Abstract
Acute effects of neurotrophins on synaptic plasticity have recently received much attention, but the roles of these factors in regulating long-lasting changes in synaptic function remain unclear. To address this issue we studied the long-term (days to weeks) and short-term (minutes to hours) effects of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) on excitatory synaptic transmission in autaptic cultures of hippocampal CA1 neurons. We found that BDNF induced long-term enhancement of the strength of non-NMDA receptor-mediated glutamatergic transmission. This upregulation of EPSC amplitude occurred via an increase in the size of unitary synaptic currents, with no significant contribution from other aspects of neuronal electrical and synaptic function including cell size, voltage-gated sodium and potassium current levels, the number and size of synaptic contacts, and the frequency of spontaneous neurotransmitter release. Chronic BDNF treatment also decreased the degree of synaptic depression measured in response to paired stimuli. Thus, BDNF induced long-term synaptic enhancement of both basal and use-dependent synaptic transmission via specific changes to the synapse rather than through generalized potentiation of neuronal growth and differentiation. Finally, we showed that the long-term effects of BDNF are functionally and mechanistically distinct from its acute effects on synaptic transmission, suggesting that, in vivo, BDNF activation of Trk receptors can have different functional effects depending on the time course of its action.
- neurotrophins
- BDNF
- Trk receptors
- TrkB
- hippocampal neurons
- synaptic plasticity
- excitatory synaptic transmission
- autapses
- microcultures
In contrast to the many known extracellular signaling molecules that are involved in short-term neuromodulation on the time scale of seconds to hours [e.g., purines and neuropeptides (for review, see Kaczmarek and Levitan, 1987; Nicoll et al., 1990)], little is known about signaling molecules that modulate longer-lasting forms of plasticity that, once induced, persist for days, weeks, or more. In recent years the neurotrophins have been associated with the regulation of neuronal activity on an acute time scale in vitro (Kim et al., 1994; Lessmann et al., 1994;Kang and Schuman, 1995; Levine et al., 1995; Figurov et al., 1996;Patterson et al., 1996; Gottschalk et al., 1998; Lessmann and Heumann, 1998; Li et al., 1998). However, increasing evidence indicates that neurotrophins also regulate synaptic plasticity in the long term, particularly in areas of the nervous system such as hippocampus and neocortex that exhibit robust activity-dependent neuronal plasticity (for review, see McAllister et al., 1998).
Compelling in vivo evidence of a long-term role for neurotrophins in modulating synaptic plasticity is suggested by experiments demonstrating involvement of TrkB ligands in establishing proper connectivity between neurons of the lateral geniculate nuclei and layer IV of the visual cortex (Cabelli et al., 1995, 1997). This activity-dependent refinement of connections occurs over a developmental period of days to weeks. Consistent with this time frame,in vivo and in vitro experiments indicate that activity can regulate neurotrophin expression with relatively slow kinetics. In response to physiological levels of stimuli such as LTP induction (Patterson et al., 1992; Castren et al., 1993; Bramham et al., 1996), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) mRNA levels do not increase for at least 2 h, but then can remain enhanced for 24 hr or more. Even in cases of extreme activity such as limbic seizures, BDNF mRNA levels do not peak until 6–12 hr after seizure in the hippocampus and neocortex (Isackson et al., 1991). Changes at the protein level are slower still; hippocampal BDNF protein levels peak at 16 hr after seizure activity and are maintained for several days (Nawa et al., 1995).
Neurotrophin action in target neurons, mediated in part through the Trk family of tyrosine kinase receptors, also occurs on a relatively slow time scale. Although Trk activation can induce rapid post-translational modification of neuronal proteins (Jovanovic et al., 1996; Suen et al., 1997), additional signal transduction pathways lead to the regulation of gene expression over a period of hours to days (Halegoua et al., 1991; Lewin and Barde, 1996; Segal and Greenberg, 1996). The slow time course of these latter actions suggests that long-term effects of neurotrophins on synaptic transmission, even if initiated rapidly, may require prolonged induction periods for their full manifestation. Regulation at the level of gene expression also suggests that many effects of neurotrophins will persist beyond the initial period of Trk receptor activation. Thus, it is probable that neurotrophin regulation of neuronal function, like its promotion of neuronal survival and differentiation (Davies, 1994), includes important components that occur over the time scale of days or more.
