Abstract
Perisomatic inhibitory innervation of all neuron types profoundly affects their firing characteristics and vulnerability. In this study we examined the postsynaptic targets of perisomatic inhibitory cells in the hilar region of the dentate gyrus where the proportion of potential target cells (excitatory mossy cells and inhibitory interneurons) is approximately equal. Both cholecystokinin (CCK)- and parvalbumin-immunoreactive basket cells formed multiple contacts on the somata and proximal dendrites of mossy cells. Unexpectedly, however, perisomatic inhibitory terminals arriving from these cell types largely ignored hilar GABAergic cell populations. Eighty-ninety percent of various GABAergic neurons including other CCK-containing basket cells received no input from CCK-positive terminals. Parvalbumin-containing cells sometimes innervated each other but avoided 75% of other GABAergic cells. Overall, a single mossy cell received 40 times more CCK-immunoreactive terminals and 15 times more parvalbumin-positive terminals onto its soma than the cell body of an average hilar GABAergic cell. In contrast to the pronounced target selectivity in the hilar region, CCK- and parvalbumin-positive neurons innervated each other via collaterals in stratum granulosum and moleculare.
Our observations indicate that the inhibitory control in the hilar region is qualitatively different from other cortical areas at both the network level and the level of single neurons. The paucity of perisomatic innervation of hilar interneurons should have profound consequences on their action potential generation and on their ensemble behavior. These findings may help explain the unique physiological patterns observed in the hilus and the selective vulnerability of the hilar cell population in various pathophysiological conditions.
The hilar region is in a critical position to control information flow from the entorhinal cortex to the hippocampus. Together with the dentate gyrus, it acts as a “gate” mechanism to limit the excitatory influences of the entorhinal input (Winson and Abzug 1978; Moser, 1996). The hilus is also one of the most vulnerable brain regions to various pathophysiological conditions, including epilepsy, brain trauma, and ischemia (Dam, 1980; Sloviter, 1987; Schmidt-Kastner and Freund, 1991; Lowenstein et al., 1992;Maglóczky and Freund, 1993). Neuronal loss in the hilar region is believed to be a trigger for the aberrant sprouting of mossy fibers (Tauck and Nadler, 1985).
Physiological patterns of neuronal activity depend on a critical balance of excitation and inhibition. In this respect, the hilar region has a special status. Its population consists of approximately equal proportions of principal cells, the so-called “mossy” cells (Amaral, 1978), and inhibitory interneurons (Seress and Ribak, 1983;Buckmaster and Jongen-Relo, 1999). This arrangement is quite distinct from other cortical areas, where principal cells substantially outnumber interneurons (Freund and Buzsáki, 1996). Mossy cells form a relatively homogeneous cell population, but hilar interneurons display remarkable morphological, neurochemical, and electrophysiological heterogeneity (Amaral, 1978; Han et al., 1993;Mott et al., 1997; Sı́k et al., 1997; Lubke et al., 1998). The main excitatory input of the hilus derives from the mossy fibers of granule cells (Blackstad and Kjaerheim, 1961; Amaral and Dent, 1981;Claiborne et al., 1986). Large mossy terminals innervate excitatory mossy cells (Ribak et al., 1985; Claiborne et al., 1986; Frotscher et al., 1991), whereas the more numerous small terminal types of the mossy fibers contact a larger number of interneurons (Acsády et al., 1998).
In contrast to excitatory inputs, GABAergic afferents to various hilar cell types have not been studied extensively (Hájos et al., 1996). In the hippocampus, the perisomatic region of excitatory and inhibitory cells is innervated by numerous GABAergic terminals (Freund and Buzsáki, 1996; Gulyás et al., 1999) that significantly affect firing characteristics. Perisomatic inhibition is critical in the timing of the action potential (Miles et al., 1996) and in the generation of various network rhythmic activities, including gamma frequency oscillations (Buzsáki and Chrobak, 1995; Cobb et al., 1995; Sı́k et al., 1995; Whittington et al., 1995; Ylinen et al., 1995; Wang and Buzsáki, 1996; Tóth et al., 1997a;Penttonen et al., 1998). Because the power of gamma oscillation is largest in the hilar region in vivo (Buzsáki et al., 1983; Bragin et al., 1995a), the issue of perisomatic inhibition in the hilus is of particular interest.
In the dentate gyrus and hippocampal CA1–CA3 regions with compact cell layers, somatic and proximal dendritic inhibition derives from two main basket cell populations (perisomatic inhibitory cells) that differ in their local and subcortical inputs, transmitter receptors, and neuropeptide content (Freund and Buzsáki, 1996). One of them contains parvalbumin (Kosaka et al., 1987), whereas the other colocalizes cholecystokinin (CCK) (Nunzi et al., 1985) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) (Acsády et al., 1996a,b). Although the hilar region also contains these neuron types, it is not known whether they also target the perisomatic domain of mossy cells and interneurons. In the present study we aimed to identify the postsynaptic targets of parvalbumin- and CCK-positive interneurons in the hilar region, with special reference to the perisomatic regions of the innervated cells.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Twenty-three adult male Wistar rats (Charles River, Budapest, Hungary) were used. All experimental procedures were performed according to the ethical guidelines of the Institute of Experimental Medicine, Hungarian Academy of Sciences and approved by the Ethical Committee. Sixteen rats were perfused under deep Equithesin (chlornembutal, 0.3 ml/100 gm) anesthesia without prior surgery. Three different fixatives were used to optimize the immunostaining with various antibodies and their combinations. In eight rats the physiological saline (1 min) was followed by 400 ml of fixative containing 0.05% glutaraldehyde, 4% paraformaldehyde, and 0.2% picric acid in 0.1 m phosphate buffer (PB; pH 7.4) for 30 min (fixative A, our routine fixation protocol). For CCK immunostaining, five rats were perfused with 80 ml fixative containing 3.75% acrolein and 2% paraformaldehyde (5 min) in 0.1 mPB and then with 300 ml 2% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 m PB (fixative B). In three rats the saline was followed by 400 ml of fixative containing 2% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 m PB, pH 7.4, for 30 min (fixative C, “weak fixation” protocol for parvalbumin immunostaining).
