). Early in the
L2 larval stage (23-24 hr after egg laying at 25°C), synaptic
vesicles were detected in the dorsal cord in 100% of the individuals;
however, UNC-49-YFP was detected in only 39% of the animals
(n = 23) (Fig. 2D). At 24-25 hr
after egg laying, 75% of the animals contained dorsal UNC-49-YFP
aggregates (n = 20) that aligned with synaptic vesicle
clusters. Finally, at 26 hr after egg laying, 100% of the L2 larvae
(n = 23) had an adult staining pattern with colocalized
SNB-1-CFP and UNC-49-YFP clusters along the entire dorsal cord (Fig.
2E). UNC-49-YFP was never observed as a diffuse
signal before innervation. At the onset of detection, YFP-tagged GABA
receptors formed small puncta that became brighter and bigger over
time. Thus, the appearance of synaptic vesicles at presynaptic sites
precedes the formation of postsynaptic receptor clusters in the dorsal
nerve cord.

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Figure 2.
GABA receptor clusters are present only at sites
of innervation in L1 larvae. A, Immunostaining of UNC-49
in wild-type L1 larvae. L1 larvae were immunolabeled 4 hr after
hatching at 25°C. At this stage, UNC-49 was found ventrally as six
segments (closed arrowheads) interrupted by gaps;
however, no staining could be observed in the dorsal nerve cord
(open arrowheads). Inset shows a higher
magnification of the ventral nerve cord revealing that UNC-49 receptors
form clusters. B, SNB-1-CFP (in green)
expressed in GABAergic neurons stains synaptic vesicle clusters present
along the ventral nerve cord and the soma of the six GABAergic DD motor
neurons present in young L1 larvae (arrows).
Clusters of UNC-49-YFP (red) are detected only along
the ventral nerve cord. Open arrowheads indicate dorsal
cord position. The fluorescence in the middle of the animal corresponds
to autofluorescent gut granules. C-E, Dorsal cord
labeling (open arrowheads) in representative larvae
grown at 25°C after egg laying for 16 hr (L1 larval stage)
(C), 24 hr (early L2 stage)
(D), and 26 hr (L2 larva)
(E). Presynaptic vesicles (labeled with
SNB-1-CFP in green) are detected before UNC-49-YFP
receptor clusters (red). Scale bars, 20 µm
(for all images).
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However, the time required to fold CFP and YFP may affect the
interpretation of our results. Specifically, SNB-1-CFP is already folded in synaptic vesicles of the ventral nerve cord. The vesicles simply need to be transported to the dorsal nerve cord. In contrast, UNC-49-YFP needs to be folded de novo, because no staining
is apparent before the appearance of clusters. Therefore, we analyzed the appearance of UNC-49 clusters by immunostaining. These data confirm
the results obtained using YFP-tagged receptors. During the early L2
larval stage (23-24 hr after egg laying at 25°C), UNC-49
immunoreactivity was detected only at the anterior end of the dorsal
nerve cord. At 25-26 hr after egg laying, labeling of the receptor was
intense along the entire dorsal cord (data not shown). These results
suggest that GABA receptor aggregates are not assembled before
innervation but appear only after the motor neurons have differentiated
presynaptic specializations.
Innervation is required for the maintenance of GABA
receptor clusters
Time course analysis of UNC-49 clusters suggests that presynaptic
innervation triggers the differentiation of postsynaptic domains. To
address whether innervation is required for maintenance of receptor
clusters, we analyzed the distribution of UNC-49 in a
lin-6(e1466) background. In lin-6 mutants, most
of the postembryonic cell divisions are aborted (Sulston and Horvitz,
1981 ). DD neurons are generated normally during embryonic development
in these mutants, and they rewire properly at the L1-L2 transition
(White et al., 1978 ). However, VD motor neurons do not differentiate in
L1 larvae. As a result, ventral muscles are innervated in the L1 but
lose all innervation in the L2 stage.
In L1 lin-6 mutant larvae, presynaptic and postsynaptic
staining was present in the ventral cord and was indistinguishable from
wild-type L1 larvae (data not shown). In lin-6(e1466) L4 larvae, SNB-1-CFP was detected only in the dorsal cord, confirming that DDs rewired properly, and, as expected, no GABA innervation was
observed ventrally (Fig. 3A).
