Abstract
Modulation of postsynaptic AMPA receptors in the brain by phosphorylation may play a role in the expression of synaptic plasticity at central excitatory synapses. It is known from biochemical studies that GluR1 AMPA receptor subunits can be phosphorylated within their C terminal by cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA), which is colocalized with the phosphatase calcineurin (i.e., phosphatase 2B). We have examined the effect of PKA and calcineurin on the time course, peak open probability (PO,PEAK), and single-channel properties of glutamateevoked responses for neuronal AMPA receptors and homomeric GluR1(flip) receptors recorded in outside-out patches. Inclusion of purified catalytic subunit Cα-PKA in the pipette solution increased neuronal AMPA receptorPO,PEAK (0.92) compared with recordings made with calcineurin included in the pipette (PO,PEAK 0.39). Similarly, Cα-PKA increased PO,PEAK for recombinant GluR1 receptors (0.78) compared with patches excised from cells cotransfected with a cDNA encoding the PKA peptide inhibitor PKI (PO,PEAK 0.50) or patches with calcineurin included in the pipette (PO,PEAK 0.42). Neither PKA nor calcineurin altered the amplitude of single-channel subconductance levels, weighted mean unitary current, mean channel open period, burst length, or macroscopic response waveform for recombinant GluR1 receptors. Substitution of an amino acid at the PKA phosphorylation site (S845A) on GluR1 eliminated the PKA-induced increase in PO,PEAK, whereas the mutation of a Ca2+,calmodulin-dependent kinase II and PKC phosphorylation site (S831A) was without effect. These results suggest that AMPA receptor peak response open probability can be increased by PKA through phosphorylation of GluR1 Ser845.
Ionotropic glutamate receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that mediate excitatory neurotransmission in the mammalian CNS. These glutamate receptors can be subdivided on the basis of agonist pharmacology and sequence homology into three classes, which includeN-methyl-d-aspartate, kainate, and AMPA receptors. AMPA receptors mediate fast synaptic current at most excitatory synapses and are tetrameric or pentameric complexes assembled from any of four different subunits (GluR1–4) with variable stoichiometry (Hollmann and Heinemann, 1994; Dingledine et al., 1999).
The modulation of excitatory synaptic transmission during long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD), two well established cellular models of learning and memory, results from changes in the presynaptic release of glutamate and/or changes in postsynaptic glutamate receptor function or localization (Linden, 1994; Kullmann and Siegelbaum, 1995; Maren and Baudry, 1995; Rison and Stanton, 1995;Asztely and Gustafsson, 1996; Levenes et al., 1998; Carroll et al., 1999; Malenka and Nicoll, 1999). Although the molecular mechanisms underlying LTP and LTD are not yet fully understood, the complex regulation of protein phosphorylation by intracellular second messengers plays an essential role in the induction and maintenance of certain forms of LTP and LTD. For example, protein kinase A (PKA) is transiently activated during hippocampal LTP (Roberson and Sweatt, 1996) and has been suggested to be important for both postsynaptic as well as presynaptic mechanisms underlying LTD and LTP (Kameyama et al., 1998; Tzounopoulos et al., 1998; Yan-You and Kandel, 1998). Calcineurin, which is activated by Ca2+and calmodulin, is colocalized with PKA at A kinase anchor proteins (AKAPs) in neurites (Coghlan et al., 1995; Fraser and Scott, 1999), suggesting that these two enzymes are well positioned to exert opposing actions on their substrates. Potentiation of postsynaptic responses by inhibition of postsynaptic calcineurin appears to occlude induction of LTP (Wang and Stelzer, 1994; Wang and Kelly, 1997); calcineurin has also been suggested to play a role in LTD (Mulkey et al., 1994).
Both neuronal and recombinant AMPA receptors can be phosphorylated by PKA at Ser845 (Fig. 1), a site consistent with known consensus sequences (RXS) (Pearson and Kemp, 1991;Blackstone et al., 1994; Roche et al., 1996; Mammen et al., 1997). Phosphorylation of recombinant AMPA receptors by PKA appears to potentiate their function (Keller et al., 1992; Roche et al., 1996), suggesting that the Ser845 phosphorylation could control some aspects of postsynaptic expression of LTP and LTD. Phosphorylation of the GluR1 subunit could change channel function by altering the unitary current amplitude, relative proportions of subconductance levels, number of active channels, receptor desensitization, or peak open probability. To understand the mechanism underlying the effects of PKA on AMPA receptors, we studied the time course and variance of macroscopic current responses evoked by maximal concentrations of glutamate rapidly applied to excised membrane patches containing neuronal or recombinant AMPA receptors. These experiments were supported by single-channel analysis of steady-state responses to low concentrations of glutamate and analysis of mutant GluR1 subunits lacking Ser845 and Ser831.
Some of these results have been published previously (Banke and Traynelis, 1998).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Tissue culture and cDNA transfection. Human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells (ATCC 1573) were plated on 12 mm glass coverslips coated with poly-d-lysine (10–60 μg/ml) or 35 mm plastic culture dishes and maintained in humidified 95% O2/5% CO2 in DMEM (Gibco 11960) as previously described (Traynelis and Wahl, 1997; Bowie et al., 1998). HEK 293 cells were transiently transfected (Chen and Okayama, 1987) with 0.1–1.0 μg/ml GluR1(flip) (provided by S. F. Heinemann, Salk Institute) in a CMV-based mammalian expression vector. A reporter cDNA encoding Green Fluorescent Protein [(GFP) 0.2–0.4 μg/ml; Columbia University; Marshall et al. (1995)] was used to identify individually transfected cells. In some cells, 0.2–0.4 μg/ml of cDNA encoding the catalytic subunit Cα-PKA (Huggenvik et al., 1991) (provided by M. Uhler, University of Michigan) or a cDNA encoding a fusion protein of GFP and the PKA inhibitor peptide PKI (Wang and Murphy, 1998) (provided by T. J. Murphy, Emory University) were cotransfected with GluR1 into cells (0.1–1.0 μg/ml).