To enhance immunostaining for calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) (Freund et al., 1997), in three additional rats a total volume of 8–15 μl of colchicine (1 mg/in 100 μl saline) was injected by pressure through a glass capillary bilaterally into the lateral ventricle under deep Equithesin anesthesia (chlornembutal, 0.3 ml/100 gm). The coordinates were the following: 1.0–1.2 mm posterior to the Bregma, 1.5–1.8 mm lateral to the sagittal sinus, and 3.0–3.5 mm below the pial surface. One day after the operation the animals were anesthetized again with Equithesin and perfused with fixative A.
In four rats, fimbria-fornix lesion (FFX) was made to remove GABAergic septohippocampal afferents that contain parvalbumin (Freund, 1989). The cingulate cortex (∼2 mm wide gap), the cingulate bundle, the corpus callosum, dorsal fornix, fimbria, and ventral hippocampal commissure were removed by aspiration. Four days after the operation the animals were anesthetized again with Equithesin and perfused with fixative A.
After perfusions, coronal or horizontal sections (60 μm thick) were cut from the hippocampus on a Vibratome, washed, cryoprotected in 30% sucrose in 0.1 m PB overnight, and freeze-thawed in an aluminum foil boat over liquid nitrogen. After extensive washes and treatment with 1% sodium borohydride for 30 min (only for animals fixed with fixative B), the sections were incubated in the following antisera. For single or as a first immunostaining, rabbit anti-CCK (1:6000) (Gulyás et al., 1990), rabbit anti-parvalbumin (1:4000) (Baimbridge and Miller, 1982), or mouse anti-parvalbumin (1:1000) (Sigma Immuno Chemicals, St. Louis MO), or rabbit anti-VIP (1:10000) (Gulyás et al., 1990) or rabbit anti-CGRP (1:10,000) (Baffi et al., 1992) or CB1 cannabinoid receptor (1:1000, Tsou et al., 1999) were used for 2 d at 4°C. In case of the FFX animals, the completeness of the lesion was checked using mouse anti-choline acetyl transferase antibody (CHAT; 1:300) (Cozzari et al., 1990). The specificity of the antibodies was studied extensively by the laboratories of origin. To enhance the penetration of the parvalbumin antibodies, some of the sections treated with parvalbumin antisera were incubated for 5 d at room temperature with 1% Triton X-100 (Sigma Immuno Chemicals), and NaN3 was added to the solution.
The second layer was biotinylated anti-rabbit IgG made in goat or biotinylated anti-mouse IgG made in horse (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) (1:300, 2 hr) followed by avidin biotinylated–horseradish peroxidase complex (ABC, Vector Laboratories) (1:300, 1.5 hr). All of the washes and dilutions of antisera were performed in 0.05 m Tris buffered saline (TBS), pH 7.4. The immunoperoxidase reaction was developed with ammonium nickel sulfate-intensified 3,3′-diaminobenzidine (DAB) as a chromogen. The sections were treated with 1% OsO4 in 0.1m PB for 45 min, dehydrated in ethanol and propylene oxide, and embedded in Durcupan (ACM, Fluka, Buchs, Switzerland). During dehydration the sections were treated with 1% uranyl acetate in 70% ethanol for 40 min.
For double immunostaining, the first immunoreaction was followed by one of the following antisera: rabbit anti-substance P receptor (SPR; 1:3000) (Shigemoto et al., 1993), rabbit anti-calretinin (1:5000) (Rogers, 1989), mouse anti-metabotropic glutamate receptor 1a (mGluR1a 1:10; gift of Dr. T. Görcs, Budapest, Hungary), rabbit anti-CGRP (1:10,000) (Baffi et al., 1992), anti-AMPA-type glutamate receptor 2/3 subunit (GluR2/3 1:100; Chemicon International Inc., Temecula, CA), or rabbit anti-parvalbumin (1:2000). The second layer was biotinylated anti-rabbit IgG made in goat or biotinylated anti-mouse IgG made in horse (Vector Laboratories) (1:300, 2 hr) followed by ABC (Vector Laboratories) (1.5 hr, 1:300). The immunoperoxidase reaction was developed with DAB as a chromogen, resulting in brown reaction product. Next the sections were treated with 1% OsO4(containing 7% glucose to preserve color difference) in 0.1m PB for 45 min, dehydrated, and embedded in Durcupan (ACM, Fluka) as above. Correlated light and electron microscopy were used in 75 cases to verify the synaptic specialization between the labeled profiles. The ultrathin sections containing the identified contacts were examined by a Hitachi-7100 electron microscope. In several cases, profiles labeled by DAB and DAB-Ni were identified on the basis of color difference in the light microscope and then examined in the electron microscope. In these correlated light and electron microscopic samples, we confirmed that the two types of end product can be distinguished also in the electron microscope; the DAB-Ni precipitate was always more electron dense and inhomogeneous compared with DAB (see Figs. 4, 7, 8).
The axons of CCK-immunoreactive cells were reconstructed with a drawing tube from serial 60-μm-thick sections immunostained for CCK. CCK immunoreactivity poorly visualizes dendritic processes. Thus, reconstruction of the dendritic trees of CCK-immunoreactive neurons was made from consecutive CCK–SPR double-stained sections, because SPR reveals the dendrites in great details, unlike CCK, and is expressed in all CCK-positive neurons (Acsády et al., 1997). Light microscopic quantification of terminals around cell bodies was performed using a 100× oil immersion objective. Only terminals attached to the somatic surface of the neurons were considered; contacts on proximal dendrites were excluded from this analysis.