Studies in several systems have suggested that long-term treatment with neurotrophins can alter synaptic transmission indirectly, by regulating neuronal morphology or excitability (Dichter et al., 1977; Mandel et al., 1988; Purves et al., 1988; McAllister et al., 1995; Causing et al., 1997; Gonzalez and Collins, 1997; Lesser et al., 1997), or directly, by modulating unitary synaptic properties (Wang et al., 1995;Liou et al., 1997; Wang and Poo, 1997; Rutherford et al., 1998). Here, we have addressed the long-term versus short-term neurotrophin effects on synaptic transmission in excitatory central neurons from the hippocampal CA1 region and compared the cellular mechanisms underlying these effects. Using isolated autaptic neurons, we examined glutamatergic synaptic transmission after chronic (>1 week) or acute (<2.5 hr) treatment with BDNF, focusing in particular on non-NMDA-type glutamate receptor currents, which initiate postsynaptic depolarization in these neurons. We found that chronic BDNF treatment increased basal evoked current amplitudes by 70%. This regulation occurred via specific and selective enhancement of unitary synaptic strength, rather than as a consequence of generalized cell growth, synaptogenesis, or changes in neuronal excitability. Neurons treated chronically with BDNF also showed reduced synaptic depression during repetitive firing. In comparison, the rapid effects of BDNF were very different, both mechanistically and functionally, from its long-term effects on synaptic transmission.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Electrophysiology. Neurons growing in isolation formed electrophysiologically detectable “autaptic” synaptic connections onto themselves by 7 d after plating and were used in whole-cell patch-clamp experiments up to 16 d after plating. Cultures of matched ages were used for short-term and long-term experiments, averaging 9–10 d in vitro at the time of recording. Short-term experiments were performed by two independent methods: either by using single excitatory neurons sequentially recorded in the untreated and +BDNF conditions or by comparing the synaptic properties of control populations with those treated briefly with BDNF (10–150 min). Recordings for long-term experiments were performed on parallel populations of untreated neurons and neurons treated with BDNF or TrkB–IgG for >6 d. Extracellular solutions contained (in mm): 137 NaCl, 5 KCl, 1 MgCl2, 3 CaCl2, 10 glucose, 5 HEPES, adjusted to ∼350 mOsm, pH 7.3. To ensure that EPSCs consisted only of non-NMDA-type glutamate receptor currents, APV (100 μm) was added to the extracellular solution just before recording. Potassium currents were isolated and recorded using an extracellular solution of 145 mmn-methyl-glucamine, 2.8 mm KCl, 2 mm MgCl2, 10 mm HEPES. Intracellular solutions contained (in mm): either 150 potassium gluconate, 10 NaCl, 10 HEPES, 10 EGTA, 3 Mg-ATP, adjusted to pH 7.2 with KOH, or 100 gluconic acid, 0.6 EGTA, 5 MgCl2, 2 Na2-ATP, 0.3 Na-GTP, 40 HEPES, adjusted to pH 7.2 with CsOH. Voltage-clamp recordings were obtained with an Axopatch-1D patch clamp (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) and acquired using WinClamp3.7, a Visual Basic program written in-house. Borosilicate patch pipettes (VWR, West Chester, PA; Sutter Instrument Co., Novato, CA) were pulled to resistances of 3–5 mΩ. Leak currents were generally 20–50 pA; recordings with leak currents ≥ 100 pA or series resistances exceeding 20 mΩ were discarded. Cell capacitance measurements were made by integration of capacitive transients. Data were sampled at 100 μsec intervals for sodium currents, 200 μsec intervals for synaptic currents, and 500 μsec intervals for potassium currents; recordings were filtered at 1–5 kHz. Neurons were confirmed to be excitatory by the reversal of evoked synaptic currents near 0 mV. Cells were voltage-clamped such that spontaneous action potentials were rarely observed when the cell was held at its resting potential (Vhold = −70 mV); when they did occur, action potential-driven spontaneous events were preceded by a rapid, high-amplitude spike and were easily distinguished from miniature EPSCs (mEPSCs). In all cases, no differences in spontaneous event frequencies were observed after the addition of TTX (1 μm); thus, the measured spontaneous events reflected true action potential-independent mEPSCs. mEPSC amplitudes and kinetics were measured via an automatic detection software program (MiniMAD) written in-house. Detection criteria were set such that recognized spontaneous events had peak amplitudes at least twofold greater than baseline noise; such events were confirmed by the user to have rise times under 5 msec and decay kinetics that were well fitted by single exponential functions. Spontaneous and evoked synaptic current rise times were measured from the start to the peak of the currents; decay time constants were determined by fitting single exponential functions to the falling phase of the currents. Quantal content, the number of unitary release events occurring in response to an action potential (and thus a measure of the number of synapses contributing to an EPSC), was calculated for individual cells as (peak EPSC amplitude)/(mean mEPSC amplitude), where the mean mEPSC amplitude was taken to represent the average amplitude of a unitary event. Mean values are shown ± SE; statistical significance was tested by ANOVA.
