Abstract
The spinal dorsal horn is the first level of the CNS in which nociceptive input from sensory afferents is integrated and transmitted. Although inhibitory control in this region has a crucial impact on pain transmission, the respective contribution of GABA and glycine to this inhibition remains elusive. We have previously documented co-release of GABA and glycine at the same inhibitory synapse in spinal laminas I–II of adult rats [older than postnatal day 30 (P30)]. However, despite this co-release, individual miniature inhibitory postsynaptic currents (mIPSCs) were mediated by either glycine receptors (GlyR) or GABAA receptors (GABAAR), yet never by the two together. In contrast, recent studies of ventral horn immature inhibitory synapses (≤P21) reported individual mIPSCs that were mediated by both GABAARs and GlyRs. This raises the question of whether mixed mIPSCs are present in immature lamina I–II neurons yet are lost through a maturation-dependent synaptic specialization. To test this, we recorded mIPSCs using patch-clamp techniques in lamina I–II neurons in spinal slices taken at different stages of development. We found that, in neurons younger than P23, both GlyR-only and GABAAR-only mIPSCs could be recorded, in addition to mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs. With maturation however, both lamina I–II neurons gradually discontinued exhibiting mixed mIPSCs, although with differing patterns of specialization. Yet, at all developmental stages, benzodiazepine administration could unmask mixed mIPSCs. Together, these findings indicate that, although GABA and glycine are continually co-released throughout development, junctional codetection ceases by adulthood. This indicates an age-dependent postsynaptic tuning of inhibitory synapses that occurs in a region-specific manner.
- pain
- nociception
- development
- plasticity
- inhibition
- cotransmission
- mIPSCs
- GABAA
- quantal release
- substantia gelatinosa
- marginal layer
- silent synapse
Laminas I and II of the spinal dorsal horn are key areas in the CNS in which pain-related, or nociceptive information that is carried by sensory afferents is integrated and relayed to higher brain structures. Thus, the control of excitability of lamina I–II neurons has a major impact on pain perception. Glycine and GABA are the main transmitters responsible for inhibitory control in this region and therefore play a crucial role in nociception. For example, blocking GABAA or glycine receptors (GABAARs or GlyRs, respectively) in the superficial dorsal horn can cause conditions of hyperexcitability characteristic of neuropathic pain syndromes (Yaksh, 1989; Sherman and Loomis, 1996; Sorkin and Puig, 1996). Yet, the exact respective contributions of GABA and glycine to inhibitory control in this area remain largely unknown.
Immunocytochemical studies have provided substantial evidence in favor of a colocalization of GABA and glycine as well as their respective receptors in the dorsal horn (Todd et al., 1996). For example, the vesicular inhibitory amino acid transporter (VIAAT), which is known to carry both glycine and GABA (for review, see Gasnier, 2000), has been shown in almost every inhibitory bouton in laminas I–III (Chaudhry et al., 1998; Dumoulin et al., 1999). Not surprisingly, virtually all glycinergic neurons in this region are also immunoreactive for GABA (Todd and Sullivan, 1990; Mitchell et al., 1993). Recent reports have demonstrated the co-release of GABA and glycine from individual vesicles at some synapses (Jonas et al., 1998; Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b; O'Brien and Berger, 1999). More precisely, the studies by Jonas et al. (1998) and O'Brien and Berger (1999) have shown that GABA and glycine can be co-released from interneurons in the immature ventral horn to activate both postsynaptic GABAARs and GlyRs simultaneously. In contrast, although we have also demonstrated recently the co-release of GABA and glycine in adult laminas I–II (Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b), our results indicated that quantal postsynaptic currents were either GlyR- or GABAAR-mediated, never both, in these adult cells. Together, these findings could suggest a specialization of inhibitory synapses with maturation.
We investigated this possibility in the present study using whole-cell patch-clamp techniques on transverse and parasagittal slices of spinal cord to record and analyze action-potential independent miniature inhibitory postsynaptic currents (mIPSCs), which are thought to reflect the release of single vesicles of transmitter. We found that in immature rats [postnatal day 8 (P8) to P23], most neurons in laminas I–II not only exhibited both GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs but also mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs. These mixed mIPSCs decreased in proportion with age, disappearing by P23, at which time neurons could be differentiated as displaying either GlyR-only or GABAAR-only mIPSCs, but with lamina-specific patterns of specialization. Additionally, both GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs displayed a quickening of decay kinetics with age, especially in the case of GABAARs. This allowed for a region-specific tuning of inhibitory charge carried during quantal events via an age-dependent specialization.