UNC-49-YFP clusters colocalized with presynaptic varicosities along
the dorsal cord (Fig. 3A,B). However, in ventral muscle
cells, UNC-49-YFP clusters were absent, and only scattered YFP
fluorescence was detected in some cells (Fig. 3B). These
results suggest that innervation is required not only for the formation
but also for the maintenance of GABA receptor clusters.

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Figure 3.
Innervation is required for the maintenance of
UNC-49 clusters. A, SNB-1-CFP expressed in the GABA
nervous system of lin-6(e1466) L4 larvae. In this
mutant, the GABAergic ventral motor neurons are absent, and no synaptic
varicosities are observed along the ventral cord (closed
arrowheads). The fluorescence in the middle of the
animal corresponds to autofluorescent gut granules. B,
Localization of UNC-49-YFP in the same individual, showing a
disorganization of UNC-49-YFP expression pattern ventrally
(closed arrowheads) while dorsally presynaptic
and postsynaptic markers appear wild type (open
arrowheads). Scale bar, 20 µm.
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Presynaptic innervation is sufficient to specify the site of GABA
receptor clustering
Innervation is required for the clustering of GABA receptors;
however, it is not clear whether it is sufficient. For example, commissures from the GABA motor neurons first contact the muscles on
the lateral edges and grow underneath them (Knobel et al., 1999 ).
Despite this extensive region of contact between the motor neuron and
its target, synapses and GABA receptor clusters do not form along these
segments. It is possible that a permissive environment for receptor
clustering is found only along the dorsal midline, perhaps because of
signals from the nerve cord or hypodermal ridge. To determine whether
synaptic innervation alone is sufficient to trigger GABA receptor
clustering, we analyzed the distribution of GABA receptors in
unc-5 mutants.
unc-5 encodes a netrin receptor required for the dorsal
migration of the GABA motor neuron axons (Hedgecock et al., 1990 ). In
unc-5 loss-of-function mutants, dorsal motor neuron axons do not reach the dorsal nerve cord but frequently extend along the lateral
side of the animal. Dorsal muscle cells do not extend muscle arms to
the dorsal midline but sometimes extend muscle arms ventrally to
contact ectopic axons. In the same way, some ventral muscles extend
arms dorsally to contact nearby sublateral axons. Electron microscopy
identified presynaptic specializations at contacts between ectopic
axons and muscle arms (Hedgecock et al., 1990 ). To assess whether
clustering of GABA receptors could occur outside of the ventral and
dorsal midlines, we visualized tagged GABA receptors in
unc-5 mutant animals. In unc-5(e152) mutants,
synaptic vesicle clusters and GABA receptor clusters were punctate
along the ventral cord as in wild-type animals (Fig. 4). Only a few synaptic vesicle clusters
were detected along the dorsal midline, because most motor neurons fail
to extend to the dorsal cord; however, synaptic vesicle clusters were
found along the lateral side of these animals. The space between
clusters was highly variable, as was the shape and size of individual
clusters. Ectopic muscle arms could be faintly detected extending
ventrally from dorsal muscles toward lateral axons (Fig.
4B, inset). At the tip of these arms,
UNC-49 receptors formed clusters. Merging of SNB-1-CFP and UNC-49-YFP
images revealed that UNC-49 aggregates at ectopic presynaptic
varicosities (Fig. 4C). These results indicated that
interactions between motor neuron axons and muscles are sufficient to
cause GABA receptor clustering, although the size and spacing of GABA
neuromuscular junctions might be influenced by additional regulation at
the nerve cord.

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Figure 4.
GABA receptors cluster at ectopic GABA release
sites in unc-5 mutants. A, Localization
of SNB-1-CFP expressed in the GABAergic system of
unc-5(e152) adult mutant. The migration of motor neuron
axons to the dorsal cord is disrupted. Presynaptic varicosities are
observed in ectopic axons located along the lateral side of the body
(open arrows). The dashed line indicates
the dorsal side of the worm. B, Localization of
UNC-49-YFP expressed in the same individual. UNC-49-YFP is found
along the ventral cord and at ectopic lateral positions (open
arrows). Inset shows a high amplification of the
UNC-49-YFP signal, which enables the visualization of ectopic muscle
arms extending ventrally from dorsal muscles
(arrowhead). C, Merging
SNB-1-CFP and UNC-49-YFP signals demonstrates that lateral clusters
of UNC-49-YFP are colocalized with ectopic presynaptic varicosities
(inset as in B). Scale bar, 20 µm.
