Abstract
The properties of the inhibitory influence of neurons in the perigeniculate (PGN) nucleus on thalamocortical cells were examined with intracellular recordings in the ferret geniculate slice maintainedin vitro. Activation of PGN neurons with the local application of glutamate caused IPSPs in thalamocortical neurons that were mediated by both GABAA and GABABreceptors, as well as the activation of spindle waves.
With low intensity stimulation of the PGN, local application of bicuculline to the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd) strongly inhibited evoked and spindle-associated IPSPs, indicating that these are largely mediated by GABAA receptors. The generation of GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs in thalamocortical cells that were large enough to generate rebound low threshold Ca2+ spikes required substantially increased activation of the PGN with glutamate.
The activation of synchronous bicuculline-induced slowed oscillations in thalamocortical neurons required the block of GABAAreceptors in the LGNd as well as in the PGN. These results indicate that bursts of action potentials in PGN neurons can result in the activation of both GABAA and GABAB receptors in thalamocortical neurons, with the strong activation of GABAB receptors requiring an intense, simultaneous discharge of a number of PGN neurons. Functionally, these results suggest that PGN neurons inhibit thalamocortical cells preferentially through the activation of GABAA receptors, although the strong activation of GABAB receptors may occur under pathological conditions and contribute to the generation of abnormal, synchronous slow oscillations.
The thalamic reticular nucleus is a collection of GABAergic neurons situated in the bundles of corticothalamic and thalamocortical fibers that course between the thalamus and cerebral cortex. These neurons are innervated by axon collaterals from thalamocortical cells as well as from corticothalamic fibers and give rise to a dense innervation of particular regions of thalamic nuclei (for review, see Steriade and Deschênes, 1984;Jones, 1985; McCormick, 1992). The perigeniculate nucleus (PGN) appears to be equivalent to the thalamic reticular nucleus and is intimately interconnected with the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGNd).
The functional role of the thalamic reticular and perigeniculate nuclei has been most extensively studied as it relates to sleep and the generation of spindle waves. Spindle waves are 1–3 sec periods of synchronized 6–14 Hz oscillations and are generated largely through a reciprocal interaction between the GABAergic neurons of the thalamic reticular/perigeniculate nuclei and thalamocortical neurons (Steriade et al., 1985, 1993; Buzsáki et al., 1990; von Krosigk et al., 1993; Bal et al., 1995a,b). During the generation of spindle waves, burst firing in thalamic reticular/perigeniculate neurons results in IPSPs that are mediated mostly through the activation of GABAA receptors in thalamocortical cells. These IPSPs result in the generation of rebound low threshold Ca2+ spikes which then excite again the thalamic reticular/perigeniculate neurons. Although the activation of GABAB receptors is particularly effective in generating rebound burst discharges in thalamocortical cells (Crunelli and Leresche, 1991), a functional role for the activation of these receptors in the generation of spindle waves has not been demonstrated.
Interestingly, rodent models of absence seizures suggest that the activation of GABAB receptors in the thalamus is particularly important in the generation of spike-and-wave epileptic activity (Hosford et al., 1992; Snead, 1992). Antagonism of GABAA receptors throughout the ferret geniculate slice results in a transformation of spindle waves into a synchronized 2–4 Hz slowed oscillation in which thalamocortical and perigeniculate neurons generate synchronized high frequency burst discharges (von Krosigk et al., 1993; Bal et al., 1995a,b), similar to that which occurs in at least some animal models of absence seizures (Avoli et al., 1983; 1990; Buzsáki et al., 1990; Gloor et al., 1990). We have proposed previously that this transition from normal spindle waves to the occurrence of slowed oscillations may be caused by the generation of pronounced burst firing in perigeniculate neurons resulting in part from disinhibition from neighboring PGN cells (Bal et al., 1995a,b).
Previous studies in rodent thalamic slices have demonstrated that electrical stimulation in the region of the thalamic reticular nucleus can activate GABAA receptors (Thomson, 1988; Warren et al., 1994; Ulrich and Huguenard, 1995) or both GABAA and GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs in thalamocortical neurons (Huguenard and Prince, 1994). However, the studies by Bal et al. (1995a,b) suggest that GABAB receptors are only weakly activated during the generation of spindle waves, but were strongly activated during the occurrence of bicuculline-induced slowed oscillations, when PGN neurons generate prolonged burst discharges. These findings suggest that there may be a functionally important difference in the properties of activation of GABAA and GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs in thalamocortical neurons.