Preliminary results of this study have been published previously (Coull et al., 2000).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
In this study we used slices from immature (P8–P23) or adult male (>P23) Wistar or Sprague Dawley rats. These slices were cut in either the parasagittal or transverse plane after removal of spinal cord by laminectomy or hydraulic extrusion. All dissections were performed in the presence of ice-cold (≤4°C) saccharose-artificial CSF (S-ACSF) containing (in mm): 248 saccharose, 11 glucose, 2 NaHCO3, 2 KCl, 1.25 KH2PO4, 2 CaCl2, 2 MgSO4, pH 7.35 ± 0.05. S-ACSF was bubbled continuously with 95% O2/5% CO2.
Laminectomy. Rats were deeply anesthetized with a mixture of ketamine (75 mg/kg, i.p.) and xylazine (5 mg/kg, i.p.). To limit hemorrhage and excitotoxicity during the dissection procedure, we systematically performed bilateral injections of xylocaine–adrenaline (2%) in the spine muscles of the thoracolumbar spinal cord segments. Vertebral laminectomy was then performed, followed by dorsal and ventral root transection and in situ meninges removal.
Hydraulic extrusion. We previously described the protocol for hydraulic extrusion of rat spinal cords (Chéry et al., 2000). Briefly, rats were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (30 mg/kg); then, adult rats were perfused intracardially with ice-cold S-ACSF, whereas immature rats were immersed in ice-cold water for 4–5 min. After either perfusion or immersion, both groups of rats were rapidly decapitated. The sacral vertebral column was transected, and a syringe was used to inject S-ACSF into the foramen, thus ejecting the spinal cord.
Slice preparation. Cervical and lumbar segments (0.5–2 cm long) were isolated and glued with cyanoacrylate cement, either lateral side down (allowing for parasagittal slicing) or vertically, supported by an agarose block (allowing for transverse slicing), to the platform of a Vibratome chamber filled with oxygenated ice-cold S-ACSF. Slices (300–400 μm thick) were cut, incubated in S-ACSF at room temperature (23–28°C) for 30 min, and transferred to normal ACSF for at least 1 hr before electrophysiological recordings. Finally, slices were transferred to a recording chamber under a Zeiss Axioscope that was equipped with infrared differential interference contrast (IR-DIC) and water immersion objectives for visualization of neurons in thick live tissue. The slices were continuously perfused with oxygenated normal ACSF in which 125 mm NaCl was substituted for saccharose. To increase the frequency of occurrence of mIPSCs, 100 μm ruthenium red (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was applied to the bath chamber for some slices (n = 25). Ruthenium red is a polyvalent cation that blocks voltage-dependent calcium channels and enhances mIPSC frequency via a Ca2+-independent mechanism (Sciancalepore et al., 1998; Trudeau et al., 1998; Hoffman and Lupica, 2000).
Electrophysiological recordings, data acquisition, and analysis. All recordings were made at room temperature. For voltage-clamp experiments, patch pipettes were obtained by pulling borosilicate glass capillaries with inner filament using a horizontal laser puller (P-2000; Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA) or a two-stage vertical puller (PP-83; Narishige, Tokyo, Japan). The pipettes were filled with a solution containing (in mm): 130 CsCl, 2 MgCl2, 10 HEPES, pH 7.3, adjusted with CsOH. Approximately 60% of the recordings were made with 0.4 mm GTP and 2 mm ATP (Sigma) added to the intracellular solution. Because no differences in mIPSC characteristics were observed among the two conditions, all data were pooled. Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were obtained using an Axopatch 200B amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) with >80% series resistance compensation.
Recordings were low-pass filtered (5–10 kHz), digitized, and stored on videotape. Off-line, recordings were filtered at 2 kHz and digitized at 4–10 kHz on an Intel Pentium-based computer. Data were acquired and analyzed using the Strathclyde electrophysiology software CDR (courtesy of Dr. J. Dempster, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK) and analysis software designed by Y.D.K.
Detection of individual mIPSCs was performed using a software trigger previously described in detail (Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b;Poisbeau et al., 1999). More than 95% of events that satisfied the trigger criteria were detected, even during compound mIPSCs. For each experiment, all detected events were examined individually, and any noise that spuriously met trigger specification was rejected.