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Receptor clustering is triggered by a factor transported by the
neuronal kinesin UNC-104
Our results demonstrate that formation of UNC-49 clusters requires
innervation. These data suggest that a presynaptic factor is
instructing the differentiation of postsynaptic domains in muscle. One
possibility is that this factor is released from synaptic vesicles. To
test this hypothesis, we analyzed GABA receptor clusters in
unc-104 mutants. unc-104 encodes a neuronal
kinesin required for synaptic vesicle transport (Hall and Hedgecock,
1991 ; Zhou et al., 2001 ). In partial loss-of-function mutants such as
unc-104(e1265), axonal outgrowth is normal but most synaptic
vesicles remain trapped in neuron cell bodies, resulting in a complete
absence of synaptic vesicles in the dorsal nerve cord as determined by
electron microscopy (Hall and Hedgecock, 1991 ). Consistent with these
data, we could not detect any SNB-1-CFP in the dorsal nerve cord of
unc-104(e1265) mutants (Fig.
5A). Instead, fluorescence
appeared concentrated in motor neuron cell bodies, and only some weak
vesicular staining was observed along the ventral neurites.

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Figure 5.
The neuronal kinesin UNC-104 is required for the
differentiation of both presynaptic and postsynaptic domains.
A, Expression of SNB-1-CFP in the GABA neurons of an
adult unc-104(e1265) mutant. Synaptic vesicles are
highly concentrated in the cell bodies of motor neurons
(arrows); few synaptic vesicles are present along the
ventral cord, but no SNB-1-CFP is detected in the dorsal cord
(indicated by the dashed line). B,
Localization of UNC-49-YFP in the same animal. C, The
overlay of the CFP and YFP images shows that UNC-49-YFP receptors
cluster in contact with the soma of the motor neurons
(inset) and also form large aggregates in the ventral
nerve cord, mostly at places where residual synaptic vesicles are
detected. Scale bar, 20 µm.
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In these animals, a faint and diffuse UNC-49-YFP signal was observed
in dorsal muscle cells, but no clusters were present along the dorsal
cord (Fig. 5B). Furthermore, along the ventral side of the
unc-104(e1265) mutants, unusually large and irregular UNC-49-YFP aggregates were found along the ventral cord where residual
numbers of synaptic vesicles accumulated (Fig. 5C).
UNC-49-YFP clusters were also found directly in contact with the cell
bodies of the GABA motor neurons (Fig. 5C,
inset). These data suggest that, in a wild-type animal, a
factor required for clustering of GABA receptors is transported from
the cell bodies to synaptic sites by the neuronal kinesin UNC-104.
GABA is not necessary for the differentiation of
postsynaptic domains
The most obvious candidate for a signaling molecule carried by
synaptic vesicles is the neurotransmitter itself, GABA. GABA is
synthesized by glutamic acid decarboxylase, which is encoded by a
single gene, unc-25. Using tagged synaptic vesicle markers and electron microscopy, Jin et al. (1999) demonstrated previously that
the distribution and density of presynaptic contacts to muscles were
normal in unc-25 mutants. Similarly, we observed a normal distribution of the presynaptic marker SNB-1-CFP in
unc-25(e156) mutants (Fig.
6A). To test whether
GABA is required to signal the differentiation of postsynaptic domains,
we determined the distribution of GABA receptors in an
unc-25-null mutant.

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Figure 6.
UNC-49 GABA receptor clustering is normal in the
absence of GABA. A, SNB-1-CFP expression in GABAergic
neurons of the ventral cord in an adult unc-25 mutant
(arrows, motor neuron soma; arrowheads, synaptic
varicosities). unc-25 encodes GAD, the biosynthetic
enzyme of GABA, and in the mutant unc-25(e156), no GABA
is detected (McIntire et al., 1993a ). B,
Localization of UNC-49-YFP in the ventral cord of the same animal.