To study the coexistence of CCK with VIP, the mirror technique ofKosaka et al. (1985) was used, extended to cells having one or several main dendrites cut on the surface as described previously (Acsády et al., 1996a). Thus, three consecutive sections were reacted for CCK–SPR, and the fourth was reacted for VIP. The continuation of cut dendrites was identified on the common surfaces of adjacent sections using capillaries as landmarks.
For fluorescent double immunostaining the following mixture of antisera was used: mouse anti-CCK (1:2000) (provided by Cure/Gastroenteric Biology Center, Los Angeles, CA) and rabbit anti-VIP (1:5000). The second layer was lissamine rhodamine-conjugated anti-mouse IgG made in goat (1:100) (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) and Alexa 488-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG made in goat (1:200) (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) or Cy3-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit (1:200) (Jackson ImmunoResearch) and FITC-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (1:100) (Jackson ImmunoResearch). The sections were examined in a ZeissAxioplan2 fluorescent microscope using Zeiss Filter set 10 (excitation BP 450–490; emission BP 515–565) and Filter set 15 (excitation BP 546/12; emission LP 590).
The color version of certain double immunostainings is available as supplementary information at the following worldwide web page:http://www.koki.hu/∼Acsády/hilus.
RESULTS
Axonal and dendritic arborization of CCK-immunoreactive interneurons
The distribution of CCK-immunoreactive neurons in the dentate gyrus was similar to that described earlier (Somogyi et al., 1984;Kosaka et al., 1985; Nunzi et al., 1985; Léránth and Frotscher, 1986; Sloviter and Nilaver, 1987). Briefly, round, ovoid, or fusiform CCK-containing cell bodies of various sizes were scattered in the hilus, whereas at the stratum (str.) granulosum/hilus border, CCK-positive cells had a pyramidal shape with apical dendritic tufts crossing str. moleculare. More than two-thirds of the CCK-positive neurons (68.7%, n = 147) were located in the hilus, whereas the rest belonged mainly to the type with pyramidal shape. As in earlier studies, two prominent types of CCK-immunoreactive fibers were observed. One of them displayed large axonal swellings and formed pericellular baskets around immunonegative cells in the hilus with up to 20–25 boutons per cell. The other fiber type arborized most extensively in the str. granulosum and in the supragranular layer with somewhat smaller terminals. CCK-positive varicosities were rare in the outer str. moleculare.
To examine whether the two CCK-positive fiber types originate from CCK-containing interneurons in the hilus and str. granulosum, respectively, we reconstructed the axonal and dendritic arbors of various CCK-immunoreactive neurons. Reconstructions of the dendritic trees were made from CCK–SPR double-stained sections because SPR reveals the dendrites in great detail and is expressed in all CCK-positive neurons (Acsády et al., 1997). CCK-immunoreactive neurons in the hilus were bitufted or multipolar and had four to six smooth, thick, primary dendrites that frequently ran parallel to str. granulosum and branched distally from the cell body (Fig. 1). The majority of the dendritic tree was confined to the hilus and only rarely reached str. radiatum of the CA3c region. Hilar CCK-positive cells always had one to three dendrites that penetrated str. granulosum and branched in str. moleculare (Fig. 1). The pyramidal-shaped CCK-positive cells in str. granulosum had a thick apical dendrite that split into several thin secondary dendrites on reaching the upper limit of str. granulosum and extended into str. moleculare with “graceful arch” (Amaral, 1978). Secondary dendrites frequently ran parallel with the laminar boundaries and remained in the inner third or str. granulosum. Most of these dendrites were very thin, occasionally beaded, and rarely ramified. In str. moleculare, thin, thread-like connections were occasionally observed among the dendrites of different CCK-positive cells similar to that described among other GABAergic cells (Katsumaru et al., 1988; Hájos et al., 1998). The basal dendrites of pyramidal-like CCK-positive cells were confined to the hilus.
Some small, round CCK-immunoreactive cells, mainly in str. moleculare, contain VIP (Hájos et al., 1996). Using double immunofluorescent methods, we established that the vast majority (118 of 124 neuron) of pyramidal-like (n = 40) and hilar fusiform (n = 78) CCK-immunoreactive cells are negative for VIP (data not shown), which was also confirmed using the mirror technique (n = 5) (Fig. 1). The remaining six cells as well as seven additional small, round CCK-positive neurons in str. moleculare colocalized VIP as shown in earlier studies (Hájos et al., 1996). In the CCK/VIP double immunofluorescent sections, brightly fluorescent double-immunostained fibers with large boutons were seen in str. granulosum but not in str. moleculare. As described before (Hájos et al.,. 1996) in VIP-immunostained material, these fibers occurred in patches rather than homogeneously covering the entire str. granulosum. CCK-positive fibers in the inner str. moleculare were homogeneous along the dentate gyrus and had smaller boutons. These features suggest that the majority of these fibers originate from the VIP-negative CCK-immunoreactive interneuron population.
The quality of immunostaining allowed us to reconstruct the proximal part of the axonal arbor of various CCK-immunoreactive cells. We found that there was no correlation between the location of CCK-positive somata and their projection pattern. Thus, the axons of hilar fusiform cells as well as those of pyramidal-shaped neurons were found to ramify either in str. moleculare or the hilus, or both (Fig. 1). In addition, the axon of a single cell was found to reach str. pyramidale of the CA3c region as well.