Statistical analysis and curve fitting. Peak amplitudes, rise times, and decay time constants were calculated for each of several hundreds of mIPSCs per cell, using an automated algorithm (De Koninck and Mody, 1994, 1996). Averages of several hundred mIPSCs were also superimposed for comparison. Decay time constants were fitted using a least-square method that was based on a simplex algorithm as previously described (De Koninck and Mody, 1994). The goodness of fit was evaluated on the basis of fitting subsets of points drawn from the whole set of data points as well as from evaluation of the reduced χ2: χv2 = χ2/v, where the factorv = N − n is the number of degrees of freedom left after fitting N data points to then parameters. The necessity to introduce additional exponential components to the fits was judged first on the basis of visual inspection of the fitted curves superimposed onto the data. When the merit of additional components was not obvious, an Ftest was used to assess how the additional component improved the value of the reduced χ2:Fχ = Δχ2/χv2(df1 = 1 and df2 =v). The critical value for the merit of additional components was set at a low level (p < 0.01) to favor parsimony of the fitted function. When focusing on comparisons of the late component of mIPSCs, fits were started at a fixed interval after the peak of the event to allow for nonequivocal monoexponential fits that provide an easier and fairer reference when dealing with nonaveraged, individual traces (De Koninck and Mody, 1994; Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b). This also avoided contamination of the values of decay time constants with variable weighting factors. Student'st tests were used to analyze the differences between parameters of the GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated IPSCs. Cumulative probability distributions were compared using the Kolmogorov–Smirnov test. χ2 tests for contingency tables were performed to determine the correlation between the laminar location of the cells and the presence of GABAAR- and GlyR-mediated mIPSCs. The critical value for statistical significance was set atp < 0.05. All data are expressed as mean ± SEM, unless otherwise indicated.
Drug application. Slices were continually perfused with oxygenated ACSF containing tetrodotoxin (0.5 μm; Sigma) and either kynurenic acid (2 mm; Fluka, Neu-Ulm, Germany) or 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (10 μm;Tocris Cookson, Ballwin, MO) and D2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (40 μm; Tocris Cookson). For selective blockade of glycine receptors, strychnine hydrochloride (200 nm–1 μm; Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA) was used. For selective blockade of GABAA receptors, bicuculline methiodide (10 μm; Research Biochemicals) or SR-95531 (Gabazine; 3 μm; Research Biochemicals) was used. All drugs were prepared as 1000 × concentrated frozen stock solution aliquots. Diazepam (Sigma) was diluted in 96% ethanol, whereas all other drugs were prepared in distilled water.
RESULTS
Whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings of mIPSCs from 68 adult (>P30) and 78 immature (P8–P23) lamina I and II neurons are included in this report. Neurons were selected if they could be recorded from for a sufficient duration (>15 min) with stable access resistance throughout (7–20 MΩ). Spinal slices were obtained from either lumbar or cervical spinal enlargements. Consistent with our previous reports, no differences were observed in recordings between the two regions, in terms of mIPSC frequency or kinetics (Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b).
Lamina II neurons were accessed using either a parasagittal or a transverse spinal slice preparation. Optimal identification of lamina I neurons required the use of a parasagittal slice. As previously described (Chéry et al., 2000), we defined lamina I neurons as those found within 30 μm of the outlying dorsal white matter in the parasagittal configuration. No significant differences were observed in recordings obtained using the different slice preparations, and thus data were pooled.
In some cases, we bath-applied 100 μm ruthenium red, a polyvalent cation that blocks voltage-dependent calcium channels, to increase mIPSC frequency (n = 25). We observed no significant differences in recordings from cells in the absence or presence of ruthenium red, in terms of decay time constant (GABAAR only, 23.5 ± 11.2 vs 27.5 ± 1.8 msec; GlyR only, 9.7 ± 1.0 vs 10.0 ± 1.3 msec) or 10–90% rise time (GABAAR only, 1.1 ± 0.3 vs 1.0 ± 0.1 msec; GlyR only, 1.1 ± 0.2 vs 0.9 ± 0.2 msec; tested in 16 cells all taken at P14).
GlyR- and GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs
Before P23, all neurons in lamina I (100%; n = 12) and the majority of neurons in lamina II (72%; n = 47) exhibited quantal events mediated by GlyRs and by GABAARs, as well as by both types of receptors concurrently (see below). The remaining lamina II neurons displayed events mediated either solely by glycine receptors (termed hereafter GlyR-only mIPSCs; n = 3 or 4% of cells) or by GABAA receptors (termed hereafter GABAAR-only mIPSCs; n = 16 or 24% of cells). In neurons displaying both GlyR- and GABAAR-mediated events, the simultaneous presence of bicuculline (10 μm) and strychnine (500 nm) was required to completely and reversibly abolish miniature events (Fig.1A). Kinetic analysis revealed that the decay phase of the bicuculline-sensitive GABAAR-only mIPSCs was significantly slower than that of strychnine-sensitive GlyR-only mIPSCs (Fig.1B). This is further highlighted in Figure1C, which shows the cumulative probability distribution of mIPSC decay time constants in two neurons. In control conditions, a clear bimodal distribution of decay time constants indicated two kinetically distinct populations of mIPSCs within this cell. Each of the two peaks represented by this bimodal distribution could be selectively abolished by the administration of bicuculline or strychnine, respectively. Generally, pharmacologically isolated GABAAR- and GlyR-only mIPSCs possessed decay phases that could be appropriately fitted by a monoexponential function (Fig. 1B).