In this and the accompanying paper (Sanchez-Vives et al., 1997) we demonstrate that PGN neurons can activate GABAA and GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs in thalamocortical as well as PGN neurons and that the block of GABAA receptors in both the PGN and LGNd is required for the generation of the bicuculline-induced slowed oscillation.
Some of these findings have been published previously in abstract form (Sanchez-Vives et al., 1995).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
For the preparation of slices, male or female ferrets, ∼2–3 months old, were deeply anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (30 mg/kg) and decapitated. The forebrain was rapidly removed, and the hemispheres were separated with a midline incision. Sagittal slices (400 μm thick) were formed on a DSK microslicer (model DTK-1000; Ted Pella, Inc.). A modification (as described here) of the technique developed by Aghajanian and Rasmussen (1989) was used to increase tissue viability. During preparation of slices, the tissue was placed in a solution in which NaCl was replaced with sucrose while an osmolarity of 307 mOsm was maintained. After preparation, slices were placed in an interface-style recording chamber (Fine Sciences Tools) and allowed at least 2 hr to recover. The bathing medium contained (in mm): NaCl 124, KCl 2.5, MgSO4 1.2, NaH2PO4 1.25, CaCl2 2, NaHCO3 26, dextrose 10, and was aerated with 95% O2, 5% CO2 to a final pH of 7.4. For the first 15 min that the geniculate slices were in the recording chamber, the bathing medium contained an equal mixture of the normal NaCl and the sucrose-substituted solutions. Bath temperature was maintained at 34–35°C.
Intracellular recording electrodes were formed on a Sutter Instruments P-80 micropipette puller from medium-walled glass (1BF100; WPI) and beveled on a Sutter Instruments beveler. Micropipettes were filled with 1.5–2.0 m potassium acetate and 2% biocytin for intracellular labeling of recorded neurons and had resistances of between 60 and 100 MΩ.
Neurotransmitter agonists or antagonists were typically applied with the pressure-pulse technique in which a brief pulse of pressure (10–250 msec; 200–350 kPa) was applied to the back of a broken microelectrode (1–4 μm tip diameter) to extrude ∼ 1–20 pl of solution. Applications of glutamate and GABA were performed at varying locations and depths within the slice to determine the best response. Other agonists and antagonists were applied to the surface of the slice either within 50 μm of the entry point of the recording electrode or as indicated in the figures. The latency for activation of neurons with local application of glutamate was estimated by performing extracellular multiple unit recordings adjacent to the glutamate-applying micropipette within the slice. These recordings revealed that pressure-pulse application of glutamate caused action potentials at a minimum latency of 20–25 msec, followed by an increase in the intensity of neuronal discharge peaking at ∼35–40 msec. Therefore, monosynaptic connections between neurons excited by local application of glutamate and recipient cells will have a minimum latency of 20–30 msec. This latency may be longer if the location of the excited neuron is not immediately adjacent to the local application of glutamate. The detection of monosynaptic connections was facilitated by the relative lack of polysynaptic excitatory connections between thalamocortical cells in the LGNd (Soltesz and Crunelli, 1992;Sanchez-Vives et al., 1996). The degree of activation of the PGN was typically varied by making incremental steps in the duration of the pulse of pressure applied to the glutamate application pipette. These durations were normalized for the purposes of illustration by dividing each by the duration of the maximal application plotted. In addition, the fast and slow GABA responses or IPSPs were also normalized to the peak amplitude generated for the purposes of illustration. We have demonstrated previously that there are no, or only very weak, functional connections between the perigeniculate and local circuit interneurons (Bal et al., 1995a,b), although PGN neurons do inhibit interlaminar PGN-like interneurons (Sanchez-Vives et al., 1996), as well as other PGN cells (Sanchez-Vives et al., 1997). These GABAergic to GABAergic neuronal connections seem to be purely inhibitory, and therefore the IPSPs induced in thalamocortical cells from application of glutamate in the PGN can be safely assumed to result from the release of GABA from PGN neurons.