Immunoblot analysis. HEK-293 cells grown on 10 cm dishes were transiently transfected with either the wild-type GluR1 (5 μg/dish) or S845A mutant GluR1 (5 μg/dish) as described above (also see Roche et al., 1996). In some cases, the HEK293 cells were cotransfected with a cDNA encoding Cα-PKA (1–2 μg/dish) or PKI-GFP (3–5 μg/dish). The cells were then harvested 48 hr after the transfection and were lysed and sonicated in ice-cold buffer containing (in mm): 150 NaCl, 50 NaF, 10 NaH2PO4, 5 EDTA, 5 EGTA, 10 sodium pyrophosphate, 1 sodium vanadate, plus 10 U/ml aprotinin and 1 μm okadaic acid, pH 7.0. A membrane fraction was generated from the lysate by centrifugation at 14,000 ×g for 10 min at 4°C. The resulting membrane pellet was resuspended in sample buffer composed of 10% glycerol (v/v), 5% β-mercaptoethanol (v/v), 2% SDS (v/v), and a trace amount of pyronin Y, in Tris-HCl buffer, pH 6.8, and boiled for 5 min. The samples were run on a 7.5% polyacrylamide gel, which was then transferred to polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) membranes for immunoblot analysis.
PVDF membranes were incubated in blocking buffer consisting of 1% bovine serum albumin and 0.1% Tween-20 in PBS for 1 hr. The PVDF membranes were then incubated for 2 hr at room temperature in phosphorylation site-specific antibodies that recognize phosphorylated Ser831 (1:1000 dilution) or Ser845 (1:250 dilution) on GluR1. The phosphorylation site-specific antibodies have been characterized previously (Mammen et al., 1997). The PVDF membranes were washed five times for 5 min in blocking buffer and incubated for 1 hr in alkaline phosphatase-linked secondary antibody (1:10,000 dilution; Pierce, Rockford, IL). After final washes in blocking buffer (five times for 5 min), enhanced chemifluorescence (ECF) substrate (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) was applied on the membranes for ≥5 min. The membranes were dried between filter papers and scanned directly on a Storm 860 scanner (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA) to measure fluorescence using blue chemiluminescence mode at 650–900 V. The fluorescence signals were quantified using ImageQuant software (Molecular Dynamics). The immunoblots using phosphorylation site-specific antibodies were subsequently stripped and reprobed with an antibody that recognizes the GluR1 C terminus (1:5000 dilution). The degree of GluR1 phosphorylation at Ser845 and Ser831 was analyzed by normalizing the signal from phosphorylation site-specific antibody to the total amount of GluR1 measured using an antibody against the GluR1 C terminus.
Acute dissociation of hippocampal pyramidal cells.Hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons were dissociated as previously described by Washburn et al. (1997) from 300 μm hippocampal slices from 12- to 17-d-old rats that were decapitated under deep isofluorane anesthesia; slices were allowed to recover in artificial CSF bubbled with 95% O2/5% CO2 with a composition of (in mm): 124 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 1 NaH2PO4, 26 NaHCO3, 1 CaCl2, 1.4 MgCl2, 10 glucose. One to four hours after preparation, slices were incubated in DMEM supplemented with pronase E (0.5–1.0 mg/ml; Sigma, St Louis, MO), 4 mmMgCl2, and 1 mm kynurenate and bubbled with 95%O2/5%CO2for 15–45 min. Slices were washed with HEPES buffered saline supplemented with 5 mm MgCl2 and 10 mm glucose, and the CA1 region including stratum pyramidale was microdissected. The tissue was triturated through a series of three increasingly narrow, fire-polished pipettes and plated on glass coverslips onto which 10 μl of a 5:3 ratio of Cell-Tak and 0.1m NaHCO3 had been dried. Cells were allowed to settle for 30 min before recording. Although our preparation will include both pyramidal cells and interneurons, we refer to the neurons studied here as pyramidal cells on the basis of their morphology and because they are the most numerous neuron in region CA1.
Xenopus oocyte injection and recording. FemaleXenopus laevis were anesthetized using 0.1–0.2% ethyl 3-aminobenzoate, and the ovaries were surgically removed. Stage V and VI oocytes were isolated after a 2 hr incubation of the ovaries in 2 mg/ml collagenase at room temperature. Oocytes were injected the following day with 60 ng of cRNA encoding the GluR1(flip) receptor that was transcribed in vitro. Injected oocytes were maintained at 17°C in Barth's solution containing gentamycin sulfate (0.1 mg/ml) for 3–6 d, after which recordings were made at 23°C from cells continuously perfused in a solution containing (in mm): 115 NaCl, 5 HEPES, 2 KCl, 1.8 CaCl2, pH 7.0. Recording pipettes were filled with 3 m KCl. Glutamate (100 μm) was used to activate steady-state current responses recorded from oocytes under two-electrode voltage clamp. After three control responses to glutamate were measured, 5–20 nl of purified Cα-PKA (0.6 U/nl) or enzyme buffer was injected into each oocyte with an Eppendorf Microinjector 5242. Approximately 20 min later a test glutamate response was evoked, and potentiation was calculated as the ratio of the amplitude of the test response to the control response.