Mixed GABAAR–GlyR-mediated mIPSCs
In the absence of inhibitory amino acid receptor antagonists, a population of individual mIPSCs with a prominent dual component could be observed in neurons in both laminas I and II. Mixed mIPSCs illustrated at the bottom of Figure 1B represented as many as 27% of the total number of mIPSCs displayed by an immature neuron. This proportion of dual component mIPSCs was found further to be not significantly different when superficial neurons were recorded using Cs2SO4-containing electrodes (ECl ∼ −60 mV) at a holding potential of 0 mV (n = 9, data not shown). The relative contribution of the fast decay component to these mIPSCs (τ1) was consistently 66 ± 10%, compared with that of the slow decay component (τ2), which was 33 ± 6% (n = 10) (Fig.1E).
Importantly, biexponential mIPSCs were absent in the presence of either bicuculline or strychnine, and when fitted with double exponential decay functions yielded components that had kinetics comparable to that of their pharmacologically isolated counterparts (GABAAR-only and GlyR-only mIPSCs). In addition, the frequency of pharmacologically isolated monoexponential mIPSCs was found to be similar to the sum of the frequencies of the monoexponential mIPSCs and biexponential mIPSCs when isolated kinetically in neurons younger than P23 (Fig. 1D). That is, the frequency of GlyR-only mIPSCs in the presence of bicuculline (0.43 ± 0.1 Hz) was not significantly different from the sum of the frequencies of kinetically isolated fast monoexponentially decaying mIPSCs and dual component mIPSCs (0.42 ± 0.09 Hz, n = 8, p > 0.05). Similarly, after strychnine application, the frequency of pharmacologically isolated GABAAR-only mIPSCs (0.33 ± 0.09 Hz) was equivalent to the sum of the mean frequencies of kinetically isolated slow monoexponentially decaying mIPSCs and dual component mIPSCs (0.36 ± 0.1, n = 17, p > 0.05). These results are consistent with the interpretation that, in these cells, mIPSCs with a prominent biexponential decay possess both a GABAAR and a GlyR component, and can be reduced to a monoexponential mIPSC of either variety simply by blocking the other component. Consistent with this observation is also the fact that dual component mIPSCs had peak amplitudes that were on average twice that of GlyR-only mIPSCs or GABAAR-only mIPSCs (confirmed in all of 51 neurons tested; ages P8–P22) (Fig.2). Together, all of these results suggest the synchronous coactivation of synaptic GABAARs and GlyRs during a subgroup of quantal inhibitory events in lamina I–II neurons. These events will henceforth be referred to as mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs.
Age-dependent disappearance of mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs
We observed a disappearance of mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs with development. In lamina I (Fig. 3A), the proportion of these events peaked at P14 (27%), and then decreased in a linear fashion, becoming virtually undetectable by approximately P23. Interestingly, and similar to the mixed mIPSCs, GABAAR-only mIPSCs were also gradually lost in lamina I with maturation and were virtually absent beyond P23. Thus, consistent with our previous results (Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b), adult lamina I neurons only expressed GlyR-only mIPSCs (n = 39).
A similar trend in the disappearance of mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs was also observed in lamina II neurons (Fig. 3B). Again, mixed events were excluded by approximately P23. In contrast to lamina I, however, the synaptic events recorded in adult lamina II neurons were evenly divided into GABAAR-only mIPSCs and GlyR-only mIPSCs (52 vs 48%, respectively; n = 33).
Additionally, the decrease in the proportion of mixed mIPSCs in lamina I and II neurons was not correlated with a significant change in the relative contribution of the fast decaying component to the peak amplitude of mixed events (P8–P15, AGlyR/ATotal = 58.5 ± 9.6, n = 36; P20–P22, AGlyR/ATotal = 69.7 ± 9.6, n = 5; p > 0.05).