Presynaptic vesicle aggregates and GABA receptor clusters are
colocalized in a pattern indistinguishable from what is observed in
wild-type animals (arrowheads). Scale bar, 20 µm. C, UNC-49-YFP cluster size in the dorsal cord of
wild-type (white) and unc-25(e156)
(black) animals. Wild type, 0.56 ± 0.05 µm2 (average ± SEM; n = 3 worms; 95 clusters); unc-25, 0.59 ± 0.06 µm2 (n = 3 worms; 74 clusters). D, Fluorescence intensity of UNC-49-YFP
clusters in wild type (white) and
unc-25(e156) (black). Average ± SEM
are, respectively, 80.96 ± 6.16 (n = 4 worms;
152 clusters) and 79.56 ± 5.71 (n = 8; 362)
in the ventral nerve cord (VNC) and 67.85 ± 4.40 (n = 4; 100) and 66.17 ± 6.89 (n = 6; 182) in the dorsal nerve cord
(DNC). E, Synapse densities in
wild type (white) and
unc-25(e156) (black). Average
spacing ± SEM between clusters are, respectively, 3.19 ± 0.18 µm (n = 18 worms) and 3.31 ± 0.15 µm
(n = 16) in ventral nerve cord (VNC)
and 3.72 ± 0.26 µm (n = 15) and
3.52 ± 0.12 µm (n = 18) in dorsal nerve
cord (DNC). F, Time course analysis of
GABA receptor cluster formation in the dorsal cord of N2
(white) and unc-25(e156)
(black) L2 larvae. As early as 23-24 hr after egg
laying, synaptic varicosities are detected in 100% of L2 larvae, but
the detection of GABA receptor clusters is delayed. UNC-49-YFP
clusters are detected with a similar time course in wild-type
(white) and unc-25(e156)
(black) animals.
|
|
In adult unc-25(e156) animals, GABA receptors were clustered
into puncta, and these puncta were aligned with presynaptic vesicle clusters (Fig. 6A,B). The size of the clusters and
the average fluorescence intensity per cluster were similar in
unc-25 mutants and in wild type (Fig. 6C,D).
Furthermore, synapse densities along the ventral and dorsal nerve cords
were identical in unc-25 and wild-type young adults (Fig.
6E). Because GABA could play a role in the early
formation of GABA receptor clusters, we performed a time course
analysis of UNC-49-YFP expression in unc-25 mutants. No
difference was observed between wild-type and unc-25 mutants during the formation of GABAergic synapses on dorsal body wall muscles
(Fig. 6F). These results demonstrate that the
neurotransmitter GABA is not required for the clustering of GABA
receptors in C. elegans.
 |
Discussion |
In this study, we characterized the interactions between GABAergic
inhibitory motor neurons and body muscle cells during synapse formation
in C. elegans. We found that the formation of GABA receptor clusters followed the appearance of synaptic vesicles at presynaptic sites, suggesting that the formation of postsynaptic GABA receptor clusters is instructed by presynaptic inputs. Signaling from the presynaptic terminal is dependent on the neuronal kinesin UNC-104. However, the neurotransmitter GABA is not required for the formation of
GABA synapses. These results suggest that synapse formation does not
depend on neurotransmission during the initial wiring of the nervous system.
The differentiation of GABAergic neuromuscular junctions results
from bidirectional interactions between nerve and muscle
Morphological analysis of inhibitory neuromuscular junctions
indicates that neurotransmitter release sites and receptor fields are
tightly aligned. Using fluorescently tagged proteins in living specimens, we observed a one-to-one codistribution between synaptic vesicle aggregates and GABA receptor clusters. At the ultrastructural level, 95% of the synaptic vesicles are contained within an area of
0.5 µm centered around the active zone (Crump et al., 2001 ). As
revealed by UNC-49 antibody staining, GABA receptors are contained in
clusters with an apparent diameter of 0.7 µm. Because the resolution of light microscopy overestimates the actual size of the clusters, these results suggest that receptor fields closely match
neurotransmitter release sites.