Our conclusion is that despite their morphological heterogeneity, CCK-immunoreactive cells appear to form a functionally homogeneous cell population in the hilar region. They pick up excitatory input via their dendrites in the hilus as well as in str. moleculare (although the ratio of granule cell vs entorhinal cortical input might be different for hilar vs pyramidal-like cells) and project to both of these regions.
Target selectivity of CCK-immunoreactive axon terminals in the hilus
Recent advances in chemical neuroanatomy identified several neurochemical markers that allow the visualization of distinct hilar cell types. In the present study, mossy cells were visualized by immunostaining for GluR2/3 and CGRP (Léránth et al., 1996;Freund et al., 1997). To characterize CCK input to the heterogeneous hilar GABAergic cell population, we selected antibodies that label interneurons from each of the three major interneuron types classified according to their axonal arborization pattern and target selectivity. Interneurons with axonal arbors innervating the perisomatic region of principal cells and other interneurons (perisomatic inhibitory cells) were visualized by parvalbumin and CCK. The best characterized hilar cell population, the somatostatin-containing hilar-perforant path-associated (HIPP) cells (Baude et al., 1993; Han et al., 1993;Katona et al., 1999a) that arborize in the dendritic region of granule cells (dendritic inhibitory cells), was visualized by mGluR1a. GABAergic cells that are specialized to contact other GABAergic cells (interneuron-selective cells) were labeled by an antiserum against calretinin (Freund and Buzsáki, 1996; Gulyás et al., 1996). In addition, a large hilar GABAergic cell population that includes a portion of perisomatic, dendritic, and interneuron selective inhibitory cells was identified by its SPR immunoreactivity (Acsády et al., 1997).
Innervation of mossy cells
The pattern of GluR2/3 immunostaining was identical to that described earlier (Léránth et al., 1996). Briefly, large ovoid or triangular cell bodies were labeled in the hilus together with the proximal segment of their two or three main dendrites. The principal cells of other hippocampal regions were also labeled. In CCK–GluR2/3 double-immunostained sections, CCK-immunoreactive terminals surrounded nearly all GluR2/3-immunoreactive neurons, their somata, and their proximal dendrites in a basket-like manner in the dorsal as well as in the ventral hippocampus (Figs.2A,3A). Arrays of CCK-positive terminals around GluR2/3-negative cell bodies were found only very rarely. The density of CCK-positive boutons around mossy cells never approached that around pyramidal cells in the CA1 and CA3 regions. The relatively low packing density of GluR2/3-immunoreactive cells and the reasonable penetration of the CCK-positive terminals allowed us to quantify the number of CCK-containing axonal swellings around mossy cell bodies at the light microscopic level. On average, 10.3 CCK-positive terminals contacted the somata of GluR2/3-positive neurons (n = 100 cell; SEM = 0.34). Because GluR2/3 immunostaining may label a few interneurons as well, we repeated the experiment using a more specific mossy cell marker, CGRP. CGRP immunostaining labeled large numbers of mossy cells mainly in the temporal part of the hippocampus in colchicine-treated animals together with their termination zone in the inner third of str. moleculare, as described previously (Freund et al., 1997). Colchicine treatment did not alter the distribution of CCK-positive elements. The CCK–CGRP double staining gave essentially the same results as CCK–GluR2/3 immunostaining. CCK-positive terminals contacted all CGRP-containing cell bodies and proximal dendrites. On average, CGRP-positive cell bodies were surrounded by 9.9 CCK-containing terminals (n = 50 cell bodies; SEM = 0.44). The number of CCK-positive contacts around CGRP- and GluR2/3-imunoreactive cells was statistically similar (t test, p> 0.1).
The CCK input to CGRP-positive neurons was confirmed using the mirror technique, which excludes potential false CGRP immunoreactivity in the postsynaptic targets. In adjacent CCK- and CGRP-immunostained sections, the other half of nearly all CGRP-containing cell bodies (30 of 34) identified in the CCK-immunostained sections was surrounded by CCK-positive terminals.
To reveal whether the light-microscopically identified CCK-positive terminals correspond to conventional synaptic boutons, representative samples of CCK-GluR2/3 (n = 21) and CCK-CGRP (n = 20) contacts were examined by correlated light and electron microscopy. All 41 terminals formed symmetric synaptic specializations on the somata or proximal dendrites of GluR2/3- or CGRP-labeled mossy cells (Fig. 4). The electron microscopic examination did not reveal more CCK-positive terminals than established by light microscopy. The size of the elongated boutons was highly variable, (minor axis 0.5–1 μm, major axis 1.5–3 μm), and they contained few mitochondria. Nearly all of them had long synaptic active zones that were often disjunct or perforated (Fig. 4). Occasionally the two halves of a perforated synapse were separated by a protrusion from the presynaptic terminal, which deeply invaginated into the postsynaptic profile as shown previously (Léránth and Frotscher, 1986).
Innervation of interneurons
First we examined the connections among CCK-containing basket cells. CCK-containing terminals arranged in a basket-like manner were never found around CCK-immunoreactive interneurons; 80% of the cells received no contacts at all (Fig. 3). At the light microscopic level, CCK-positive cells were surrounded, on average, by 0.2 terminals (n = 100 cell bodies; SEM = 0.05).
Subsequently we examined the CCK input to parvalbumin-positive perisomatic inhibitory cells and to mGluR1a-positive dendritic inhibitory cells (HIPP cells). The pattern of parvalbumin and mGluR1a immunostaining was similar to that published earlier (Kosaka et al., 1987; Baude et al., 1993). The dendrites and somata of large ovoid hilar neurons covered with long thin spines were labeled for mGluR1a. The entire dendritic arbor of mGluR1a-positive neurons was confined to the hilus. Parvalbumin immunostaining is described in detail in the next section.