Diazepam revealed that co-release still occurred during GlyR-only mIPSCs at immature synapses
Our finding of mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs that are excluded with maturation in both laminas I and II in favor of GlyR-only or GABAAR-only mIPSCs raises the question of whether this specialization reflects a reorganization of presynaptic release or of postsynaptic receptor expression. To address this question, we used the benzodiazepine diazepam (DZP) (1 μm) to increase the affinity of GABAARs in lamina I and II neurons to test for the possibility that GABA may be co-released with glycine but remain subliminal to postsynaptic GABAARs. DZP was perfused on immature neurons (n = 5) with synaptic events being initially categorized into GlyR-only, GABAAR-only, and mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs on the basis of their decay kinetics (as described above). At the end of each recording, the validity of these categories was confirmed using strychnine and bicuculline administration sequentially and after full recovery from each application. Figure 4 illustrates the effect of diazepam administration to each of these types of mIPSCs. As shown in Figure 4A, GlyR-only mIPSC kinetics was not affected by perfusion of DZP. In the five cells tested, the decay time constant remained stable (control, 9.8 ± 1.4 msec; DZP, 10 ± 1.7 msec), in addition to the 10–90% rise time (control, 0.5 ± 0.3 msec; DZP, 0.7 ± 0.3 msec; data not shown) and the peak amplitude (control, 69.6 ± 37.6 pA; DZP, 55.4 ± 23.2 pA). However, the interevent interval of fast-decaying mIPSCs was significantly prolonged, corresponding to a reduction in frequency from 0.24 ± 0.16 to 0.09 ± 0.06 Hz for control and DZP, respectively (p < 0.05; n = 5).
DZP also induced an increase in the decay time constant of GABAAR-only mIPSCs that grew from 30.2 ± 7.0 msec (control) to 58.7 ± 14.2 msec (DZP; n = 5) (Fig. 4B). None of the other kinetic parameters were significantly affected. When assessing the effects of DZP on mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs (Fig. 4C), we found that the fast decay component remained stable (11.2 ± 3.3 vs 10.1 ± 3.1 msec), whereas the slow component doubled from 31.1 ± 4.8 to 67.4 ± 16.9 msec (n = 5). The relative contribution of the fast-decaying component (GlyR-mediated) to the peak amplitude of mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs was also observed not to change with DZP application (control, AGlyR/ATotal = 58.5 ± 9.6, n = 36; DZP, AGlyR/ATotal = 57.3 ± 5.6, n = 7; p > 0.05). Together, these results reinforce our conclusion that dual-component mIPSCs correspond to mixed GABAAR–GlyR-mediated mIPSCs with the slow component being attributed to GABAAR activation. More importantly, the frequency of mixed mIPSCs was significantly higher after DZP perfusion with values of 0.20 ± 0.1 and 0.31 ± 0.13 Hz in control and DZP, respectively (p < 0.01; n = 5). The total frequency of events was not significantly different between the control and DZP conditions (0.21 ± 0.06 vs 0.19 ± 0.06 Hz;p > 0.05). Consistent with this, the reduction in GlyR-only mIPSC frequency was similar to the increase in mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSC frequency (for greater power of the test, comparison was made for each cell; the mean difference was 0.036 ± 0.056 Hz, not significantly different from zero;p > 0.05). We can thus conclude that the increase in mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSC frequency results directly from the DZP-induced conversion of GlyR-only mIPSCs into mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs.
Comparable potentiation of GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs in immature versus adult neurons by diazepam
To test for changes in GABAAR subunit composition with maturation (Laurie et al., 1992), we applied DZP at the same concentration on isolated GABAAR-only events from both immature and adult superficial dorsal horn neurons. Perfusion of diazepam (1 μm) induced a comparable approximately twofold increase in the decay time constant of pharmacologically isolated GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs in both immature (control, 30.2 ± 7.0 msec, vs diazepam, 58.7 ± 14.2 msec; n = 5) and adult (control, 14.4 ± 0.6 msec, vs diazepam, 27.3 ± 0.9 msec;n = 6) neurons. Figure 5illustrates such a potentiation for isolated GABAAR-mediated mIPSCs in lamina II neurons. This finding indicates that the sensitivity of immature and adult GABAARs to diazepam was not significantly different.