Recordings of macroscopic current responses in excised membrane patches. A piezobimorph-driven double-barreled perfusion system was used to rapidly apply the endogenous neurotransmitter glutamate (10 mm) onto excised membrane patches for 100–200 msec, as previously described (Traynelis and Wahl, 1997). The agonist application barrel was preflushed for 1–4 sec to remove any dilute solution at the tip. The time course of solution exchange across the laminar flow interface was estimated by liquid junction potential measurements to be 0.2–0.4 msec (10–90% rise time) for a 10-fold difference in ionic strength; the time course of the junction potential change for our perfusion system was measured at the end of most experiments. External recording solution for all experiments was (in mm): 150 NaCl, 10 HEPES, 3 KCl, 1 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 10–20 mannitol, pH 7.4; 310–330 mOsm. All experiments were performed at 23°C. Borosilicate glass pipettes [1.65 mm outer diameter (OD), 1.15 mm inner diameter (ID)] had resistances after fire-polishing of 7–9 MΩ. The internal solutions used are described in Table1; pH was adjusted to 7.3 using CsOH, and osmolality was 290–300 mOsm. Spermine (0.1 mm) was included in the internal solution for all experiments measuring macroscopic current–variance relationship except some experiments in which cells were cotransfected with a cDNA encoding Cα-PKA or PKI. In one set of experiments, Na2ATP was replaced by the nonhydrolyzable analog 5′-adenylylimido-diphosphate (Na2AMP-PNP; Sigma). Cα-PKA, PKI, and calcineurin were obtained from Promega (Madison, WI), and calmodulin was obtained from Upstate Biotechnology (Lake Placid, NY). Biochemical assays of phosphate liberation from p-nitrophenyl phosphate added to our internal recording solution verified that the phosphatase activity we observed with the addition of calcineurin was dependent on divalent ions and calmodulin. Internal solutions that contained calmodulin and/or calcineurin were stored during the experiment in a glass syringe on ice.
Nonstationary variance analysis of macroscopic current responses. Native and recombinant AMPA receptors open to several conductance levels (Dingledine et al., 1999). Barring the isolation of patches that contain a single active channel, it is difficult to ascertain the properties of nondesensitized single channels activated by maximal concentrations of glutamate because multiple openings and multiple conductance levels confound single-channel analysis. In such situations, variance analysis of macroscopic currents can be used to obtain an estimate both of the probability that a channel is open at the peak of the response and the weighted mean unitary current (Cull-Candy et al., 1988). Sigworth (1980) was the first to extend variance analysis to nonstationary currents (for review, see Heinemann and Conti, 1992), and several studies of this method suggest that it can provide reliable results when carefully applied to high quality data (Silberberg and Magleby, 1993; Traynelis and Wahl, 1997; Traynelis and Jaramillo, 1998).
We have used nonstationary variance analysis of current responses to estimate conductance and PO,PEAK for GluR1 receptors activated by 10 mm glutamate. Between 20 and 150 glutamate-evoked current responses (mean 59) were typically recorded at a sampling frequency of 50 kHz (2–5 kHz eight-pole Bessel filter; cutoff frequencies are −3 dB). Responses in excised patches showed on average 19% rundown during the experiment (0.43% rundown per event; 130 patches). Experiments with >1% rundown per response were excluded, although they gave qualitatively similar results to experiments without any detectable rundown. For all patches, local averages of five current responses were made to estimate the response waveform, and variance was analyzed as previously described (Traynelis and Wahl, 1997). The current–variance relationship was analyzed in two ways. First, the current–variance plot for each patch was fitted by the equation: Equation 1where i is the mean weighted unitary current,I(t) is the macroscopic current, N is the number of channels, and VarianceBASE is the baseline variance (Neher and Stevens, 1977). A simplex algorithm (least squares criterion) or a Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm was used to obtain the best fit (Χ2 criterion) of this equation to the data.VarianceBASE was forced to be >0.0 during the fitting procedure. PO,PEAKwas calculated by: Equation 2where IPEAK is the maximum current response. Different portions of the current–variance curve containing 60, 80, and 100% of the data set (always including low current values) were fitted by Equation 1 and gave similar estimates for unitary current (p > 0.5; ANOVA; power to detect 0.3 pA difference was 0.6–0.7 for measurements in Table2), as expected if our variance measurements were free of amplitude-dependent artifacts and desensitization-linked changes in conductance. The mean value forPO,PEAK from fits obtained to 80 and 100% of the current–variance plot is reported for experiments in Results. The stochastic nature of responses and inherent variability of this approach accounts for about half of the variability in ourPO,PEAK measurements (data not shown).
The second method we used to analyze response variance was to calculateVarianceNORM(t) by dividing the variance of each bin of a given response by the response amplitude. This reduces the abscissa to unity, converts the units on the ordinate to pA, and allows data from patches with different response amplitudes to be pooled because unitary conductance andPO,PEAK were independent of response amplitude (‖R‖ = 0.09–0.35; mean 0.13; p > 0.05 for all conditions). The normalized current–variance plots were fitted by the equation: Equation 3where I(t)NORM andbaseNORM are the normalized current and normalized baseline variance: Equation 4and Equation 5These two methods produced similar values for i andPO,PEAK for responses to maximal glutamate. Chord conductance levels were calculated for a reversal potential of 0 mV.
The existence of subconductance levels can increase the current variance at high values of PO,PEAK and complicate the analysis described above (Traynelis and Wahl, 1997).Colquhoun and Hawkes (1977) have provided a general solution to the problem of calculating the variance for a receptor with multiple conductance levels that can be written in nonmatrix time-dependent form (Sigworth, 1980) as: Equation 6where k is the number of sublevels, p(t)is the time-dependent response waveform, which is 1 at the peak response, and pO,PEAK,J is the probability that the subconductance level J with unitary current iJ is open at the peak of the response. PO,PEAK is the sum ofpO,PEAK,J for k sublevels. The relative contributions of the sublevels are assumed to be constant throughout the decay of response waveform, although this may not be true for the brief rising phase of the response (Rosenmund et al., 1998), which was omitted from analysis (see Discussion). We have used this expression to determine whether shifts in the relative proportions of subconductance levels might have accounted for an apparent difference in PO,PEAK that we calculate from Equations 1-5 for current–variance curves constructed from recordings made with calcineurin and purified Cα-PKA included in the pipette. To do this we generated a p(t)–variance relationship from Equation 6 for a receptor with a single conductance level (k = 1) usingPO,PEAK and the weighted mean chord conductance determined from variance analysis. We then compared this representation of our data with 2 × 109 theoretical curves generated from Equation 6 using conductance levels determined from our single-channel analysis (see Table 4) and po,PEAK,Jvalues for each sublevel ranging from 0 to 1 in steps of 0.0005. The sum of squares differences between the theoretical relationships and our data were evaluated to obtain the set of solutions for Equation 6given our measured subconductance level amplitudes.