In the case of CCK-parvalbumin double-immunostained sections, the staining was optimized for CCK-positive axons (see Materials and Methods); thus parvalbumin-positive boutons were weak on the surface and absent deeper than 2–3 μm below the surface of the sections. Basket-like multiple CCK-immunoreactive contacts were found only around parvalbumin-negative cell bodies (Fig.2B,C). Seventy-nine percent of the parvalbumin-containing interneurons received no CCK-positive terminals at all. In the rest of the cases the number of contacts was limited to one, two, or rarely three. Similarly, mGluR1a-containing interneurons were always avoided by perisomatic arrays of CCK-positive terminals (Fig. 2E). A small portion (10%) of the cells received one or two CCK terminals. The average number of CCK-positive boutons per cell body counted at the light microscopic level was 0.4 (n = 100; SEM = 0.09) in the case of parvalbumin-containing interneurons and 0.2 in the case of mGluR1a-containing interneurons (n = 100; SEM = 0.07). CCK-positive terminals on parvalbumin- or mGluR1a-immunoreactive dendrites were found only occasionally, and they always involved only a single terminal. To check the quality of CCK immunostaining in these sections, we counted the number of terminals around parvalbumin- and mGluR1a-negative cell bodies as well. The results showed that the number of terminals around immunonegative cell bodies (11.1,n = 21; SEM = 0.64) was similar to that established in the CCK–GluR2/3 and CCK–CGRP double-stained material.
The target selectivity of CCK-positive terminals in the hilus was further examined with double staining for calretinin and for SPR. Calretinin labels a GABAergic neuron population that selectively innervates other interneurons, the so-called interneuron-selective cells (Gulyás et al., 1996; Hájos et al., 1996), whereas SPR is expressed in a large, heterogeneous GABAergic cell population that includes all CCK-positive interneurons, more than two-thirds of the somatostatin-containing cells and one-third of the calretinin-containing cells and other uncharacterized interneuron populations (Acsády et al., 1997). The patterns of immunostaining for both antigens were identical to that published earlier. Numerous spiny and aspiny cells were revealed in the hilus. Double immunostaining for CCK and calretinin or for CCK and SPR demonstrated that similar to the other GABAergic cell populations, calretinin- or SPR-immunoreactive interneurons were not contacted by perisomatic arrays of CCK-positive terminals (Fig. 2D). The results were particularly striking in the case of CCK–SPR staining. Despite the fact that the hilus is relatively densely packed with SPR-containing interneurons, CCK-positive terminals always surrounded SPR-negative cell bodies (Fig. 3B).
An independent confirmation of the target selectivity of CCK-immunoreactive cells derived from CB1 cannabinoid receptor immunostaining. Previous studies demonstrated that 90% of the CCK-immunoreactive cells also contain CB1 (Katona et al., 1999b;Tsou et al., 1999), and similar to CCK immunostaining, large CB1-containing terminals form pericellular baskets in the hilus. In CB1–SPR and CB1–parvalbumin double-stained sections, large CB1-expressing terminals never surrounded parvalbumin- or SPR-immunoreactive interneurons (data not illustrated).
Our conclusion is that CCK-immunoreactive cells display a striking target selectivity in the hilar region. They innervate mossy cells with multiple perisomatic synaptic contacts but largely avoid hilar GABAergic neurons (Fig. 5).
Parvalbumin-immunoreactive neurons in the dentate gyrus
Parvalbumin-immunoreactive neurons were present in the hilus as well as in str. granulosum of the dentate gyrus as described previously (Kosaka et al., 1987; Nitsch et al., 1990; Ribak et al., 1990). For the purpose of the present study, a parvalbumin-immunoreactive neuron will be considered as hilar if its cell body is clearly situated outside str. granulosum. In our sample, 58% of the parvalbumin-positive cells was found in the hilus (n = 176), whereas the rest were embedded in the granule cell layer. Hilar parvalbumin-immunoreactive neurons had large multipolar cell bodies with three to five thick primary dendrites. Many cells had one or two main dendrites that crossed str. granulosum and reached the outer third of str. moleculare. Most of the parvalbumin-containing cells in str. granulosum had pyramidal-shaped or ovoid cell bodies. In contrast to pyramidal-like CCK-positive cells, the dendrites of these parvalbumin-positive neurons did not split into thin secondary dendrites at the border of str. granulosum and moleculare, but thick secondary branches were emitted sequentially and followed a straight course as shown previously (Sı́k et al., 1997).
In contrast to the numerous descriptions of parvalbumin-positive axons in all other regions of the hippocampus, parvalbumin-immunoreactive axons in the hilus have been described as “almost absent” (Nitsch et al., 1990) or “few if any” (Ribak et al., 1990) or “restricted to the granule cell layer” (Kosaka et al., 1987). Most probably this can be attributed to the poor penetration of parvalbumin antisera in this region, as well as the relative scarcity of innervation compared with the dense parvalbumin-positive fiber plexi in the somatic layers of other hippocampal subfields. By using weak fixation or prolonged treatment of the sections in Triton (see Materials and Methods) many axonal processes could be visualized in the hilus (Fig.6). Several of them crossed the hilus with only a few small en passant terminals, but in addition, parvalbumin-immunoreactive terminals arranged in a basket-like manner were also frequently found. In agreement with earlier studies, numerous parvalbumin-positive terminals were observed in str. granulosum and in the inner third of the molecular layer.
Postsynaptic targets of parvalbumin-positive axons in the hilar region
Only a limited number of antibodies work reliably under the conditions that allow the visualization of parvalbumin-positive axons. Thus, to examine the target selection of parvalbumin-positive cells, the GluR2/3 antibody was used to label mossy cells, whereas SPR immunostaining was used for the identification of interneurons. In addition, connections among parvalbumin-positive interneurons were also examined.