When GABA antagonists were applied locally, we attempted to ensure that these drugs where confined to either the PGN or LGNd by making applications in small drops (∼5–10 μm in diameter) on the anterior-most aspects of the PGN and by confining our intracellular recordings and drug applications to thalamocortical cells to lamina A1, ∼0.5 mm distant from the PGN.
Only those cells that exhibited stable resting membrane potentials negative to −60 mV and were capable of generating trains of action potentials with depolarization were included in this study. Data are reported as mean ± SD. CGP35348 and CGP54626A were kind gifts of Novartis (Switzerland). All other drugs were obtained from Research Biochemicals (Natick, MA) or Sigma (St. Louis, MO).
RESULTS
Intracellular recordings were obtained from 184 thalamocortical neurons in either lamina A or A1 of the ferret LGNd. A representative sample of these cells exhibited an average resting membrane potential of −64 ± 4 mV (mean ± SD; n = 10) and an apparent input resistance to 0.1–0.4 nA current pulses of 73 ± 32 MΩ. As reported previously (Bal et al., 1995a,b), during the generation of spindle waves thalamocortical neurons received barrages of IPSPs at a frequency of 6–10 Hz, whereas intracellular recordings from PGN neurons revealed barrages of EPSPs that activate repetitive low threshold Ca2+ spikes and bursts of action potentials (Fig. 1A,B). Bath application of the GABAA antagonists bicuculline methiodide (20 μm) or picrotoxin (10–20 μm) transformed spindle waves into slow, synchronized oscillations that were associated with more prolonged bursts of action potentials in both thalamocortical and PGN neurons (Fig.1C,D). Close examination of the IPSPs generated in thalamocortical neurons during the generation of the spindle waves revealed that they have a latency to peak of 32.8 (±9.7;n = 16) msec and a duration of 170 (±18.4;n = 16) msec as measured from the onset of the IPSP (Fig. 1B). In contrast, the IPSPs occurring after the block of GABAA receptors had a latency to peak of 184.7 msec (±39.7 msec; n = 16) and a duration of 454 msec (±67.0 msec; n = 16) (Fig. 1D). Previously we have demonstrated that these slow IPSPs are mediated through the activation of GABAB receptors (Bal et al., 1995a,b). Comparing the action potential discharges generated by PGN neurons in normal and bicuculline- or picrotoxin-containing solutions with the amplitude–time course of IPSPs in thalamocortical cells suggests that high-frequency and prolonged discharges in PGN neurons may be needed to strongly activate GABAB receptors, a prerequisite to the generation of the bicuculline-induced slow network oscillations (Bal et al., 1995a,b). Here we examine this possibility with intracellular recordings in thalamocortical cells while we activate the PGN to varying degrees with the local application of glutamate.
Properties of GABAergic IPSPs activated by stimulation of the PGN
Local activation of neurons in the PGN with the pressure-pulse application of glutamate activated a compound IPSP in thalamocortical cells at relatively short latency (25–50 msec) followed by the repetitive barrages of IPSPs representative of the generation of a spindle wave (Fig. 2A). Activation of these IPSPs while the thalamocortical cell was depolarized or hyperpolarized to different membrane potentials (after the block of GABAB receptors with the local application of CGP 35348; 2 mm in micropipette) revealed that the presumed monosynaptic IPSPs exhibited a reversal potential of −83.3 ± 3.6 mV (n = 9), which was the same as the reversal potential for the spindle wave-associated IPSPs (−83.4 ± 3.0 mV;n = 6) (Fig. 2A). Local application of bicuculline methiodide (0.2–0.4 mm in micropipette;n = 34), picrotoxin (0.5 mm in pipette;n = 9), or SR 95531 (0.5 mm in pipette;n = 2) to the region of the recorded thalamocortical cell abolished these evoked IPSPs, indicating that they were mediated by GABAA receptors (Fig. 2A). Increasing the duration of the glutamate application in the PGN, after the abolition of these IPSPs with bicuculline or picrotoxin and the washout of CGP35348, resulted in the activation of a slow IPSP (Fig.2B). This IPSP reversed at an average membrane potential of −96.7 ± 7.7 mV (n = 8) and was blocked by local application of CGP 35348 (2 mm in micropipette), indicating that it was mediated by GABABreceptors.