Cell culture. All long-term experiments were performed in CF-1 murine cultures. Short-term experiments used both Sprague Dawley rats (single-cell experiments) and mice (single-cell and population experiments); no differences in the rapid effects of BDNF were observed between the two species. Autaptic cultures (Bekkers and Stevens, 1991; Pan et al., 1993) were made using hippocampal neurons dissected from postnatal day 0 rat pups or embryonic day 17 mice. We used only CA1 neurons to reduce the likelihood of intrinsic differences in the responsiveness of different cell types since levels of BDNF and TrkB expression (as well as the other neurotrophins and Trks) are differentially regulated among hippocampal regions (Maisonpierre et al., 1990; Ernfors et al., 1991). Briefly, glass coverslips or plastic tissue culture dishes (VWR; Corning, Corning NY) were coated with 0.15% agarose, then sprayed with an atomizer containing poly-d-lysine and collagen (Collaborative Research, Bedford, MA) to yield “microdots” of growth substrate. Cells were plated at low density to yield single neurons growing on islands of glia, confined by the agarose to the microdots. Media contained MEM (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) with 5% non-heat-inactivated FBS (Hyclone, Logan, UT), 20 mm glucose, 1% Mito-Serum Extender (Collaborative Research), and 1% sodium pyruvate (Life Technologies). For chronic treatment experiments, BDNF or TrkB–IgG (generous gifts of Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Tarrytown, NY) was added to cultures the day after plating at 100 ng/ml or 10 μg/ml, respectively. Cultures were maintained in 5% CO2and fed BDNF or TrkB–IgG every 3–4 d. Proliferation of non-neuronal cells was controlled by the addition of mitotic inhibitors (5-fluoro-2-deoxyuridine and uridine) to the media.
Immunocytochemistry and quantification of fluorescent staining. Autaptic cultures were fixed at 7–9 d in vitro in 4% paraformaldehyde and 5% sucrose for 10 min, then incubated at 4°C overnight with a polyclonal antibody directed against synapsin Ia,b (1:500; generous gift of P. De Camilli, Yale University, New Haven, CT) and a monoclonal antibody directed against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) (1:750; Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN). Primary antibodies were visualized using Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Vector, Burlingame, CA; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) and fluorescein- or Oregon Green-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Molecular Probes), each incubated at 1:750 for 1 hr. Immunostained neurons were imaged for uniform exposure times using a 25×, 0.8 NA oil immersion objective with a 12-bit cooled CCD camera (Princeton Instruments, Trenton, NJ) and were analyzed with IPLabs software (Signal Analytics, Vienna, VA; courtesy of D. Chikaraishi, Duke University). Analysis of anti-synapsin staining was performed by imaging GAD-negative autaptic neurons on islands not significantly larger than the visual field, manually tracing individual fluorescently stained anti-synapsin punctae that occurred along neuronal processes for each imaged neuron, and then quantifying number and area of punctae using IPLabs software. The resolution of the imaging system was such that one image pixel represented 0.06 μm2.
RESULTS
Because of the complexity of neural circuits even in conventional dissociated cultures, we studied BDNF regulation of synaptic transmission in microdot cultures of rodent CA1 hippocampal neurons (Furshpan et al., 1976; Segal and Furshpan, 1990; Bekkers and Stevens, 1991; Pan et al., 1993). Neurons in this system are confined to grow in isolation and form synapses only on themselves (autapses). Autaptic synaptic transmission is functionally indistinguishable from that found in conventional dissociated culture (Bekkers and Stevens, 1991), and the simplicity of these cultures has been critical for the investigation of several fundamental properties of synaptic transmission (Landis, 1976; Furshpan et al., 1986; Pan et al., 1993;Mennerick and Zorumski, 1995a, 1996; Mennerick et al., 1995;Stevens and Tsujimoto, 1995; Tong et al., 1996; Kimura et al., 1997). We identified excitatory autaptic neurons by the reversal of their postsynaptic currents at ∼0 mV in electrophysiology experiments or by the absence of GAD immunoreactivity in morphological experiments. In combination with whole-cell patch-clamping, immunocytochemistry, and image analysis, this system enabled clear determination of BDNF-induced changes in excitability, morphology, synaptic transmission, and short-term synaptic plasticity at the level of individual excitatory neurons and synapses.