Innervation of mossy cells
In sections with reasonable penetration for parvalbumin, nearly all GluR2/3-immunoreactive neurons were found to be contacted by parvalbumin-positive terminals. The overwhelming majority of the cells received multiple innervation from 6–16 terminals attached to the somata and proximal dendrites of mossy cells (Fig.7) (for a color picture, see supplementary information on the website mentioned earlier). The average number of contacts around the cell bodies was 7.4 (n = 130; SEM = 0.30). It should be stressed that the density of parvalbumin-positive terminals around mossy cells was much weaker than around the principal cells in other hippocampal regions. A representative sample of 28 parvalbumin-positive terminals in close apposition to mossy cells was examined by correlated light and electron microscopy. The vast majority of them (23 of 28) established symmetric synaptic specializations (Fig. 7), whereas in the remaining cases, poor ultrastructure (because of the weak fixation protocol; see Materials and Methods) precluded the unequivocal characterization of the junctional membranes. The parvalbumin-containing terminals were round (diameter 1.5–2 μm), always contained mitochondria, and in contrast to CCK-positive boutons, established synapses with a single active zone that was rarely perforated.
Innervation of interneurons
The connections among hilar parvalbumin-containing cells were examined in sections with prolonged Triton treatment (see Materials and Methods). Parvalbumin-immunoreactive terminals were frequently seen around parvalbumin-positive interneurons in the hilus (Fig. 6). The number of terminals was highly variable and could not always be unequivocally determined. Some of the cells received up to 10–15 terminals, whereas others were contacted by only three to five parvalbumin-positive boutons or received no contacts at all. Parvalbumin-positive cells in the hilus were in sharp contrast to those within the granule cell layer where the somata and the thick proximal dendrites of parvalbumin-containing interneurons were frequently surrounded by large numbers of parvalbumin-positive terminals (Fig. 6), as described before in the pyramidal cell layer of other hippocampal subfields (Fukuda et al., 1996; Gulyás et al., 1999). Those parvalbumin-immunoreactive cells that received a higher number of parvalbumin-positive terminals were situated just below str. granulosum, whereas those with fewer contacts resided more often in the deep hilus. Parvalbumin-positive axons that contacted parvalbumin-positive cells in the hilus could frequently be traced back to the fiber plexus in str. granulosum (Fig. 6A).
Parvalbumin-immunoreactive terminals innervated other hilar interneuron types very rarely (Fig. 5). In sections double-immunostained for parvalbumin and SPR, most of the parvalbumin-positive terminals arranged in a basket-like manner were around SPR-negative neurons (see supplementary information). Most of the SPR-immunoreactive cells (75%, n = 104) received no parvalbumin contacts at all; only four received more than three. The average number of parvalbumin-immunoreactive terminals around SPR-positive interneurons was 0.54, which was statistically different (Mann–Whitney U test, p ≫ 0.01) from the number of parvalbumin-positive terminals contacting GluR2/3-expressing cells.
We also counted the number of parvalbumin-positive terminals around SPR-negative cell bodies. The average number of parvalbumin-immunoreactive terminals around SPR-negative cells (9.4,n = 28) was similar to the number of parvalbumin-positive terminals around mossy cells (see above).
Origin of parvalbumin-positive terminals in the dentate gyrus
In addition to the local collaterals of hippocampal parvalbumin-positive basket cells, the hippocampus receives parvalbumin-positive fibers from the medial septum (Freund, 1989), which selectively innervates interneurons; among them quite frequently are parvalbumin-positive cells (Freund and Antal, 1988). To exclude the possibility that the observed hilar parvalbumin–parvalbumin contacts derive in large part from this subcortical center, parvalbumin–parvalbumin contacts were examined 4 d after fimbria-fornix lesion. Examination of the lesion site revealed complete removal of the fiber tract together with the overlying cortex, including the cingulate bundle. Immunostaining for CHAT demonstrated a nearly complete loss of CHAT-immunoreactive fibers from the hippocampus.
Many parvalbumin–parvalbumin contacts were found also in the fimbria-fornix-transected animals (Fig. 6B). The majority of these terminals showed no signs of degeneration. Occasionally, swollen parvalbumin-containing terminals were encountered climbing along parvalbumin-positive dendrites or somata. To compare the innervation of parvalbumin-positive cells by parvalbumin-containing axons in the lesioned and control animals, we calculated the proportion of parvalbumin-immunoreactive cells that received multiple (three or more) parvalbumin-positive contacts. In the control animals, 79.3% of the parvalbumin-immunoreactive neurons were innervated by multiple parvalbumin-positive contacts (n= 92). This number did not change significantly after fimbria-fornix transection (72.3%, n = 101). Thus, our conclusion is that most of the parvalbumin-positive terminals in the hilus belong to local collaterals of parvalbumin-immunoreactive basket cells. It should be emphasized, however, that parvalbumin–parvalbumin contacts were far more abundant in other subregions of the hippocampus than in the hilus.
Interaction among interneurons in strata granulosum and moleculare
As described above, the str. granulosum and the innermost part of str. moleculare contain dense plexi of CCK- and parvalbumin-positive terminals. Because most of the hilar CCK- and parvalbumin-positive interneurons have dendrites in these layers, we examined the possibility that interneuron populations that largely avoid each other in the hilus may interact via their dendrites and axon collaterals in str. moleculare. In CCK–parvalbumin double-immunostained sections, CCK-positive terminals were frequently found to impinge on parvalbumin-immunoreactive dendrites, forming multiple contacts. Correlated light and electron microscopy revealed that in contrast to the hilus, small CCK-positive terminals (<0.5 μm) established symmetrical synapses on thick proximal parvalbumin-positive dendrites in the inner molecular layer (Fig.8) (for color version see supplementary information).