These results suggest that the functional activation of GABAA and GABAB receptors in thalamocortical cells may require different intensities of discharge in PGN cells, which is regulated not only by the activity of excitatory afferents but also by the degree of inhibition from neighboring PGN neurons (Bal et al., 1995b; Sanchez-Vives et al., 1997). Here we examined further the functional effect of block of GABAA receptors in the PGN and LGNd on the generation of IPSPs in thalamocortical cells.
Gradual increases in the duration of glutamate application to the PGN resulted in steady increases in the peak amplitude and duration of evoked IPSP barrages in thalamocortical cells (Fig.3A). Comparing the evoked and spindle-associated IPSPs before and after local application of bicuculline (200–400 μm in micropipette) to lamina A1 revealed that both IPSPs were mediated largely through the activation of GABAA receptors (Fig. 3A,B). After the block of GABAA receptors, a slow IPSP remained. These slow IPSPs were blocked by local application of the GABAB antagonist CGP35348 (n = 8), indicating that they were mediated by GABAB receptors (see Fig. 5F,bottom). After the local blockade of GABAAreceptors at the recorded thalamocortical cell (n = 45), the evoked IPSPs lasted only a few cycles and did not generate the rhythmic low threshold Ca2+ spikes typical of the slow oscillation that occurs after bath application of GABAA antagonists (Fig. 3B). However, additional local application of bicuculline to the PGN in the region of the glutamate-applying electrode, and subsequent block of PGN lateral inhibition (Sanchez-Vives et al., 1997), resulted in the enhancement of evoked IPSPs and the development of bicuculline-induced slowed oscillations (Fig. 3C) (n = 21).
Examination of the effects of bicuculline application in the PGN before application of this antagonist in the LGNd revealed similar results. Local application of bicuculline (200–400 μm in micropipette) to the PGN, near the site of glutamate application, enhanced the evoked IPSPs in thalamocortical cells (n = 38) (Figs. 4A,B,5G). This enhancement was often most prominent at the lowest doses of glutamate application in the PGN and became less apparent, although still present, with large applications of glutamate and large evoked IPSPs. Presumably this decreased enhancement results from a “ceiling effect” owing in part to the strong activation of PGN cells. The blockade of GABAA receptors in the PGN did not result in the generation of the bicuculline-induced slow oscillation (Fig. 4B), although the additional application of bicuculline to lamina A1 did result in the occurrence of the slowed oscillation (Fig. 4C). Together, these results suggest that the activation of GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs in thalamocortical neurons that are large enough to result in the generation of rebound low threshold Ca2+ spikes requires the strong activation of the PGN and that GABAAreceptors must be blocked in both the PGN and the LGNd for the generation of the bicuculline-induced slowed oscillation.
Additional support of this hypothesis was obtained with the bath application of CGP35348 to block GABAB receptors, followed by the local application of bicuculline (Fig.5). Activation of the PGN with local application of glutamate after the bath application of the GABAB antagonist CGP35348 (1 mm) resulted in the activation of purely GABAA receptor-mediated IPSPs and spindle waves in thalamocortical cells (Fig. 5A). Local application of bicuculline (400 μm in micropipette) to the PGN increased the amplitude of the initial evoked IPSP (Fig.5B,G). Subsequent application of bicuculline to the region of the recorded thalamocortical cell completely blocked these IPSPs, confirming that they were mediated by GABAA receptors (Fig.5C).
Removal of the bicuculline-applying pipette as well as the removal of CGP35348 from the bath reinstated evoked spindle oscillations (Fig. 5D). Subsequent application of bicuculline to both the PGN and lamina A1 transformed the evoked spindle waves into the bicuculline-induced slowed oscillation (Fig.5E), which was subsequently blocked with local application of CGP35348 (2 mm in micropipette) to lamina A1, confirming that it is mediated through the activation of GABABreceptors (Fig. 5F).