Chronic enhancement of basal synaptic transmission by BDNF
We studied the long-term actions of BDNF by measuring non-NMDA receptor-mediated EPSCs (Fig.1A) elicited in autaptic neurons grown under each of three experimental conditions for 6–15 d: untreated, +TrkB–IgG to block potential activity of endogenous BDNF (10 μg/ml) (Shelton et al., 1995; Binder et al., 1999), or +BDNF (100 ng/ml). Consistent with other neurotrophin studies in hippocampal systems, neither addition of BDNF nor of TrkB-IgG affected neuronal survival (Ip et al., 1993; Ohsawa et al., 1993; M. Bolton and D. Lo, unpublished observations). The number of surviving neurons after 1 week of BDNF or TrkB–IgG treatment, normalized to survival in untreated plates, was 1.06 ± 0.07 and 1.25 ± 0.28, respectively (mean ± SE; p > 0.38 and 0.42 by ANOVA; n = 3 separate experiments). Because TrkB–IgG-treated neurons did not differ from untreated neurons in any parameter measured, these treatment groups were combined (“control”) (Table 1).
In contrast, neurons grown in the continuous presence of BDNF showed basal excitatory postsynaptic responses that were on average 1.7-fold greater than controls (Fig. 1B,C) (p < 8.8 × 10−8; combination of five separate experiments). These potentiating effects of BDNF were maintained for at least several hours in the absence of added BDNF or TrkB–IgG in the recording salines. The possible cellular mechanisms underlying this potentiation fall into one or more of the following categories: (1) changes in neuronal excitability; (2) an increase in synaptogenesis; and (3) changes in the function of individual synapses. We thus experimentally examined each of these areas in turn.
Intrinsic excitability
Several observations suggested that changes in passive membrane properties and action potential propagation were not significant factors in the synaptic potentiation induced by BDNF. First, the rise times for both evoked and spontaneous synaptic currents were unchanged by BDNF treatment, indicating an absence of significant changes in passive membrane properties (Table 2). Second, cell membrane area, as measured by electrical capacitance, was not affected by BDNF (Fig.2A) (p > 0.15).
We also measured functional levels of whole-cell voltage-gated potassium and sodium currents. Neither peak nor steady-state potassium current component amplitudes were affected by BDNF (Fig.2B) (p > 0.35). Similarly, BDNF treatment did not alter the amplitudes or kinetics of voltage-gated sodium currents measured concurrently with evoked synaptic currents (Fig. 2C) (p > 0.09). Thus, neither changes in the passive nor the active electrical characteristics of neuronal membranes appeared to be the mechanisms by which EPSC amplitudes were increased.
Synaptogenesis
We next examined whether BDNF could, on this time scale, be acting simply as a “growth factor” for synaptogenesis. We addressed this directly by quantifying the number and size of synapses in BDNF-treated and control cultures. Synapses were visualized by immunostaining cultures with a polyclonal antibody directed against synapsin Ia and Ib (gift of Dr. P. De Camilli) (Fig.3A). Localized in mature presynaptic terminals, these proteins are important in synaptogenesis and the regulation of neurotransmitter release (Greengard et al., 1993). Quantitation of anti-synapsin immunostaining in isolated glutamatergic neurons showed that BDNF affected neither the number of synapses per neuron (Fig. 3B) (p > 0.16) nor their average size (Fig. 3C) (p > 0.56). This provided direct evidence that BDNF did not alter the rate of synaptogenesis in these cultures and thus that the increase in evoked current amplitude was not caused by differences in synapse number or size.
Synaptic function
Because the preceding experiments suggested that the principal regulatory effects of BDNF were not on neuronal excitability, cell growth, or synaptogenesis, we examined the remaining possibility that BDNF modified the unitary properties of synaptic transmission. Because mEPSCs occur independently of action potentials, we could directly examine changes localized at synapses by measuring the amplitudes and kinetics of these spontaneous events.