The interaction among CCK-positive neurons in the str. moleculare was examined in CCK–SPR double-immunostained sections to overcome the difficulties caused by the weak dendritic staining for CCK (see Materials and Methods). Because SPR immunostaining labels the dendrites and somata of all CCK-positive cells, the connections between CCK-positive terminals and CCK–SPR-positive dendrites could be examined and were found to be numerous. In addition to axo-dendritic and axo-somatic contacts, many CCK–SPR-positive dendrites frequently ran parallel to each other and formed multiple thin “bridges” with each other resembling rungs of a ladder similar to that described before in the case of m2-immunoreactive interneurons (Hájos et al., 1998) (data not shown).
In parvalbumin–SPR double-stained sections, many SPR-immunoreactive dendrites were contacted by parvalbumin-positive terminals, indicating an interaction among parvalbumin- and CCK-positive cells in str. moleculare. Parvalbumin-positive cells were found to innervate each other extensively in str. granulosum (Fig. 6C) as well as in str. moleculare, as described previously (Ribak et al., 1990). Thus, in contrast to the hilus, CCK- and parvalbumin-positive interneurons interact with each other in the inner molecular layer. HIPP cells have a dendritic tree restricted to the hilus. Thus, they could not be innervated by CCK- or parvalbumin-positive boutons in any other layer.
DISCUSSION
In this study we demonstrated that CCK- and parvalbumin-immunoreactive interneurons preferentially innervate mossy cells in the hilar region. The perisomatic innervation of hilar interneurons by these basket cells was found unusually sparse, whereas CCK- and parvalbumin-immunoreactive interneurons mutually innervated each other in strata granulosum and moleculare (Fig.9). These findings indicate that interactions among the GABAergic neuronal population in the hilus are qualitatively different from other cortical regions.
Identity and arborization of CCK- and parvalbumin-positive interneurons
Intracellular filling in vivo and in vitrodemonstrated that the precise laminar distribution of axon arbors within and adjacent to the granule cell layer is quite heterogeneous in the dentate gyrus. The axons of certain basket cells in str. granulosum are strictly confined to this layer (Han, 1994; Mott et al., 1997;Lubke et al., 1998), whereas the axons of other interneurons arborize in the inner third of str. moleculare [the “classical” hilar neurons with axon in the commisural and association pathway (HICAP) cells] (Han et al., 1993; Buckmaster and Schwartzkroin, 1995b; Mott et al., 1997). Many cells have been described that arborize in both of these layers to a varying degree (Han et al., 1993; Mott et al., 1997;Sı́k et al., 1997; Lubke et al., 1998; Mott et al., 1999). Furthermore, some interneurons innervate both the dentate gyrus and the hilus (Han et al., 1993; Scharfman, 1995; Sı́k et al., 1997;Lubke et al., 1998) and even the CA3c region (Sı́k et al., 1997). On the basis of these previous results and the present reconstruction of CCK-positive axons, we can conclude that hilar perisomatic inhibitory terminals originate from basket cells with cell bodies situated in both the hilus and str. granulosum. Furthermore, these interneurons probably have collaterals in str. granulosum and inner str. moleculare to varying degrees. The confirmation of these results requires the combination of intracellular filling and simultaneous determination of neurochemical marker content. Regarding the neurochemical identity of the cells, we demonstrated that unlike in other hippocampal regions (Acsády et al., 1996a), CCK-containing large hilar boutons in the hilus derive from CCK-positive cells that do not colocalize VIP.
Target selectivity of hilar basket cells
Neurons can be broadly categorized as target selective or nonselective. Target-selective neurons contact only certain cell types within the entire neuron population (Freund and Antal, 1988; Freund et al., 1990; Acsády et al., 1996b; Gulyás et al., 1996), whereas nonselective cells innervate their targets in a quasi-random manner, commensurate with the distribution probability of the available targets (Sı́k et al., 1993, 1995; Katona et al., 1999a). Basket cells in other hippocampal regions are non-target-selective cells because within their termination zone they innervate pyramidal cells or other basket- or non-basket-type interneurons with multiple contacts (Sı́k et al., 1995; Cobb et al., 1997). The unexpected finding of the present study was that the hilar collaterals of CCK- and parvalbumin-containing basket cells contacted predominantly excitatory mossy cells and largely avoided other GABAergic neurons. On average, a single mossy cell received input from approximately 40 times more CCK-positive terminals than a hilar GABAergic cell (10.33 and 0.26 CCK terminals for mossy cells and GABAergic cells, respectively). This number is lower (∼15 times) in the case of parvalbumin-positive terminals, but it is still in sharp contrast to the CA1 region where on their somatic region pyramidal cells are contacted by fewer GABAergic terminals than parvalbumin cells (Gulyás et al., 1999). This target selectivity cannot be explained by spatial factors because CCK- and parvalbumin-positive terminals as well as the various potential target cell types are distributed evenly in the hilus. In concert with our anatomical data in an in vivo study, the fast and slow IPSP conductance was found to be significantly smaller in hilar interneurons than in mossy cells, granule cells, or CA3 pyramidal cells (Buckmaster and Schwartzkroin, 1995a), suggesting limited inhibitory input. In contrast to the pronounced target selectivity in the hilar region, CCK- and parvalbumin-positive neurons innervated each other via collaterals in str. granulosum and moleculare. This laminar difference in target selectivity is likely to be associated with the differential processing of excitation arriving on hilar versus str. moleculare dendrites of the same neurons (see below).