These results confirm that the activation of the PGN can activate both GABAA and GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs and suggest that the activation of large GABAB IPSPs may require a more intense release of GABA than for GABAAIPSPs. We examined this possibility in several cells (n= 7) by generating input–output relationships for the fast IPSPs and bicuculline-resistance slow IPSPs (Fig.6). Incremental increases in the duration of the glutamate application in the PGN resulted in incremental increases in both the fast IPSPs and bicuculline-resistant slow IPSPs (Fig. 6A). Plotting the peak amplitude of the fast and slow IPSPs before and after application of bicuculline revealed the input–output relations of these inhibitory potentials (Fig.6Ac,Ad). The amplitude of the fast, GABAAreceptor-mediated IPSP was measured in normal bathing solution and therefore could contain a small contribution from the activation of GABAB receptors. However, this contribution is likely to be relatively small because GABAB IPSPs have a long latency (e.g., 25–50 msec) to onset, and the fast IPSPs peak relatively quickly (compare Fig. 6Aa,Ab). Examining the input–output relationship of the fast GABAA and slow GABAB IPSPs revealed that both exhibited a similar threshold for activation in 6 of 8 cells tested (Fig. 6), whereas in the remaining two cells, at the lowest levels of glutamate application in the PGN, a fast IPSP was evoked that was completely blocked by application of bicuculline (not shown). The activation of a GABAB receptor-mediated IPSP without activation of a GABAA receptor-mediated IPSP was never observed in normal solution. The most notable difference between the two responses was the relationship between their amplitudes and the duration of glutamate application (Fig. 6). Increasing the application of glutamate in the PGN increased the amplitude of both the fast and slow IPSPs, although the fast IPSP reached a large amplitude as well as obtained its maximal amplitude with lower doses of glutamate than did the slow IPSP (Fig.6A). These results suggest that for a given amplitude, IPSPs mediated through GABAB receptors require a more intense release of GABA than do those mediated by GABAA receptors.
We performed similar input–output relationships for the response to exogenous application of GABA to thalamocortical neurons (n = 12) (Fig. 6B). In normal bathing medium, the local application of GABA often evoked a complex of hyperpolarizing and depolarizing postsynaptic responses (n = 28; not shown). Lowering the GABA-applying pipette closer to the depth of the recording electrode, which presumably was located in the soma, typically reduced or even abolished the depolarizing GABA response (Crunelli et al., 1988). The depolarizing GABA responses were also blocked by local application of acetazolamide (200 μm in micropipette), indicating that they represent GABA-mediated increases in bicarbonate conductance (Staley et al., 1995). We have not yet observed similar depolarizing responses in the IPSPs induced by the activation of PGN neurons, despite intense activation of these cells with local application of glutamate. No changes in these IPSPs were observed when acetazolamide was applied to thalamocortical cells.
In the presence of acetazolamide, local application of increasing doses of GABA resulted in incremental increases in the activation of two distinct phases of hyperpolarization (Fig. 6Bb). Local application of the GABAA channel blocker picrotoxin (500 μm in micropipette) abolished the initial fast phase of these hyperpolarizing GABA responses, leaving a presumed GABAB receptor-mediated hyperpolarization (Fig.6Bc). Subtracting the responses obtained after picrotoxin application from those obtained before revealed the amplitude and time course of the GABAA receptor-mediated component (not shown). Comparing the presumed GABAB and GABAA components revealed that at all but the lowest level of GABA application, both of these receptors are activated. At the threshold level of GABA application, a small (∼1 mV) hyperpolarization is evoked that is completely blocked by local application of picrotoxin (Fig. 6B).
Presynaptic inhibition of GABA release in LGNd
Previous investigations of GABAergic synapses have consistently revealed that the activation of presynaptic GABAB receptors results in the inhibition of GABA release (for review, see Bowery, 1989). Similarly, we found that the local application of the GABAB agonist baclofen (100–200 μm in micropipette) resulted in a pronounced reduction in the amplitude of evoked IPSPs in thalamocortical neurons (n = 10) (Fig.7A). In addition, the local application of baclofen also increased the apparent input conductance by ∼20–30%, although this was too small to explain the ∼80% decrease in amplitude of the evoked IPSPs (Fig. 7). The local application of the GABAB receptor antagonist CGP35348 (2 mm in micropipette) reversed these effects of baclofen. Both the reduction in evoked IPSP amplitude as well as the hyperpolarization and increase in membrane conductance returned to normal (Fig. 7A). Interestingly, the local application of baclofen to the region of the PGN activated with glutamate application only slightly reduced or had no effect on the amplitude and duration of evoked IPSPs in thalamocortical cells (Fig. 7B). In the accompanying paper (Sanchez-Vives et al., 1997), we demonstrate that the activation of GABAB receptors hyperpolarizes perigeniculate neurons. Presumably the glutamate-induced depolarization in PGN cells, which probably was facilitated by the low threshold Ca2+ current, was large enough to overcome this baclofen-induced hyperpolarization.