How is the differentiation of two congruent subcellular domains in
motor neurons and in body wall muscle cells achieved? Previous work
demonstrated that presynaptic differentiation requires a signal from
the muscle. When muscle cell precursors are laser ablated in the
C. elegans embryo so that dorsal muscle cells are completely
absent, neural processes still extend dorsally, but no presynaptic
varicosity can be detected using anti-GABA immunostaining (Plunkett et
al., 1996 ). Thus, the development of presynaptic release sites depends
on inputs from the muscle. Our data indicate that the formation of the
postsynaptic domain relies on a signal emanating from the motor neuron.
First, presynaptic varicosities start to differentiate before the
postsynaptic compartment. Synaptic vesicles tagged with SNB-1-CFP were
detected before the appearance of UNC-49-YFP receptor clusters.
Second, loss of innervation to the ventral muscles disrupts the
maintenance of GABA receptor clusters, indicating that continuous input
from the motor neurons is required to maintain receptor clusters.
Third, displacing synaptic vesicle release sites to ectopic positions
causes receptor clusters to form at these locations. Specifically, in
unc-5 mutants, ectopic motor axons that run along the
lateral hypoderm are intercepted by muscle arms, and receptor clusters
form at these lateral positions. More dramatically, in mutants that
lack the synaptic vesicle kinesin UNC-104, synaptic vesicles remain in
the cell body of the motor neuron, and GABA receptors are found
clustered against the motor neuron soma. This cannot be explained by a
primary defect of GABA receptor trafficking in muscle of
unc-104, because unc-104 gene expression is
detected only in neurons, and neuronal expression of an UNC-104-GFP
fusion protein rescues the UNC-104 phenotype (Zhou et al., 2001 ).
Interestingly, proteins of the presynaptic active zone are properly
localized in unc-104 mutants. Specifically, liprin/SYD-2 (Zhen and Jin, 1999 ), Rab-3 interacting
molecule/UNC-10 (Koushika et al., 2001 ), and RPM-1
(Schaefer et al., 2000 ; Zhen et al., 2000 ) are correctly localized in
the dorsal cord; however, these incomplete synapses cannot direct the
clustering of GABA receptors. Therefore, sites of presynaptic
differentiation can be specified in the motor neuron independently from
the formation of synaptic vesicle aggregates. However, GABA receptor
clusters will differentiate only after synaptic vesicles have reached
presynaptic sites.
The formation of GABAergic neuromuscular junctions does not depend
on GABAergic neurotransmission
Because the density of receptors present on the postsynaptic
membrane is a critical parameter of synaptic strength, it would be
reasonable to predict that GABA release directly controls the formation
of postsynaptic GABA receptor clusters. In one model, GABAergic
neurotransmission would be required for the differentiation or the
maintenance of the postsynaptic domains. Disrupting GABAergic transmission would therefore cause a loss of GABA receptor clusters on
the muscle membrane. In another model, homeostatic control of receptor
number could be achieved by neurotransmission. In this model, the loss
of neurotransmission would cause an increase in postsynaptic GABA
receptors. These hypotheses could be tested using mutants with impaired
GABAergic neurotransmission. Our results indicate that the
morphological differentiation of GABAergic synapses is independent of neurotransmission.
First, presynaptic varicosities and GABA receptor clusters
differentiate normally in mutants in which evoked synaptic vesicle release is absent. UNC-49-GFP was shown previously to be properly clustered in unc-13 mutants (Richmond et al., 1999 ). Using
double-transgenic worms expressing SNB-1-CFP and UNC-49-YFP, we
confirmed that GABA receptor clusters were morphologically normal and
were opposite GABA release sites in unc-13 mutants (data not
shown). Interestingly, electrophysiological recording from muscle cell
indicates that the response to exogenous application of GABA is normal
in unc-13 mutants (Richmond et al., 1999 ), demonstrating
that GABA receptors are inserted in the plasma membrane and functional.
Similarly, we observed normal differentiation of presynaptic and
postsynaptic compartments at GABAergic neuromuscular junctions of
unc-18 mutants that are also defective in synaptic release
(data not shown). However, electrophysiological analysis of
unc-13 and unc-18 mutants indicates that
spontaneous release of synaptic vesicles occurs at very low frequency
(Richmond et al., 1999 ; J. Richmond, personal communication).