Perisomatic inhibition and the vulnerability of hilar neurons
Several hypotheses were put forward to explain the sensitivity of hilar neurons to various insults that damage most of the cell classes of this region transiently or permanently. These included versions of the excitotoxicity hypothesis, the excessive amount of kainate or Ca-permeable AMPA and NMDA receptors, cytoskeletal features of the neurons, or weak inhibition to balance large excitatory events (Houser, 1991; Schmidt-Kastner and Freund, 1991; Choi, 1992; Scharfman, 1992;Maglóczky and Freund, 1995; Tóth et al., 1997b). Rigorous anatomical testing of this last possibility has not been performed so far. Several in vivo and in vitroelectrophysiological studies demonstrated GABA receptor-mediated evoked and spontaneous inhibitory responses in hilar mossy cells as well as in interneurons (Misgeld and Frotscher, 1986; Soltész et al., 1993;Soltész and Mody, 1994; Buckmaster and Schwartzkroin, 1995a;Sı́k et al., 1997), but others claimed that compared with granule cells and CA3 pyramidal neurons, hilar mossy cells receive only very weak inhibition (Livsey and Vicini, 1992; Scharfman, 1992, 1993). In the present study, both major basket cell types were shown to establish multiple perisomatic contacts around mossy cells. The number of terminals was estimated to be approximately 20. A single basket cell even via three synaptic boutons is able to block action potential initiation in a postsynaptic pyramidal cell in vitro (Miles et al., 1996). The powerful effect of perisomatic inhibitory synapses makes it unlikely that total lack of inhibition is a major factor in the sensitivity of mossy cells. However, it should be pointed out that compared with other hippocampal regions, the density of both CCK- and parvalbumin-positive terminals around mossy cells was always far below that around pyramidal or granule cells. On the other hand, in the case of hilar interneurons, it is tempting to speculate that the paucity of perisomatic inhibition contributes to the loss of hilar GABAergic cells under pathological conditions.
Functional implications
Perisomatic inhibition is believed to be an important control mechanism for the temporal adjustment of the action potential (Lytton and Sejnowski, 1991; Buzsáki and Chrobak, 1995). From this perspective, one may predict that the timing of action potentials in mossy cells and especially hilar interneurons is less precise than in other parts of the hippocampus. Furthermore, mutual innervation of basket cells has been implicated in the generation of various cortical rhythms, including gamma oscillations (Bragin et al., 1995a;Buzsáki and Chrobak, 1995; Whittington et al., 1995). Indeed, computer modeling efforts suggest that a certain critical amount of innervation in an inhibitory network is critical for the emergence of the gamma rhythm (Whittington et al., 1995; Wang and Buzsáki, 1996). From this theoretical and experimental background, the low incidence of mutual innervation of the hilar interneuron population is especially unexpected because the power of gamma oscillation in the hippocampus is highest in the hilar region (Buzsáki et al., 1983;Bragin et al., 1995a). However, it should be emphasized that extracellular field activity in the hilus is caused mostly by the transmembrane currents generated by the numerous and laminarly arranged granule cells. The resolution of extracellular methods is not sufficient to separate fields generated by the granule cells and neurons in the hilus proper. Nevertheless, the current findings suggest that the different anatomical wiring of the hilar region should contribute to the electrical patterns of this region in a unique way.
Our present results point to an unusual asymmetry in the inhibitory control of various excitatory inputs to hilar interneurons (Fig. 9). Because perisomatic inhibitory cells largely ignore other GABAergic cells in the hilus, the mossy fiber input is able to exert a massive excitatory action on postsynaptic interneurons without the restraining influence of inhibition mediated by two major perisomatic inhibitory cell populations. Excitatory cortical and associational inputs to dentate interneurons, however, will always be under the control of feed-forward and feedback inhibition because GABAergic cells interact in str. granulosum and str. moleculare. Thus, recruitment of inhibition by granule cells is facilitated by two wiring characteristics. First, granule cells innervate more inhibitory than excitatory neurons (Acsády et al., 1998); second, innervation of hilar interneurons by basket cells is exceptionally sparse (present study). This is in sharp contrast to other cortical regions where principal cells innervate 8–10 times fewer interneurons than principal cells and the basket cells are interconnected (Sı́k et al., 1993). The unique wiring system of the hilar region probably results in one of the strongest inhibitory controls of principal cells in cortical systems. This effect is most evident during dentate spikes when most of the hilar GABAergic cells are strongly activated, whereas most mossy cells and pyramidal cells reduce their firing rate (Bragin et al., 1995b;Sı́k et al., 1997). Strong inhibitory action is necessary to produce sparse, discrete neuronal coding. Indeed, the dentate gyrus appears to transform the noisy spatial signal of the entorhinal cortex (Quirk et al., 1992) into the most discrete spatial code in the hippocampal formation, and granule cells have the lowest firing rate outside their preferred spatial field (Jung and McNaughton, 1993). We hypothesize that the strong activation of inhibitory circuits in the dentate gyrus is optimized to convert a denser cortical code into a sparse hippocampal representation.
Footnotes
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (MH 54671), Howard Hughes Medical Institute, OTKA Hungary T 32251, the Bolyai János Scholarship, and Spanish DGES (PM97–0097). F.J.M.-G. was the recipient of a travel fellowship from the Spanish DGICYT. The mouse anti-CCK antibody was provided by the Cure/Gastroenteric Biology Center, Antibody/RIA Core, National Institutes of Health Grant DK 41301. We are grateful to Dr. T Görcs for CCK, VIP, CGRP, and mGluR1a antibodies, as well as to R. Shigemoto for SPR, K. G. Baimbridge for rabbit anti-parvalbumin, K. Mackie for CB1, and C. Cozzari for CHAT antibodies. The technical assistance of Erzsébet Borók, Erzsébet Oszwald, and Gyozo Goda is gratefully acknowledged.
Correspondence should be addressed to Tamás Freund, Institute of Experimental Medicine, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H-1450 Budapest, P.O.B. 67, Hungary. E-mail:freund{at}koki.hu.