Autaptic neurons are unique in that mEPSCs and EPSCs arise from the same neuron and thus the same set of synapses. Because only one set of synapses is involved, direct correspondences can be drawn between the properties of evoked versus miniature synaptic currents. To address most rigorously the possibility that changes in unitary synaptic properties underlie the BDNF-induced increase in EPSC amplitude, we first focused on the set of experiments that had the greatest number of mEPSC and EPSC recordings from the same cells. In these experiments, evoked postsynaptic current amplitudes increased on average by 1.8-fold in BDNF-treated cultures relative to controls (Fig.4A,B) (p < 0.02). Strikingly, the amplitude of spontaneous events in BDNF-treated neurons increased proportionally with the increase in evoked current amplitudes, by 1.8-fold relative to control neurons (Fig. 4A,B) (p < 0.03). No differences in rise or decay kinetics were observed for EPSCs or mEPSCs recorded from control versus BDNF-treated neurons (Fig. 4A, Table 2), nor did BDNF affect the frequency of mEPSCs (Fig. 4C) (p > 0.25).
These data suggested that at the level of individual neurons, increases in evoked EPSC amplitude induced by BDNF were quantitatively accounted for by a parallel increase in mEPSC size. We further tested this idea by comparing EPSC amplitudes versus mEPSC amplitudes for a larger population of neurons, combining multiple experimental trials. Even across different experiments, EPSC and mEPSC amplitudes were strongly correlated and covaried (Fig. 5) (r = 0.57, p < 0.0001). In contrast, a plot of EPSC amplitudes versus mEPSC frequencies for individual cells showed no correlation (Fig. 5) (r = 0.01,p > 0.9).
The above findings thus indicated that the BDNF-induced increase in EPSC amplitudes arose from a proportional increase in average mEPSC amplitude. Furthermore, if a change in mEPSC amplitude completely accounted for the change in EPSC amplitude, these results predicted that quantal content, the average number of quanta contributing to an EPSC [= (EPSC amplitude)/(mEPSC amplitude); see Materials and Methods], should be unaffected by BDNF treatment. In fact this was observed: 211 ± 36 and 225 ± 43 quanta were released per EPSC (control vs BDNF-treated neurons, n = 12 and 9, respectively; p > 0.8). Thus, chronic BDNF treatment increased basal evoked synaptic current amplitudes via regulation of the amplitudes of unitary synaptic currents and not by increasing the probability of neurotransmitter release.
Chronic BDNF enhances use-dependent synaptic transmission
In the above experiments, synaptic currents were elicited at very low frequencies (≤0.05 Hz). However, neurons in vivonormally respond to repetitive stimuli at substantially higher frequencies. To determine whether BDNF also regulated the efficacy of synaptic transmission in response to higher frequency stimuli, we examined a simple form of use-dependent synaptic plasticity in these cells, synaptic depression, using a paired-pulse depression (PPD) paradigm (Zucker, 1989).
Pairs of evoked currents were elicited 1 sec apart, and the resultant degree of synaptic depression was determined by measuring the amplitude of the second EPSC relative to the first. Autaptic neurons treated chronically (>1 week) with BDNF were much less depressed by successive firing than were controls. While EPSCs elicited by the second stimulus were 36% smaller than the initial EPSC in control cells (i.e., 36% PPD), BDNF-treated neurons showed only 8% PPD (p < 0.005) (Fig.6A,B). Chronic treatment with BDNF thus significantly enhanced synaptic efficacy in response to repetitive stimuli as evidenced by a four- to fivefold reduction in PPD at a 1 sec interpulse interval.
In several systems, including hippocampal autapses, PPD has been attributed to the depletion of the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles (Mennerick and Zorumski, 1995a; Dobrunz and Stevens, 1997). Thus, one simple mechanism by which the observed decrease in PPD could have occurred is via an increase in the rate at which this pool is replenished. We examined the possibility that BDNF increased the refilling rate of the readily releasable pool in the range of stimulation frequencies that cause PPD (1–12.5 sec) (Fig.6C). We found that recovery rates from PPD did not differ between BDNF-treated and BDNF-deprived neurons at any of these stimulus intervals (τBDNF = 5.8 ± 1.1 sec; τcontrol = 6.3 ± 1.1 sec). This suggested that although BDNF attenuated synaptic depression by several-fold, this effect did not occur via alterations in the rate at which synapses recover from PPD.
Acute effects of BDNF on synaptic transmission
Recent work from several laboratories has provided evidence for rapid effects of BDNF on non-NMDA receptor-mediated glutamatergic transmission in hippocampal neurons (Kim et al., 1994; Lessmann et al., 1994; Kang and Schuman, 1995, 1996; Levine et al., 1995; Figurov et al., 1996; Patterson et al., 1996; Tanaka et al., 1997; Gottschalk et al., 1998; Lessmann and Heumann, 1998; Li et al., 1998). We were interested in whether the chronic effects on synaptic transmission described above—–increased amplitudes of both evoked and spontaneous EPSCs—–were related to potential effects of brief BDNF exposure on synaptic transmission, or whether BDNF regulates synaptic function in distinct ways over acute versus prolonged time scales.