Recording and analysis of unitary GluR1 currents in excised membrane patches. Recordings of single-channel currents in excised membrane patches from HEK 293 cells expressing wild-type GluR1 were made as described above, except that we used Sylgard-coated thick-walled borosilicate micropipettes (1.5 mm OD, 0.86 mm ID) with resistances of 15–25 MΩ. Single-channel activity was evoked using a submaximal concentration of glutamate (10 μm), and records were digitized at 20 kHz and filtered off-line using a Gaussian filter (−3 dB, cutoff 1 kHz). Single-channel currents activated by glutamate are brief and of low amplitude and thus difficult to distinguish from momentary seal breakdown or other noise. To obtain a reliable estimate of the relative amplitudes of subconductance states, we took two measures to ensure that the signals we analyzed arose from glutamate-activated channels. First, in 11 patches in which current recordings were analyzed for single-channel openings in the absence of glutamate and the presence of 10–50 μm CNQX, the frequency of apparent transitions was on average 9.4-fold lower than in the presence of 10 μm glutamate (p< 0.001; mean control current amplitude −0.4 pA), suggesting that the events we measure arise from glutamate gating of homomeric GluR1. Second, only patches with an rms value <0.11 pA (1 kHz filter) for control records were included in analysis (mean rms 0.09 + 0.004 pA; n = 13 patches). Single-channel openings were analyzed using the time course fitting method (software provided by D. Colquhoun, University College London); transitions briefer than 2.0 × filter-rise times (i.e., 98% of full amplitude) were excluded from the analysis of amplitude histograms. All apparent transitions greater in amplitude than 2 × rms between the open and closed states were fitted, and the resulting idealized records were revised by imposition of a minimum resolvable duration for openings and shuttings (120 μsec) (Colquhoun and Sigworth, 1995); refitting of the data imposing a 200 μsec resolution produced similar results. The false event rate for detection of 8 pS sublevels is 0.0001 sec−1; however, this rises to 0.5 sec−1 for conductance levels that match our lowest detected openings in our best patches (Colquhoun and Sigworth, 1995). The unbinned data comprising the amplitude histograms were fitted to the sum of two to four Gaussian components (maximum likelihood method; software provided by D. Colquhoun). The composite closed time distribution obtained for GluR1 single-channel currents from all patches recorded with PKA in the pipette was fitted with four exponential components, and a critical time (TCRIT) was calculated to define bursts of openings from the two briefest shut time components (0.5 and 4 msec) such that the percentage of misclassified gaps is minimized (Colquhoun and Sigworth, 1995). Bursts defined byTCRIT of 1.0 msec were fitted with the sum of two exponential components. If all agonist-bound channels open with a burst structure similar to that observed with 10 μm glutamate, then the maximum achievablePO,PEAK can be estimated using: Equation 7where <burst length> is the mean burst length calculated from the fitted components of the burst length distribution,<open periods per burst> is defined as one plus the mean number of gaps within a burst, and <open period> was the mean duration of open periods regardless of the sublevel amplitude calculated from the fitted open period histogram constructed from openings to all subconductance levels. More complex aspects of burst structure were not analyzed. Direct transitions between subconductance levels were considered to be a single open period.
Statistical analysis. Differences between measured parameters were assessed using ANOVA with Tukey post hoctesting. Where appropriate, Student's t test was used. We rejected the null hypothesis at p values <0.05 and calculated the power of ANOVA and t tests that showed no significant difference (Zar, 1999).
RESULTS
Control of neuronal AMPA receptor function by PKA
PKA has previously been reported to enhance the function of recombinant and neuronal glutamate receptors (Dingledine et al., 1999). To determine whether PKA alters the function of hippocampal AMPA receptor response properties, we analyzed macroscopic glutamate receptor responses from patches excised from acutely dissociated CA1 pyramidal neurons with either Cα-PKA or calcineurin added to the pipette solution (Fig.2A). These neurons are known to express primarily GluR1 and GluR2 AMPA receptor subunits, as well as some GluR3 subunits (Boulter et al., 1990; Sommer et al., 1990;Monyer et al., 1991; Leranth et al., 1996). Rapid application of 10 mm glutamate to patches excised from the soma in the presence of 20 μm MK-801 plus 1 mm Mg2+ and in the nominal absence of glycine activated rapidly rising (mean 10–90% rise time 420 μsec; n = 15) and rapidly desensitizing current responses that reversed near 0 mV (corrected for +9 mV junction potential; Fig. 2B). Glutamate-evoked current responses could be best fit by two exponential components (mean from all cells tauDECAY1 = 5.8 msec, 57%; tauDECAY2 = 31 msec, 43%; n = 15). The decay time course of these responses was similar to that described for dendritic AMPA receptors in CA1 pyramidal cells (Spruston et al., 1995) and was not altered by inclusion of Cα-PKA versus calcineurin in the pipette (Table 2). To evaluate whether PKA alters either the weighted mean unitary conductance orPO,PEAK, we performed nonstationary variance analysis of glutamate-evoked current responses. Figure2C,D shows fluctuations of the residual difference currents obtained by subtraction of the mean current waveform. These fluctuations arise from random properties of channel gating during glutamate application. Analysis of the current– variance relationship of the difference currents shown in Figure 2C,D (inset) highlights the stochastic nature of these fluctuations. The composite current–variance curves (Fig.2E,F) constructed from many difference currents shows the parabolic form described by Equation 1. From these data we have estimated the weighted mean unitary current and the number of active channels and used these values to determinePO,PEAK. When Cα-PKA was included in the patch pipette, PO,PEAK was 0.92 ± 0.01 (mean ± SEM; n = 6; Fig.2D,F), which was 2.4-fold higher than PO,PEAK calculated from responses recorded when calcineurin plus calmodulin were included in the pipette (0.39 ± 0.02; n = 9; p < 0.001; unpaired t test) (Fig.2C,E). The weighted mean conductance values were not significantly different with PKA or calcineurin included in the pipette (Table 2) and were similar to values obtained for glutamate activation of homomeric GluR1 receptors [Table 2; see also Derkach et al. (1999)] and for dendritic hippocampal AMPA receptors (Spruston et al., 1995). These results suggest that PKA can enhance hippocampal AMPA receptor function by increasing PO,PEAK.