Age-dependence of mIPSC kinetics
Although no change was observed for the benzodiazepine sensitivity of GABAARs with maturation, we found significant alterations in the decay time course of both pharmacologically isolated GABAAR-only and GlyR-only mIPSCs with maturation. Specifically, GABAAR-only mIPSCs showed a linear threefold quickening of decay time between P8 and P23 (from 35.0 ± 3.0 to 10.0 ± 0.6 msec) (Fig.6B). In contrast, GlyR-only mIPSCs exhibited a smaller decrease in decay time with maturation (from 9.8 ± 1.0 to 5.8 ± 0.3 msec) (Fig.6B). Interestingly, this decrease in the decay time constant for GlyR-only mIPSCs appeared to coincide more closely with the period in which the proportion of mixed mIPSCs declined, from P15 to P23. There was also a decrease in the 10–90% rise time of both GABAAR-only and GlyR-only mIPSCs (Fig.6A). The fact that the ratio of GABAAR-only/GlyR-only rise time remained constant at ∼1.3 (see also Fig. 8), however, suggests that the shortening of both rise times may be caused by a similar mechanism, such as a change in the degree of electrotonic filtering with maturation. Alternatively, the ratio of GABAAR-only to GlyR-only decay time constant was not constant, falling from ∼4.5 at P8 to ∼2 at P23 (Fig. 6C), indicating that changes in electrotonic filtering are not sufficient to explain this differential change in decay kinetics.
In addition to changes in kinetics, mIPSCs were significantly larger in adult animals than in immature animals. In lamina I, GlyR-mediated mIPSCs were 24.4 ± 4.8 pA (n = 10) in immature animals versus 74.4 ± 10.2 pA (n = 12) in adults. A similar increase in mIPSC amplitude was observed in lamina II for both isolated GlyR-mediated (47.1 ± 3.5 pA, n = 39, vs 76.8 ± 5.8 pA, n = 32) and GABAAR-mediated (44.7 ± 3.3 pA,n = 39, vs 56.1 ± 6.3 pA, n = 22) mIPSCs .
Change in net inhibitory charge carried by mIPSCs
As a direct consequence of the reduced duration of GABAAR-only mIPSCs, in addition to the loss of mixed mIPSCs in the adult superficial dorsal horn, the net inhibitory charge carried by individual mIPSCs recorded from lamina I neurons was dramatically decreased. Figure 7illustrates that in P8 lamina I neurons, which principally develop GlyR-dominant synaptic junctions, individual mIPSCs carried a mean net inhibitory charge of 668.7 ± 72.1 fC (n = 7). This net charge is roughly 50% greater than that carried by mIPSCs in P20 lamina I neurons (445.0 ± 26.9 fC;n = 3; p < 0.05), despite comparable mIPSC amplitudes (P8, 23.5 ± 1.8 pA, n = 7, vs P20, 25.6 ± 1.2 pA, n = 3). Even in adult lamina I neurons, which displayed mIPSCs with significantly greater amplitude (86.5 ± 2.5 pA; n = 3), the net inhibitory charge carried by mIPSCs (509.7 ± 69.2 fC; n = 3) remained less than that of P8 lamina I neurons.
Analysis of the development of net quantal inhibition in lamina II neurons was difficult because age-dependent specialization results in a mixed population in this area (i.e., adult cells display varying proportions of GlyR-only vs GABAAR-only mIPSCs). It is interesting to note, however, that for cells with a greater proportion of GABAAR mIPSCs, the reduction in net quantal inhibition with maturation is tempered because of the more prolonged decay kinetics of these synaptic currents in adult animals (Fig. 6). Thus, these cells appear to develop a smaller deficit of inhibition with maturation than neurons in which quantal inhibition is predominantly mediated by GlyRs.
These observations emphasize the impact of the change in mIPSC kinetics and composition on the net inhibition of the cell during the maturation process and further demonstrate the distinction in development among lamina I and II neurons.
Comparison of mIPSC rise times
In our previous study of adult lamina I neurons, we found that the GABAAR-component that was unveiled with the use of a benzodiazepine had a much slower (>10×) rise time than its GlyR counterpart. Because the two components were part of the same mIPSC, and thus originated from co-release from the same presynaptic terminal, we had hypothesized that this may indicate that GABAARs may be located perisynaptically at lamina I inhibitory synapses. We thus decided to contrast this result with values of rise time at different stages of development.
Interestingly, we found that individual 10–90% rise times from the GlyR-only and GABAAR-only mIPSCs were similar in immature neurons, displaying a constant mean ratio of ∼1.3 (GABAAR rise/GlyR rise) in both laminas (n = 11) (Fig. 8). In the adult, despite the disappearance of mixed mIPSCs, the rise time ratio between GABAA-only and GlyR-only mIPSCs also remained stable in lamina II. This result was in sharp contrast with that from adult lamina I neurons that normally only display GlyR-mediated mIPSCs. In the latter case, the benzodiazepine-revealed GABAAR component of mIPSCs had a much slower rise time (>10×) than that of its GlyR counterpart or that of GABAAR events recorded from lamina II neurons (Fig. 8) (Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b).