We examined the acute effects of BDNF on basal synaptic transmission using two independent methods. First, non-NMDA receptor-mediated EPSC and mEPSC amplitudes were measured in continuous recordings from single neurons before and after bath application of BDNF. In contrast to the effects of chronic BDNF treatment described above, no appreciable change in the amplitude of EPSCs was detected for the duration of these recordings, which lasted from 40 min to >2 hr (Figs.7,8A, bottom). This is consistent with results observed in hippocampal slices (Figurov et al., 1996; Korte et al., 1996; Patterson et al., 1996; Tanaka et al., 1997; Frerking et al., 1998; Gottschalk et al., 1998; but see alsoKang and Schuman, 1995, 1996). The amplitudes of mEPSCs were also unaffected by BDNF addition for at least 1.5 hr after BDNF addition (Figs. 7, 8A, center). However, the frequency of spontaneous events increased significantly within 10 min after the addition of BDNF, by 2.5-fold on average (Figs. 7,8A, top), similar to other findings in conventional dissociated hippocampal cultures (Lessmann et al., 1994;Lessmann and Heumann, 1998; Li et al., 1998). These events were insensitive to TTX, indicating that BDNF increased the frequency of true “minis” (Fig. 7).
Because of the difficulty in recording stable currents from autaptic neurons for prolonged periods of time, we confirmed these results in a larger number of neurons by recording from neuronal populations that were either untreated or treated briefly with BDNF (<2.5 hr, with BDNF present throughout the recording period). The results of these experiments were identical to those observed in the continuous recordings: neither EPSC nor mEPSC amplitudes were affected by brief BDNF treatment (Fig. 8B, bottom andcenter) (EPSC, p > 0.17; mEPSC,p > 0.10), but the average frequency of mEPSCs increased by 2.5-fold (Fig. 8B, top) (p < 0.001).
Finally, we asked whether BDNF had rapid effects on short-term synaptic depression by measuring PPD. We found that untreated neurons and neurons treated briefly (<1 hr) with BDNF were equivalently depressed at a 1 sec interpulse interval, by 28 ± 2% and 32 ± 5% (control and BDNF-treated, respectively; p > 0.37). Thus, on a rapid time scale, BDNF had no effect on the use dependence of evoked synaptic transmission as assessed by PPD. Rather, the predominant effect of BDNF treatment on the time scale of minutes to hours was an increase in the frequency of mEPSCs. All of the effects of brief BDNF treatment were thus distinct from its long-term actions: the selective increase in the size but not the frequency of mEPSCs and the enhancement of both basal and use-dependent evoked synaptic transmission.
DISCUSSION
Although much evidence has accumulated in recent years of a role for neurotrophins in the rapid modulation of neuronal activity, the slow time courses of neurotrophin regulation and action, as well as the known long-term effects of neurotrophins on neuronal morphology and excitability, suggest that these growth factors also regulate neuronal activity on longer time scales. We addressed this issue directly by using isolated excitatory hippocampal neurons to investigate the long- versus short-term effects of BDNF on central excitatory synaptic transmission.
We found that chronic treatment (1–2 weeks) of autaptic CA1 neurons with BDNF led to a 70% enhancement of action potential-evoked synaptic currents mediated through non-NMDA-type glutamate receptors. This effect was unlikely to be caused by selection for a population of neurons with larger EPSCs, because no effects of BDNF or TrkB–IgG were observed on neuronal survival. Long-term treatment of autaptic neurons with BDNF also regulated a form of use-dependent, transient synaptic plasticity, paired-pulse depression. BDNF-treated neurons showed substantially less PPD than controls in that successive firing only marginally depressed EPSC amplitudes in these neurons. Notably, these long-term effects of BDNF were directly on synaptic function, rather than occurring as a secondary consequence of enhanced synaptogenesis or neuronal excitability. Our results are particularly interesting in light of observations in hippocampal neurons of mice chronically deficient in BDNF [BDNF heterozygous and homozygous knockouts (Patterson et al., 1996)]. These animals show a gene dosage-dependent reduction in levels of basal synaptic transmission, which can be partially rescued only after at least 12 hr of BDNF incubation.