Control of recombinant AMPA receptor function by PKA
To evaluate the molecular basis for the PKA-induced increase inPO,PEAK that we observed in CA1 neurons, we recorded glutamate-induced current responses from recombinant AMPA receptors expressed in HEK 293 cells andXenopus oocytes. We studied homomeric GluR1(flip) receptors because the C terminal of the GluR1 subunit has been shown to be a substrate for phosphorylation by PKA. Phosphorylation-induced increases in GluR1 receptor response amplitude previously have been observed after the addition of purified Cα-PKA to the intracellular solution in whole-cell patch recordings (Roche et al., 1996). In confirmation of this result, we found that the glutamate-activated GluR1 current responses recorded under voltage clamp in Xenopus oocytes were significantly potentiated after microinjection of Cα-PKA (1.70 ± 0.17-fold; n = 13) compared with buffer-injected oocytes (1.02 ± 0.03-fold; p < 0.05) (see also Keller et al., 1992). To test whether Cα-PKA potentiates recombinant GluR1 function in a manner similar to neuronal AMPA receptor function, we studied the kinetic properties of macroscopic current responses in excised membrane patches from HEK 293 cells transiently expressing GluR1 (Fig. 3A). Application of a maximal concentration of glutamate (10 mm; EC50 0.5 mm) (Wahl et al., 1998) to outside-out patches evoked fast-activating current responses that desensitized rapidly and profoundly (Table 2) and reversed in the absence of spermine at a membrane potential of +1 mV (n= 3; corrected for +9 mV measured junction potential). As shown in Figure 3C, the glutamate-evoked current-response waveform was stable through many agonist applications at a 2 sec interval. Typically 20–300 wild-type GluR1 current responses (mean 63) were recorded over several minutes from outside-out patches. Holding potential was −60 mV.
To evaluate the mechanism underlying the ability of PKA to potentiate recombinant GluR1 function, we determined the GluR1 response time course, weighted mean single-channel conductance, rate of desensitization, and the probability of receptor opening when the purified catalytic subunit Cα-PKA was included in the pipette; some cells were also cotransfected with cDNA encoding Cα-PKA. Measurements under these conditions were compared with those obtained from cells cotransfected with a cDNA encoding the PKA inhibitor peptide PKI without Cα-PKA added to the pipette solution. The effects of PKI and Cα-PKA cotransfection on GluR1 phosphorylation were assessed by immunoblot analysis using phosphorylation site-specific anti-bodies (Fig. 4) (Mammen et al., 1997). Cotransfection of PKI with GluR1 significantly reduced the phosphorylation of the C-terminal PKA phosphorylation site Ser845 (0.36 ± 0.09-fold of basal phosphorylation measured when GluR1 was transfected alone, n = 7, p < 0.001; paired t test). Ser831 phosphorylation also unexpectedly decreased with PKI cotransfection (0.60 ± 0.09 fold of basal phosphorylation, n = 7; p < 0.005; paired t test). These changes are unlikely to reflect changes in GluR1 expression levels by PKI, because the expression of GluR1 was comparable in cells expressing GluR1 with or without PKI. The change in Ser831 phosphorylation may be caused by downregulation of signal transduction cascades that maintain basal Ser831 phosphorylation. Cotransfection of HEK 293 cells with GluR1 and Cα-PKA significantly increased phosphorylation of GluR1 at Ser845 (14.5 ± 4.2-fold increase; n = 7), compared with basal phosphorylation observed when GluR1 was transfected alone (pairedt test: p < 0.05) (Fig. 4). The effect of Cα-PKA on phosphorylation of GluR1 was specific to Ser845, because there was no significant change in phosphorylation at Ser831 (1.1 ± 0.2-fold change compared with basal phosphorylation;n = 7; p > 0.5; paired ttest); the increase in Ser845 phosphorylation by Cα-PKA was almost completely eliminated when Ser845 was mutated to alanine (93 ± 3% inhibition of phosphorylation, n = 5).