To control for the indirect decrement of GABAergic IPSPs through changes in postsynaptic membrane conductance, inhibitory postsynaptic currents were recorded with single-electrode voltage clamp in thalamocortical neurons with electrodes filled with 2 mCsAc to reduce K+ conductances (n = 4) (Fig. 8). Under these conditions, the local application of baclofen to lamina A1 of the LGNd resulted in a small outward current and inhibited both glutamate-evoked and spindle-associated IPSCs in thalamocortical cells (Fig.8A,B), without affecting the intensity of extracellularly recorded glutamate-evoked discharge in the PGN (Fig.8).
The possibility that the activation of GABAB receptors occurs endogenously and reduces the amplitude of IPSPs in thalamocortical cells was examined by applying CGP35348 to lamina A while recording evoked or spindle wave-associated IPSPs or IPSCs (n = 6) (Fig. 9). Local application of CGP35348 (2 mm in micropipette) enhanced the amplitude of evoked IPSPs (Fig. 9A,B) as well as evoked IPSCs (Fig. 9C,D). In addition, the local application of CGP35348 also enhanced spindle wave-associated IPSCs (Fig. 9). In one cell that exhibited a large number of spontaneous IPSCs, application of CGP35348 also increased the amplitude of these spontaneous events (Fig.9E–G).
DISCUSSION
Investigations into the inhibitory influence of the GABAergic neurons of the thalamic reticular or perigeniculate nuclei have repeatedly demonstrated that these cells activate GABAAreceptors on thalamocortical cells (Thomson, 1988; Shosaku et al., 1989; Huguenard and Prince, 1994; Warren et al., 1994; Ulrich and Huguenard, 1995). The activation of Cl−-dependent IPSPs and/or GABAA receptors is particularly prominent and important to the generation of spindle waves during slow wave sleep (Andersen and Sears, 1964; Deschênes et al., 1984; Bal et al., 1995a,b). Burst firing in thalamic reticular and perigeniculate neurons activates IPSPs in thalamocortical cells that are of sufficient amplitude and duration to result in the generation of rebound low threshold Ca2+ spikes. The generation of these Ca2+ spikes leads to the activation of a burst of action potentials in thalamocortical cells and subsequently the excitation once again of the thalamic reticular/perigeniculate neurons (Steriade et al., 1993; Bal et al., 1995a,b). Surprisingly, the antagonism of GABAB receptors in vitro does not have marked effects on the generation of spindle waves, suggesting that the activation of these receptors is not essential to the generation of this normal sleep rhythm (Bal et al., 1995a,b) (see also Fig. 5).
Additional evidence, however, suggests that the strong activation of thalamic reticular/perigeniculate GABAergic neurons may also generate slow K+-mediated IPSPs through binding to GABAB receptors (Huguenard and Prince, 1994; Bal et al., 1995a,b; Kim et al., 1997) and that the activation of GABABreceptors may be particularly important to the generation of some forms of generalized spike-and-wave seizures (Hosford et al., 1992; Snead, 1992). In particular, the bath application of the GABAAreceptor antagonist bicuculline transforms normal spindle wavesin vitro into slow, robust 1–4 Hz oscillations in which perigeniculate and thalamocortical neurons generate strong repetitive bursts of action potentials (Bal et al., 1995a,b). We have suggested previously that a key event in this transformation is the generation of strong bursts of action potentials in PGN neurons owing to disinhibition of these cells from one another (von Krosigk et al., 1993; Bal et al., 1995a,b).