In contrast to the long-term effects of BDNF, brief BDNF application (<2.5 hr) affected neither the amplitude nor the extent of paired-pulse depression of evoked EPSCs. Rather, BDNF acutely regulated the frequency of mEPSCs, a target that was not affected in long-term studies. Thus, although BDNF directly regulated synaptic function in both the short term and long term, it did so on these two time scales in distinct ways, via distinct cellular mechanisms. The clear differences between these rapid versus long-term effects of BDNF suggest that, in vivo, BDNF can have very different consequences on synaptic transmission and plasticity depending on the time course of BDNF availability and action.
Cellular mechanisms of chronic BDNF regulation
Of the three cellular mechanisms by which BDNF could have increased EPSC amplitudes—regulation of membrane excitability, synapse number, or synapse strength—only one mechanism was observed in CA1 neurons: an increase in synaptic strength. BDNF’s long-term effects on basal evoked synaptic transmission were caused by the upregulation of quantal size, as evidenced by the proportional increase in mEPSC amplitudes that quantitatively accounted for the change in EPSC amplitude.
Because mEPSCs increased in amplitude but not frequency, our evidence was most consistent with a postsynaptic locus of regulation by BDNF. Changes in mEPSC amplitude typically arise from postsynaptic modifications (Korn and Faber, 1991; Bekkers and Stevens, 1995); for example, changes in the number, localization, or phosphorylation state of AMPA-type glutamate receptors could increase quantal amplitudes without affecting kinetics (Craig et al., 1993; Smart, 1997). Changes indicative of a presynaptic site of modulation were notably absent; namely, BDNF did not increase the probability of neurotransmitter release because no differences were observed either in the frequency of mEPSCs or in quantal content. However, it is also possible that the amount of neurotransmitter packaged per quantum was the target of BDNF regulation, as has been observed for the regulation of midbrain dopamine neurons by GDNF (Pothos et al., 1998). Such a scenario would require that postsynaptic glutamate receptors are not saturated by basal levels of neurotransmitter release per quantum (Bekkers and Stevens, 1990; Liu and Tsien, 1995) (but see Clements et al., 1992;Tong and Jahr, 1994; Forti et al., 1997).
Interestingly, Rutherford et al. (1998) have reported very different effects of BDNF on quantal size at excitatory synapses in mixed cultures of visual cortical neurons. In their studies, long-term treatment with BDNF decreased, rather than increased, the amplitude of mEPSCs onto excitatory neurons. Several experimental differences could account for this discrepancy in BDNF’s long-term effects, including brain region and cell type. Indeed, these differences underscore the diversity of actions that, depending on the specific cell context of a particular target neuron, may result from activation of a given receptor (Sherwood et al., 1997).
Our observation of a BDNF-mediated reduction in PPD in the absence of a concomitant change in the probability of release (Pr) may seem initially surprising, because it is well known that changing overallPr (for instance, by changing the extracellular Ca2+ concentration) results directly in a change in PPD. However, the converse of this relationship may not be obligatory. Because PPD is a function not only of initialPr(Pr1), but also ofPr during the second stimulus (Pr2), our observation that PPD was modified in the absence of a change inPr1 suggests that BDNF induced a change in Pr2 only. The cellular mechanism by which PPD occurs in most systems, including hippocampal autaptic cultures, is thought to be via depletion of neurotransmitter vesicles available for release at individual presynaptic terminals [the readily releasable pool (Zucker, 1989; Mennerick and Zorumski, 1995a; Dobrunz and Stevens, 1997)]. Because our experiments ruled out an increased refilling rate of this pool, a potential mechanism for the decrease in PPD caused by chronic BDNF treatment is a change in the ability of vesicles to be released in response to the second stimulus. Such selective changes in “fusion efficiency” (Stevens and Wesseling, 1999) could occur, for example, if vesicular release in response to the second pulse occurs at sites distinct from initial release (Jiang and Abrams, 1998).
Rapid effects of BDNF
The above mechanisms of chronic regulation by BDNF were distinct from its rapid effects: a selective increase in the frequency of spontaneous events with no change in evoked EPSCs, mEPSC size, or paired-pulse depression. The dissociation between mEPSC frequency and EPSC amplitude in the rapid action of BDNF is notable because these two properties of synaptic transmission are usually linked. However, because “true” mEPSCs are independent of action potentials, it is possible to regulate mEPSC frequency and EPSC amplitude independently. In cortical autapses, for example, Kimura et al. (1997) have found that not all synapses that are capable of spontaneous release also release neurotransmitter in response to depolarization. Cash et al. (1996) have observed that heterosynaptic depression of EPSC amplitude in neuromuscular cultures occurs without a corresponding change in the frequency of spontaneous events. Similarly, Deitcher et al. (1998) andYoshihara et al. (1999) have reported dissociation of these properties at the Drosophila neuromuscular junction. In their neuronal synaptobrevin (n-syb) mutants, evoked synaptic currents are eliminated but spontaneous release still occurs in a Ca2+-dependent manner, demonstrating that synaptobrevin mechanistically distinguishes evoked from spontaneous vesicular release.