Nonstationary variance analysis of homomeric GluR1 macroscopic current responses (Fig. 3) to rapid application of maximally effective glutamate suggests that inclusion of Cα-PKA in the patch pipette solution has little effect on weighted mean unitary current of wild-type GluR1 measured at −60 mV (Table 2). Likewise Cα-PKA has no effect on GluR1 response time course in excised membrane patches (Table2). However, Figure 5A shows that PO,PEAK is high in the presence of Cα-PKA and ATP compared with cells cotransfected with PKI or with calcineurin added to the patch pipette. Measurements ofPO,PEAK from current responses to maximal concentrations of glutamate are clustered with a mean of 0.78 ± 0.04 (n = 13) (Fig. 5A) when purified Cα-PKA is included in the pipette;PO,PEAK was also high (0.62 ± 0.04; n = 6; data not shown) in patches excised from cells cotransfected with a cDNA encoding Cα-PKA. These values are similar to the maximum single-channelPO,PEAK value predicted for homomeric GluR1 receptors (0.80; Eq. 7) using the mean number of opening periods per burst (1.22; n = 7 patches), the mean open period duration (0.47 msec) determined from a composite histogram of all openings in all patches (see Fig. 7), and the mean burst length (Table2). By contrast, PO,PEAK was significantly lower in cells expressing the PKA inhibitor peptide PKI and lacking catalytic subunit Cα-PKA in the pipette (0.50 ± 0.06; n = 11) (Fig. 5A). The somewhat increased variability ofPO,PEAK in PKI transfected cells may reflect a variable level of Ser831 basal phosphorylation, which can also increase PO,PEAK (T. G. Banke and S. F. Traynelis, unpublished data). Inclusion of purified calcineurin and its co-activators (100 nm Ca2+,calmodulin) in the pipette solution for patches obtained from cells transfected with PKI also showed a low PO,PEAK(0.42 ± 0.05; n = 10). Figure 5A(bottom panels) compares the pooled normalized current–variance plots for responses from different patches with either Cα-PKA or calcineurin plus its coactivators included in the pipette. These current–variance curves illustrate the predicted parabolic relationship and more clearly demonstrate the difference inPO,PEAK.
To determine whether PKA modifies receptor function through ATP-dependent phosphorylation, we performed control experiments in which we included Cα-PKA in the patch pipette together with AMP-PNP, a non-hydrolyzable analog of ATP. Cells were cotransfected with GluR1 and PKI to reduce basal phosphorylation of Ser845; we assume that all endogenously expressed PKI is rapidly washed out from our patch. Inclusion of Cα-PKA and the nonhydrolyzable ATP analog in the patch pipette was associated with a reducedPO,PEAK value (0.40 ± 0.06;n = 11) when compared with Cα-PKA plus ATP (p < 0.001). This result is consistent with the idea that Cα-PKA mediates its effects on receptor function through ATP-dependent phosphorylation of GluR1 rather than association with an intracellular portion of the receptor.
Structural determinants of control of recombinant GluR1 PO,PEAK by PKA
Ser845 and Ser831 are two C-terminal residues that are unique to GluR1 compared with other AMPA receptor subunits (Fig. 1) and have been biochemically identified as substrates for phosphorylation. Roche et al. (1996) and Barria et al. (1997) have sought to link these phosphorylation sites to functional effects of the kinases by showing that exchange of Ser845 and Ser831 to alanine blocks the potentiating effects of PKA and CAMKII on GluR1 responses, respectively. To test whether either of these two residues might control the effects of PKA on PO,PEAKdescribed here, we recorded current responses from GluR1(S845A) and GluR1(S831A) during rapid application of maximal concentrations of glutamate. Analysis of the response time course and current–variance relationship for GluR1(S845A) suggests that inclusion of Cα-PKA in the patch pipette had no effect onPO,PEAK (Fig. 5B), weighted mean unitary current, rise time, or the time course for receptor desensitization in excised membrane patches when compared with recordings made with calcineurin (Table3). Thus, the substitution S845A in GluR1 blocks the enhancement ofPO,PEAK by PKA without altering other response characteristics. By contrast, PKA was still able to enhancePO,PEAK of the GluR1(S831A) mutant compared with both PKI transfected cells and patches with calcineurin included in the pipette solution, suggesting that the effects of PKA do not reflect phosphorylation of Ser831 (Fig. 5C) or indirect effects of other kinases that act on Ser831. These results are consistent with biochemical studies that show that recombinant and native GluR1 Ser845 but not Ser831 is phosphorylated in vitro and in vivo by PKA (Fig. 4) (Roche et al., 1996;Mammen et al., 1997).
Effects of PKA and calcineurin on single-channel currents
Both recombinant and native AMPA receptors have previously been shown to arise from multiple conductance levels (Wyllie et al., 1993;Swanson et al., 1997; Dingledine et al., 1999), which complicates the relationship between response amplitude, variance, andPO,PEAK. For example, a change in relative opening frequency of any conductance level will change the relative macroscopic current as well as the variance. Moreover, the presence of multiple conductance levels means that current variance will still exist even for PO,PEAKvalues of 1.0. To evaluate the complex contribution that changing sublevel occupancy might make to our measurements ofPO,PEAK from Equations 1-5, we sought to determine the sublevel amplitudes with single-channel analysis of recombinant GluR1 receptors activated by application of a submaximal concentration of glutamate.
Figure 6 shows examples of glutamate-activated homomeric GluR1 channel openings recorded when either Cα-PKA or calcineurin plus its coactivators are included in the pipette. We analyzed these responses by fitting a filtered step-response function to all apparent transitions between closed and open sublevels. Currents chosen for analysis were between −0.2 and −4.0 pA in amplitude and had durations longer than 0.12 msec. Openings were brief in duration with fitted time constants for distributions of the mean open period, mean burst length, and mean intraburst gap times (data not shown) that were similar to those reported for GluR4(flip) (Fig. 7). The mean burst length (Table 2) is also similar to the relaxation time constant (0.8–1.1 msec) observed for GluR1 receptors in response to brief pulses of glutamate (Mosbacher et al., 1994; Partin et al., 1996). Addition of Cα-PKA or calcineurin plus its coactivators did not alter the mean open period or burst length of GluR1 unitary currents (Table 2, Fig. 7), consistent with the lack of effect of these treatments on the response time course (Table 2).