Here we demonstrate that the PGN can inhibit thalamocortical cells of the ferret LGNd and other perigeniculate cells (Sanchez-Vives et al., 1997) through the activation of both GABAA and GABAB receptors. Functionally, the activation of GABAA receptors after the generation of burst firing in even a single well connected PGN neuron is capable of generating a rebound low threshold Ca2+ spike and burst of action potentials in thalamocortical cells (Bal et al., 1995b; Kim et al., 1995, 1997; Bal and McCormick, 1996). This does not seem to be the case for the activation of GABAB receptors (Kim et al., 1997). This result confirms our previous suggestion that the activation of the bicuculline-induced 2–4 Hz oscillation requires the generation of synchronized prolonged burst discharges in a number of PGN neurons (Bal et al., 1995a,b). However, our present results also indicate that the disinhibition of PGN cells from one another is not sufficient for the generation of this abnormal activity.
We found that GABAA receptors must be blocked in both the PGN and the A-laminae for the bicuculline-induced slowed activity to be generated. Block of GABAA receptors in the A-laminae alone resulted in the abolition of spindle waves in that region without the appearance of the bicuculline-induced slow oscillation. This result is as expected, because the IPSPs occurring during the generation of spindle waves are mediated largely through the activation of GABAA receptors. Block of GABAA receptors in the PGN alone, however, also did not result in the generation of the bicuculline-induced slowed oscillation, but rather resulted in an enhancement of the amplitude and duration of IPSPs that result after activation of the PGN. This enhancement did not disrupt the generation of spindle waves. Only when GABAA receptors were subsequently blocked in the A-laminae were the bicuculline-induced slowed oscillations apparent (Fig. 4). This result suggests that the presence of strong GABAA receptor-mediated components in the PGN-evoked IPSPs in thalamocortical cells prevents the generation of the bicuculline-induced slowed oscillation, even after the block of GABAA receptors in the PGN. Presumably, these GABAA IPSPs continue to generate rebound low threshold Ca2+ spikes at a latency that is approximately normal (e.g., 100–160 msec) (Bal et al., 1995a,b). With the block of GABAA receptors at the thalamocortical cells, only the slow GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs remains. The prolonged time course (250–450 msec) of these IPSPs then forces the interaction between the PGN and thalamocortical cells to slow to ∼2–4 Hz, which matches the intrinsic frequency with which single thalamocortical cells prefer to generate rhythmic low threshold Ca2+spikes (McCormick and Pape, 1990). We propose that the slowing of the network oscillation to one that matches the intrinsic frequencies of thalamocortical cells is a key event that leads to the generation of this “paroxysmal” activity.
Cellular mechanisms for activation of GABAB receptors
Our results, along with previous investigations in the hippocampus, suggest that the activation of GABAB receptors to a sufficient degree to initiate a detectable IPSP requires the strong discharge of GABAergic neurons (Thompson and Gähwiler, 1992; Isaacson et al., 1993), although it has also been suggested that the GABAergic neurons that activate GABAA and GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs represent distinct populations of interneurons (Lacaille and Schwartzkroin, 1988; Sugita et al., 1992). Previous dual intracellular recordings in the hippocampus, or examination of spontaneous unitary IPSPs, have demonstrated inhibitory potentials that seem to be mediated entirely by GABAA receptors (Miles, 1990; Otis and Mody, 1992; Buhl et al., 1994; Debanne et al., 1995). However, strong or repetitive stimulation, the reduction of GABA uptake, or the enhancement of transmitter release results in the additional activation of GABAB receptors (Otis and Mody, 1992; Isaacson et al., 1993). Similarly, we have found with dual intracellular recordings that activation of bursts or trains of action potentials in single PGN neurons preferentially activates GABAA receptor-mediated IPSPs in thalamocortical cells, although the application of the GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline can leave a small (<2 mV) residual IPSP that is mediated by GABAB receptors (Kim et al., 1997). Together with the present results, these findings suggest that the activation of a GABAB IPSP that is large enough to generate a rebound low threshold Ca2+spike requires the simultaneous release of GABA from a number of presynaptic GABAergic neurons.