DISCUSSION
In this study we show that, in contrast to what is found in the adult, immature lamina I–II inhibitory synapses exhibit individual miniature IPSCs possessing both a GlyR- and a GABAAR-mediated component in normal conditions. More importantly, although our results confirm previous evidence of copackaging and thus co-release of GABA and glycine from the same terminals in the spinal cord (Jonas et al., 1998; Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b; O'Brien and Berger, 1999), they also show that despite continued co-release of these transmitters throughout development, codetection ceases at lamina I–II adult synapses. This indicates an age-dependent postsynaptic tuning of inhibitory synapses in this area. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this pattern of development differs between lamina I, predominantly an output layer, and the more propriospinal lamina II, suggesting that synaptic tuning may be dictated by functional requirements.
Maintenance of co-release, loss of codetection
The observation of dual-component mIPSCs throughout maturation together with the fact that benzodiazepines can continually unmask mixed quantal events (Chéry and De Koninck, 1999b, and the present study) argues for the continuous copackaging and co-release of GABA and glycine at all ages. These mixed mIPSCs also indicate the coactivation of kinetically distinct junctional receptor–channel complexes and, because co-release appears to persist, the switch we observe is likely reflecting a postsynaptic change in transmitter detection at synaptic junctions. Although we cannot completely rule out a presynaptic reorganization to explain these developmentally mediated changes, several lines of evidence argue against this possibility. First, immunocytochemical evidence indicates that GABA–glycine colocalization persists uninterrupted in adulthood (Todd et al., 1996). Second, a decrease in the relative vesicular concentration of GABA is unlikely, given that the affinity of VIAAT for GABA is three times greater than that for glycine (Bedet et al., 2000). Although these arguments do not allow direct estimation of vesicular concentration, the fact that the amplitude of GABAAR-only mIPSCs and of the GABAAR component of mixed mIPSCs was not increased by diazepam (although they were prolonged) suggests that the amount of GABA released during these quantal events was saturating (De Koninck and Mody, 1994), arguing against low vesicular content.
The observation that all three combinations, mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs, GlyR-only mIPSCs, and GABAAR-only mIPSCs, are present in the same cell and the fact that benzodiazepine can convert many GlyR-only mIPSCs into mixed GABAAR–GlyR mIPSCs suggests the existence of a heterogeneous junctional distribution of GABAARs and GlyRs in spinal laminas I and II. A differential distribution of receptor subtypes or subunits at distinct junctions within the same cell has been reported previously for other receptors (Dodt et al., 1998; Toth and McBain, 1998). Furthermore, a developmental shift from GABAergic to glycinergic transmission has been observed in some systems (Kotak et al., 1998). The alteration described in the latter study also appeared to occur at the postsynaptic level, but at earlier stages (P3–P12) than what we observed in spinal laminas I–II (P14–P23).
The pattern of distribution of mIPSC type among lamina I–II neurons was also different. In lamina I, for example, in which virtually all cells will display only GlyR-mediated mIPSCs in the adult, as little as 29% of GlyR-only events were present at P8. The reason for this is unknown, but it is interesting to note that a similar pattern of development in the rat ventral horn has been reported (Colin et al., 1998). In that study, it was shown that, at birth, the points of gephyrin-immunoreactivity (IR) outnumber GlyR-IR significantly. GlyR-IR only matched gephyrin-IR by P10, with proliferation of these GlyR-gephyrin microdomains occurring gradually with development. In light of reports linking the GABAAR to gephyrin (Bohlhalter et al., 1994; Todd et al., 1996; Sassoe-Pognetto et al., 2000), this same group suggested that early unmatched gephyrin sites may be associated with the expression of a perinatal GABAAR. Indeed, it does now seem that gephyrin is required for the postsynaptic localization of GABAARs (for review, see Kneussel et al., 1999), perhaps via cytoskeletal interactions (Wang et al., 1999). Transient expression of GABAARs at early postnatal stages has also been reported in rat retina (Koulen, 1999) and other regions of the brain (Laurie et al., 1992; Poulter et al., 1992). These findings could explain why neurons that appear to express only junctional GlyRs in the adult stage display a significant proportion of mIPSCs with a GABAAR component at developmental stages.
Mechanisms of synaptic switch
The loss of codetection of co-released GABA and glycine likely involves a change in the affinity of the receptors, their expression, or subsynaptic distribution. It is reasonable to hypothesize that these changes are linked to altered subunit expression and/or intracellular regulatory mechanisms. Many reports, for example, suggest that differences in subunit composition affect subcellular localization (Nusser et al., 1998; Brickley et al., 1999; Crestani et al., 1999;Hutcheon et al., 2000; Sassoe-Pognetto et al., 2000). Similarly, phosphorylation mechanisms have been reported to interfere with translocation of GABAARs to postsynaptic domains (Wan et al., 1997b).