Inspection of amplitude histograms constructed from analysis suggests that homomeric GluR1 receptors open to at least three distinct sublevels in response to glutamate, as has been reported for native (Cull-Candy and Usowicz, 1987; Jahr and Stevens, 1987) and recombinant glutamate receptors (Swanson et al., 1996, 1997; Derkach et al., 1999). Composite amplitude histograms constructed from our lowest noise patches (Fig. 6C,D) were best fit by four Gaussian components (Colquhoun and Sigworth, 1995), perhaps suggesting that more than one subconductance level may exist below 10 pS [see also Swanson et al. (1996)]. The infrequent openings above −2 pA made determination of the amplitude of the largest conductance level ambiguous. Accordingly, we fit the large amplitude unitary current range (−2 to −4 pA) with a single, broad Gaussian component. Table4 summarizes the three main sublevel amplitudes and their relative proportions obtained from fits to histograms of glutamate-activated single-channel currents constructed from individual patches when Cα-PKA or calcineurin were included in the pipette. There was no significant difference in the weighted mean unitary current predicted from these patches, consistent with our conclusion from variance analysis of the macroscopic currents (Table2). These data together suggest that PKA phosphorylation of GluR1 is not associated with a large change in single-channel conductance or open duration. Similar conductance levels were observed using 10 μm quisqualate to activate GluR1 in outside-out patches with PKA or calcineurin included in the pipette (data not shown; n = 6).
When three or more sublevels exist, there are multiple combinations of sublevel open probabilities that can generate any given current–variance curve. In this situation the totalPO,PEAK for these different proportions of sublevel openings (i.e., the sum of the various sublevel open probabilities) will not necessarily match thePO,PEAK estimated from Equations 1-5. Therefore, we used the GluR1 sublevel amplitudes determined above to evaluate all possible combinations of sublevel open probabilities that could yield the current–variance curves that we observe with calcineurin or Cα-PKA included in our pipette solution (Fig.5A). This analysis assumes that the conductance levels (but not their relative opening frequencies) are the same in 10 μm and 10 mm glutamate. Figure 8B shows a three-dimensional plot of the solutions of Equation 6 to the current–variance relationships (Fig. 8A) that are representative of the results obtained with Cα-PKA or calcineurin included in the internal solution. This plot shows that the full range of possible PO,PEAK values that account for our data obtained with Cα-PKA and calcineurin do not overlap, and thus we conclude that homomeric GluR1PO,PEAK values are distinct for PKA and calcineurin. This result strengthens our interpretation that PKA increases receptor PO,PEAK relative to calcineurin.
DISCUSSION
The most important finding of this study is that phosphorylation of GluR1 Ser845 by PKA appears to increase the peak open probability of the receptor. This result is in contrast to the effects of CAMKII, which phosphorylates Ser831 to increase GluR1 unitary conductance (Barria et al., 1997; Derkach et al., 1999) and possibly postsynaptic AMPA receptor conductance during LTP (Barria et al., 1997; Benke et al., 1998). Thus, the same portion of the C terminal of the GluR1 molecule (residues 831–845) controls distinct determinants of channel function: open probability and single-channel conductance. Our results may provide an explanation for some forms of plasticity at synapses where AMPA receptors contain GluR1, and they further suggest that synaptic plasticity that proceeds through PKA control ofPO,PEAK can tune postsynaptic responsiveness without altering response kinetics. Moreover, increased fluctuations in postsynaptic current amplitude that accompany the reduction in glutamate receptorPO,PEAK will increase noise in the CNS, which may hold implications for information processing (Traynelis and Jaramillo, 1998).
Comparison of results with previous work
Previous studies have shown that PKA can enhance neuronal AMPA receptor equilibrium response amplitude (Knapp et al., 1990), slow AMPA receptor rundown (Wang et al., 1991; Rosenmund et al., 1994), increase channel opening frequency without changing single-channel conductance (Greengard et al., 1991), and potentiate GluR1 receptor responses without changing their time course (Roche et al., 1996). Moreover, forskolin also potentiates postsynaptic AMPA receptor function, presumably through activation of PKA (Chavez-Noriega and Stevens, 1992). Our results are consistent with these findings, as well as the suggestion by Knapp et al. (1990) that PKA increases the AMPA receptor equilibrium open probability. Moreover, our data also support the idea that recombinant and native AMPA receptors can open with a high probability (>0.5) when maximally activated by the endogenous agonist glutamate (Hestrin, 1992; Raman and Trussell, 1995; Spruston et al., 1995; Hausser and Roth, 1997; Irizarry et al., 1998). However, we do not observe a PKA-induced change in the mean channel open time or burst length for recombinant GluR1, as previously noted for neuronal AMPA receptors (Greengard et al., 1991). This discrepancy may reflect subunit composition or differences between our heterologous expression system and neurons. Our finding that S845A abolishes the effect of PKA on recombinant GluR1 fits well with data showing that this residue can be phosphorylated in vitro by Cα-PKA (Roche et al., 1996), in brain slices by forskolin activation of adenylyl cyclase (Mammen et al., 1997), and in HEK 293 cells cotransfected with GluR1 and Cα-PKA (Fig. 4).
Although our measurements are consistent with previous findings, two potential sources of artifact deserve mention. First, Rosenmund et al. (1998) have shown that antagonist-bound AMPA receptors in the absence of desensitization sequentially pass through three subconductance levels as they bind and unbind agonist. Although this study suggests that the response onset may have a sublevel composition that changes with time, the high concentration of agonist used here (20 × EC50) should induce activation of the fully liganded state of GluR1 within the brief rising phase of the response, which was omitted from our variance analysis. Second, any change in the sublevel composition of the response during desensitization could alter the current variance and invalidate the use of Equations 1-6. However, we obtained similar results when we fit current–variance curves constructed from different fractions of the response decay, suggesting that weighted mean unitary current does not fluctuate during desensitization beyond our limits of detection (∼0.3 pA). Furthermore, the weighted mean conductance determined using nonstationary variance analysis is identical to that reported for glutamate-evoked responses of cyclothiazide-treated GluR1 homomeric receptors, suggesting that desensitization does not involve a change in the relative proportions of subconductance levels (Irizarry et al., 1998). Thus, the most parsimonious explanation for our results is that the overall AMPA receptor open probability is controlled by Cα-PKA phosphorylation of Ser845.