Because it was possible that low amounts of neurotransmitter could be
enough to initiate the differentiation of a postsynaptic domain, we
used a mutant that lacked GABA altogether. unc-25 encodes the biosynthetic enzyme for GABA, glutamic acid decarboxylase. Presynaptic differentiation of GABAergic synapses is normal
in the absence of GABA (Jin et al., 1999 ). Our data indicate that postsynaptic differentiation (i.e., the clustering of GABA receptors) is normal in the absence of GABA as well. Even in 4-d-old
unc-25 adult mutants, presynaptic and postsynaptic
specializations could still be detected despite the absence of
GABAergic neurotransmission (data not shown). Therefore,
differentiation of GABAergic neuromuscular junctions occurs
independently of GABA neurotransmission.
Synaptogenesis: a neurotransmission-independent process?
Is synapse formation independent of neurotransmission in other
systems and species? The roles of neurotransmission and electrical activity during synaptogenesis have been investigated extensively at
the Drosophila neuromuscular junction. At these synapses,
the formation of glutamate receptor fields is dependent on presynaptic innervation (Broadie and Bate, 1993 ; Saitoe et al., 1997 ). Moreover, postsynaptic activity regulates the release of the neurotransmitter via
retrograde signaling (for review, see Featherstone and Broadie, 2000 ;
Keshishian, 2002 ). Whether neurotransmission per se is required for the
differentiation of postsynaptic domains remains controversial. It was
initially reported that Drosophila mutants
syntaxin-1A and shibire, which lack spontaneous
neurotransmitter release, also fail to cluster receptors at
neuromuscular junctions (Saitoe et al., 2001 ). However, recent data
suggest that, in syntaxin and shibire mutants,
many muscles are not properly innervated despite the penetration of the
nerve into the musculature. In these mutant flies, noninnervated
muscles lack postsynaptic receptor clusters, but whenever a presynaptic
contact is made, glutamate receptor fields are indistinguishable from
wild-type individuals (Featherstone et al., 2002 ). These results would
suggest that, at Drosophila neuromuscular junctions too,
neurotransmission is not required for synaptogenesis.
Recent analysis of mouse knock-outs with impaired synaptic vesicle
release suggests that neurotransmission is dispensable for the initial
formation of the mammalian brain. synaptobrevin 2 (Schoch et
al., 2001 ) or SNAP-25 (Washbourne et al., 2002 )
homozygous mutants exhibit a total block of evoked release of
synaptic vesicles but retain spontaneous vesicle release. These
mutants die at birth, but the overall structure of the fetal
brain is normal and synapses differentiate properly. Deletion
of Munc18-1 abolishes both evoked and spontaneous vesicular
release. In these mutants, initial development of the brain is normal,
but neurons undergo apoptosis after initial brain assembly is completed
(Verhage et al., 2000 ). Apoptosis is probably not caused by the lack of
neurotransmission, because Munc13-1/2 mutants also have a
complete block of vesicular release but develop normally up to birth.
In Munc13-1/2 mutant brain, normal synapses are observed by
electron microscopy, and in primary cultures of hippocampal neurons,
synapses differentiate and persist at normal density in culture
(Varoqueaux et al., 2002 ). Specifically, GABA receptors are expressed
and functional in these cells on the basis of electrophysiological
experiments, suggesting that neurotransmission is dispensable for the
initial steps of synapse formation.
This question has been best studied at the mouse neuromuscular junction
using choline acetyltransferase knock-out mice, which do not
synthesize the neurotransmitter ACh (Misgeld et al., 2002 ). Despite
several abnormalities of the neuromuscular system, many of which can be
related to muscle inactivity, the differentiation of the neuromuscular
junction per se is preserved. Large ACh receptor clusters are
present in front of well differentiated synaptic varicosities. Such
structures are completely missing in agrin and
Musk knock-out mice (DeChiara et al., 1996 ; Burgess et al., 1999 ) demonstrating that the neurotransmitter is not the key player of
synapse formation at the vertebrate neuromuscular junction.
The role of GABA during brain development has been addressed using mice
knock-outs that are deficient for the two GAD isoforms and do not
contain detectable levels of GABA. Animals die at birth because of
cleft palate, but histological analysis of GABAergic neuron populations
does not reveal any gross morphological defect (Ji et al., 1999 ).
Unfortunately, detailed analysis of the few existing GABA synapses
present in newborn animals has not been reported to our knowledge.