There are numerous reasons why the release of GABA from a single presynaptic terminal may generate a smaller GABAB than GABAA receptor-mediated IPSP or IPSC, including differences in driving force, density, sensitivity, and distribution of receptors or channels, and properties of second messenger systems. Recent investigation of GABAB receptors on CA3 pyramidal cells have revealed that GABAB receptor-mediated increases in K+ conductance actually exhibit a lower EC50 (1.6 μm) than do GABAAreceptor-mediated increases in Cl− conductance (25 μm) (Sodickson and Bean, 1996). Here we demonstrated that increasing the duration of application of a constant concentration of GABA (0.5 mm) activated GABAA and GABAB receptors with approximately the same threshold in most cells, and in the remaining neurons GABAA responses exhibited a slightly lower threshold than GABAB responses (Fig. 5). One possible explanation for this apparent discrepancy is that in our current-clamp recordings GABAAreceptor-mediated responses are more easily detected owing to their higher maximal amplitude. Another is that detectable GABAAresponses were activated by the local, high concentration of GABA near the tip of the application micropipette, whereas detectable GABAB responses required slightly larger applications over a larger portion of the recorded neuron. Given that GABABreceptor-mediated responses have a substantially lower EC50than GABAA receptor-mediated responses, the requirement for more intense activation of presynaptic GABAergic neurons to activate GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs argues strongly for an extrasynaptic location of these receptors (Sodickson and Bean, 1996), as has been suggested previously (Thompson and Gähwiler, 1992;Isaacson et al., 1993; Mody et al., 1994).
Activation of GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs in thalamocortical neurons is associated with a delay of ∼20–50 msec (Kim et al., 1997), which is similar to previous findings (Alger, 1984;Crunelli et al., 1988; Soltesz et al., 1989; Otis et al., 1993). This delay is likely to result from the multistep process of GABAB receptor to channel coupling, including GDP/GTP exchange, diffusion of activated subunits of the G-protein, and channel activation by these subunits (Destexhe and Sejnowski, 1995; Sodickson and Bean, 1996). Similar delays in the G-protein-mediated activation of K+ currents have been observed, such as the response of submucosus plexus neurons to noradrenaline (Suprenant and North, 1988) and the response of myocytes to acetylcholine (Inomata et al., 1989).
In addition to postsynaptic GABAB receptors, our results together with previous studies (Emri et al., 1996; Ulrich and Huguenard, 1996; Le Feuvre et al., 1997) demonstrate that GABAB receptors are also present on the presynaptic terminals of both GABAergic neurons as well as excitatory afferents in the thalamus and that the activation of these receptors results in the reduction of neurotransmitter release. In addition, these studies also demonstrate that there is sufficient extracellular GABA to result in a tonic decrease in amplitude in PGN-evoked IPSPs and optic tract-evoked EPSPs, as well as the frequency of occurrence of spontaneous IPSPs (Emri et al., 1996; Le Feuvre et al., 1997) (Fig. 9). These results suggest that the activation of presynaptic GABAB receptors may play an important role in the regulation of intrathalamic activity. Indeed, Ulrich and Huguenard (1996) have demonstrated that repetitive activation of thalamic reticular inputs to thalamocortical neurons results in paired pulse inhibition of IPSP amplitude through the activation of GABAB receptors. One attractive hypothesis is that the activation of presynaptic GABAB receptors may be responsible, at least in part, for the “waning” or cessation of intrathalamic oscillations such as spindle waves. However, we have demonstrated previously that the block of GABAB receptors is not associated with a block of the waning of spindle waves (Bal et al., 1995a,b) and that the block of Ih with the local application of Cs+ results in the occurrence of continuous and repetitive IPSPs, despite the lack of block of GABAB receptors (Bal and McCormick, 1996). Therefore, although a clear functional role for postsynaptic GABABreceptors in the generation of pathological forms of activity can be hypothesized, a role for the activation of presynaptic GABAB receptors, other than to continuously regulate GABA release, is not yet clear.
Footnotes
This research was supported by grants from National Institutes of Health, the Klingenstein Fund, and the Human Frontier Science Program. M.V.S.-V. was a fellow of NATO and the Epilepsy Foundation of America. We thank Uhnoh Kim, Thierry Bal, and Alain Destexhe for helpful discussions.
Additional information concerning this and related research may be obtained athttp://info.med.yale.edu/neurobio/mccormick/mccormick.html.
Correspondence should be addressed to David A. McCormick, Section of Neurobiology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, Connecticut 06510.