GluR1 Ser845 control of PO,PEAK and homosynaptic LTD
Considerable data now suggest a role for dephosphorylation of GluR1 Ser845 in LTD, making it attractive to propose that this residue may be a substrate for the phosphatases implicated in postsynaptic forms of LTD [but see Bolshakov and Siegelbaum (1994) and Stevens and Wang (1994)]. Phosphorylation of Ser845 is reduced in LTD induced by application of NMDA to hippocampal slices (Lee et al., 1998). Complimentary experiments have shown that PKA activators can inhibit both LTD and associated GluR1 Ser845 phosphorylation and that cAMP analogs can reverse previously established LTD (Kameyama et al., 1998). Furthermore, selective inhibition of PKA also depresses synaptic AMPA receptor function and occludes LTD (Kameyama et al., 1998). Thus, our finding that conditions favoring dephosphorylation of GluR1 Ser845 reduce receptor PO,PEAK could provide a biophysical explanation for homosynaptic LTD at certain synapses. This idea is strengthened by recent experiments showing that hippocampal LTD is associated with a decrease in postsynaptic responses to glutamate (Kandler et al., 1998). Several reports suggest that protein phosphatases may control homosynaptic hippocampal LTD through downregulation of AMPA receptor function. For example, Mulkey et al. (1994) have proposed that calcineurin relieves tonic inhibition of phosphatase 1A through the inactivation of one of its phosphosubstrates, an endogenous phosphatase 1A inhibitor. Furthermore,Yan et al. (1999) have proposed that protein phosphatase-1 is directly associated with AMPA receptor complexes and attenuates receptor function. Although we cannot conclude or rule out dephosphorylation of GluR1 Ser845 by calcineurin in our experiments, our data are consistent with the hypothesis that dephosphorylation of GluR1 Ser845 may be involved in the expression of LTD.
Biophysical mechanisms underlying the Ser845 control of GluR1PO,PEAK
Perhaps the most puzzling aspect of these findings as well as a similar study of PKA/calcineurin regulation of homomeric GluR6 (Traynelis and Wahl, 1997) is the enhancement ofPO,PEAK that occurs in the absence of a marked change in response waveform. Several means by which phosphorylation could increase response amplitude without changing the response time course include phosphorylation-induced creation of rapidly equilibrating agonist-bound closed states or changes in channel opening rate, which would require offsetting changes in other rate constants to maintain a similar macroscopic response time course (Traynelis and Wahl, 1997). However, the lack of marked effects of PKA and calcineurin on both response time course and desensitization properties suggests that the changes in GluR1 function that occur after phosphorylation of Ser845 might be restricted to conformations that precede agonist binding. We have explored this idea using a simplified and arbitrary model of AMPA receptor function that embodies common features of several previously described kinetic schemes (Raman and Trussell, 1992; Jonas et al., 1993; Heckmann et al., 1996; Hausser and Roth, 1997). The model described in Figure9 is not presented as the definitive mechanism of AMPA receptor activation but rather is used here to evaluate the possibility that trial-to-trial changes in the number of active receptors might account for our results. In this model we hypothesize that phosphorylation of Ser845 alters the equilibrium between a resting unbound state (R1) and an unbound nonfunctional state (R2) during the interval between glutamate applications. Perturbations in this equilibrium that occur with a time constant less than the stimulus interval (2 sec) but longer than the response decay time constant (3 msec) effectively vary the number of receptors between trials (Fig.9B) without changing the number of active receptors during a trial (Fig. 9C). Figure 9D confirms that fluctuations in the number of available receptors between agonist applications add variance throughout the current response and appear in our analysis as a decrease in peak open probability.
The central point of this model is that slow stochastic fluctuations in the occupancy of two unbound states (R1 and R2) will appear as a decreasedPO,PEAK without changing response time course, provided one of the states cannot proceed to the open state during agonist application. More work is required to compare this idea with other possible means of increasingPO,PEAK, as well as to extend it to models of AMPA receptor activation that account for multiple conductance levels and multiple open states. Nevertheless, the model in Figure 9A provides an interesting paradigm in which to consider AMPA receptor function. Moreover, if the increasingly complex network of intracellular proteins (GRIP, PICK1, NSF; α- and β-SNAPs) (Dingledine et al., 1999; Kim and Huganir, 1999) that bind to AMPA receptors within postsynaptic densities also control receptor function in a manner sensitive to the Ser845 phosphorylation, it would provide a physical correlate to the two functionally distinct unbound receptor conformations R1 and R2. Consistent in principle with this idea, C-terminal phosphorylation of Kir 2.3 by PKA (Cohen et al., 1996) and C-terminal phosphorylation of GluR2 by PKC (Matsuda et al., 1999) alter binding to PSD95 and GRIP, respectively. Interestingly, modifications of this model that reduce the equilibrium time constant between R1 and R2 below the stimulus interval produce an effective reduction in the number of receptors, an idea popularized by silent synapse models of synaptic plasticity (Gomperts et al., 1998; Kullmann and Asztely, 1998; Carroll et al., 1999). Thus, our findings, in addition to expanding our understanding of the molecular regulation of AMPA receptors, may have biophysical and structural implications for synaptic plasticity.
Footnotes
This work was generously supported by the Danish State Biotechnology Program (T.G.B.), the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (R.L.H.), the Danish Medical Research Council (A.S.), and the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke (S.F.T.). We thank Drs. M. Chalfie, S. Heinemann, T. J. Murphy, P. Seeburg, and M. Uhler for sharing cDNA constructs. We also thank Drs. J. Howe and M. L. Mayer for providing critical comments on this manuscript, J. Howe for sharing unpublished single channel data, M. Heckmann for sharing unpublished data concerning GluR6 kinetics, and P. Lyuboslavsky for excellent technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Stephen F. Traynelis, Department of Pharmacology, 5025 Rollins Research Center, Emory University, 1510 Clifton Road, Atlanta GA 30322-3090. E-mail:straynelis{at}pharm.emory.edu.