What is the GABA receptor clustering factor?
Our data indicate that GABA receptor clustering activity is
transported to and delivered at the presynaptic terminus. It is cotransported with synaptic vesicles but is not the neurotransmitter GABA. The GABA receptor clustering factor could be another
intravesicular component such as a neuropeptide. unc-31
encodes the homolog of CAPS
(Ca2+-dependent activator protein for
secretion) (Avery et al., 1993 ), which is necessary for dense
core vesicle release in adrenal cells (Berwin et al., 1998 ) and in
Drosophila neurons (Renden et al., 2001 ). We observed normal
GABA receptor clusters in the mutant unc-31(e928) (data not
shown). However, we cannot rule out that residual release of
neuropeptide persists in this mutant. Alternatively, the GABA receptor
aggregating factor could be a nonvesicular protein transported by the
kinesin UNC-104. For example, it might be cotransported in the
"synaptic packets" during development; these large complexes contain synaptic vesicles together with proteins of the presynaptic domains such as synapsin, amphyphisin, and the calcium channel subunit
1 (Ahmari et al., 2000 ). Distinguishing between these possibilities
will require the identification of the GABA receptor clustering activity.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 12, 2002; revised Dec. 12, 2002; accepted Jan. 15, 2003.
This work was funded by the Institut National de la Santé et de
la Recherche Médicale, the Ministère de la Recherche
(Action Concertée Incitative Jeunes Chercheurs 5016 CDR 5),
and the Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale. C.G. was supported
by a fellowship from the Ministère de la Recherche. We are
greatly indebted to Erik Jorgensen; he contributed scientific insight,
reagents, and unpublished data throughout the entire project and
provided critical comments during the preparation of this manuscript.
We thank Bruce Bamber for sharing the UNC-49B-GFP construct, Mike
Nonet for the VAMP-GFP construct, Janet Richmond for sharing
unpublished results, the Caenorhabditis Genetic Center
for strains, and Antoine Triller and Robby Weimer for critical reading
of this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Jean-Louis Bessereau,
Laboratoire de Biologie Cellulaire de la Synapse Normale et Pathologique, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 497, Ecole Normale Supérieure, 46 rue
d'Ulm, 75005 Paris, France. E-mail: jlbesse{at}wotan.ens.fr.
 |
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Mol. Biol. Cell,
December 1, 2008;
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R. M. Weimer, E. O. Gracheva, O. Meyrignac, K. G. Miller, J. E. Richmond, and J.-L. Bessereau
UNC-13 and UNC-10/Rim Localize Synaptic Vesicles to Specific Membrane Domains
J. Neurosci.,
August 2, 2006;
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[Abstract]
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G. P. Mullen, E. A. Mathews, P. Saxena, S. D. Fields, J. R. McManus, G. Moulder, R. J. Barstead, M. W. Quick, and J. B. Rand
The Caenorhabditis elegans snf-11 Gene Encodes a Sodium-dependent GABA Transporter Required for Clearance of Synaptic GABA
Mol. Biol. Cell,
July 1, 2006;
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J.-M. Fritschy, P. Panzanelli, J. E. Kralic, K. E. Vogt, and M. Sassoe-Pognetto
Differential dependence of axo-dendritic and axo-somatic GABAergic synapses on GABAA receptors containing the alpha1 subunit in Purkinje cells.
J. Neurosci.,
March 22, 2006;
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A. M. Rowland, J. E. Richmond, J. G. Olsen, D. H. Hall, and B. A. Bamber
Presynaptic Terminals Independently Regulate Synaptic Clustering and Autophagy of GABAA Receptors in Caenorhabditis elegans
J. Neurosci.,
February 8, 2006;
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B. D. Ackley, R. J. Harrington, M. L. Hudson, L. Williams, C. J. Kenyon, A. D. Chisholm, and Y. Jin
The Two Isoforms of the Caenorhabditis elegans Leukocyte-Common Antigen Related Receptor Tyrosine Phosphatase PTP-3 Function Independently in Axon Guidance and Synapse Formation
J. Neurosci.,
August 17, 2005;
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I. Colin-Le Brun, N. Ferrand, O. Caillard, P. Tosetti, Y. Ben-Ari, and J.-L. Gaiarsa
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