In contrast to our findings, several recent studies have reported rapid enhancement of EPSC amplitude by BDNF in dissociated hippocampal neurons (Levine et al., 1995; Lessman and Heumann, 1998; Li et al., 1998). Such discrepancies may have arisen, at least in part, from differences in analysis and in the preparation of hippocampal cultures. For example, the acute effects of BDNF in mixed cultures of whole hippocampi reported in these studies may have arisen from subpopulations of neurons not represented in our CA1 autaptic cultures. Furthermore, Lessmann and Heumann (1998) have suggested the intriguing possibility that the responsiveness of neurons to BDNF is dependent on previous levels of activity, a parameter that may have varied considerably among these different culture systems.
Rapid versus chronic effects of BDNF
The relationship between the rapid and chronic effects of BDNF that we observed is of interest. One possibility is that the differences between acute versus chronic BDNF treatment represent functionally independent effects, elicited by the same initial signaling event but manifested along different time courses. Wang and Poo (1997) have suggested, for example, that NT-4/5 has immediate postsynaptic regulatory actions on Xenopus neuromuscular acetylcholine receptors but that it also elicits presynaptic effects on neurotransmitter secretion that are longer lasting (≥ 1 hr) and do not require the constant presence of the neurotrophin. Similarly, the short- and long-term effects of BDNF may be mechanistically and functionally distinct in the mammalian central excitatory neurons studied here.
Alternatively, the differences we observed between rapid and chronic BDNF treatment may reflect different time points in a linear series of cellular changes initiated by TrkB activation. In developing neurons in culture, spontaneous events can be detected well before evoked currents (Basarsky et al., 1994; Gottmann et al., 1994), suggesting that the increases in mEPSC frequency that we observed may represent an early, obligatory phase of the later, chronic regulatory effects of BDNF on synaptic transmission. Such increases in mEPSC frequency are also characteristic of developing neuromuscular junctions (Hume et al., 1983; Young and Poo, 1983) and, indeed, have been observed shortly after neurotrophin application to embryonic neuromuscular cultures (Lohof et al., 1993; Wang et al., 1995; Wang and Poo, 1997). In either case, our results indicate that the action of a single signaling molecule such as BDNF can elicit multiple types of synaptic regulation depending on (1) the temporal characteristics of its availability and (2) the time window in which its synaptic effects are observed.
Classical studies of long-term nerve growth factor effects in the peripheral nervous system have established the requirement for this prototypic neurotrophin in promoting the survival and morphology of specific neuronal cell types (for review, see Purves et al., 1988). More recent studies in visual cortex have provided strong evidence that neurotrophins play an essential role in the activity-dependent establishment of synaptic connectivity between the LGN and visual cortex during development (Bonhoeffer, 1996; Cellerino and Maffei, 1996; Riddle et al., 1996). Intriguingly, BDNF has most recently been implicated in the establishment of L-LTP (Korte et al., 1998), a transcription-dependent form of synaptic potentiation that can last for days (Bailey et al., 1996). Our results indicate that neurotrophins such as BDNF can play important roles in regulating synaptic function on such prolonged time scales through the direct modulation of synaptic strength and reliability. Because the production, release of, and response to BDNF are intimately tied to levels of neuronal activity (Thoenen, 1995; McAllister et al., 1996), findings such as these further strengthen the idea that neurotrophins are key regulators of synaptic plasticity in the CNS in the long term as well as the short term.
Footnotes
This work was supported by the Bryan Scholars Fund and National Research Service Award Grant 5F31MH11058 (N.T.S.), and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the McKnight Endowment for the Neurosciences, and National Institutes of Health Grant NS32742 (D.C.L.). We also thank Regeneron Pharmaceuticals for BDNF and TrkB-IgG; P. De Camilli and O. Mundigl for anti-synapsin I; C. Jahr, C. Stevens, J. Wesseling, and C. Boyer for autapse and other advice; D. Chikaraishi for imaging equipment; and T. Blanpied, M. Bolton, T. Yacoubian, and D. Sherwood for stimulating discussions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Donald C. Lo, Department of Neurobiology, Box 3209, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710.
Dr. Sherwood’s present address: Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, 91125.