A switch in receptor subunit expression has been proposed to underlie changes in kinetics of GlyRs during development (Takahashi et al., 1992). Although we also observed a shortening of GlyR-mediated mIPSCs, the change reported by Takahashi et al. (1992) appears to be largely completed by the beginning of the second postnatal week, which does not fit with the time frame reported here (between P15 and P23). Similarly, we observed a shortening of the decay kinetics of GABAAR mIPSCs, consistent with that previously reported in other areas (Gao and Ziskind-Conhaim, 1995; Tia et al., 1996; Hollrigel and Soltesz, 1997; Dunning et al., 1999). The possibility that this change may be related to altered subunit expression during maturation in the spinal cord (Poulter et al., 1992) must be considered, given the recent data associating the shortening of GABAAR-mIPSC decay with an increase in α1 subunit expression in cerebellar neurons (Vicini et al., 2001). This subunit, however, appears to be absent in adult laminas I–II (Persohn et al., 1991; Bohlhalter et al., 1996), suggesting that it may not underlie kinetic changes observed in the spinal cord. Our results also indicate that any switch should not involve an altered subunit composition affecting diazepam sensitivity.
Functional significance
The significance of the transient occurrence of mixed GABAAR–GlyR quantal events during the maturation process may lie within the development of synapses themselves. Recently, it has been shown that the postsynaptic clustering of glycine receptors is activity-dependent (Kirsch and Betz, 1998). More specifically, the release of glycine from presynaptic terminals and subsequent depolarization elicited by perinatal GlyRs (<P7) (Reichling et al., 1994; Wang et al., 1994) appears to be required for the aggregation of gephyrin that clusters GlyRs. The presence of GABAARs, which are also depolarizing before ∼P7 (Obrietan and van den Pol, 1995; Serafini et al., 1995; Boehm et al., 1997) may augment this activity-dependent formation of GlyR synapses.
Furthermore, transient GABAAR expression at developing glycinergic synaptic junctions might also play a more ancillary role. GABAergic signaling has been shown to be important in early arborization (Spoerri, 1988; Behar et al., 1996) and is known to display a synergistic relationship with developing glutamatergic transmitter systems (Leinekugel et al., 1999).
Alternatively, coexpression of GABAARs and GlyRs at the same junctions may allow for optimal activity-dependent formation of GABAAR synapses, because it is now clear that gephyrin plays some role in the clustering of GABAARs (for review, see Kneussel and Betz, 2000). Poulter et al. (1997) reported that synapse formation itself may regulate the selective trafficking of GABAAR subunit mRNA during synaptogenesis. This finding is of particular importance in the interpretation of our results. That is, perhaps in lamina I GABAARs are first required to be expressed at synaptic junctions in immature dorsal horn to initiate activity-dependent migration to extrajunctional sites in the adult. The possibility that this migration is mediated by a subunit switch is supported by a second study from the same group that suggests that perinatal GABAA receptor activity may regulate the developmental switchover of GABAA receptor subunit mRNA expression (Poulter and Brown, 1999).
The possibility that the transient occurrence of junctional GABAAR and GlyR coactivation represents a protective mechanism must also be considered. It has been reported, for example, that supraspinal descending inhibitory pathways do not become fully functional until the third postnatal week (Van Praag et al., 1993; Falcon et al., 1996). A greater net inhibitory charge carried by quantal mIPSCs could therefore allow the intrinsic circuitry to accomplish sufficient inhibition of neuronal excitability in the absence of extrinsic inhibitory input. Alternatively, a greater net charge could also serve as a protective mechanism during the development of glutamatergic transmission, because it has been reported that GABAAR synapses precede glutamatergic synapses (Tyzio et al., 1999).
Previous evidence suggests that GABAA synapses can be made silent in a rapidly reversible manner (Poisbeau et al., 1997). Knowing that the functional properties of synaptic GABAARs are regulated by intracellular mechanisms (Wan et al., 1997a,b; Poisbeau et al., 1999), it is possible that the loss of a GABAergic contribution to quantal inhibitory events with maturation may represent a type of contingency organization. For instance, in normal adult lamina I, GABAARs do not appear to contribute to basal inhibition, yet they may be brought into play in conditions such as the hyperexcitability characteristic of chronic pain (Chéry and De Koninck, 1999a).
Footnotes
This work was supported by Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Grant MT12942, a grant from the Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada, a team grant from the Fonds pour la Formation de Chercheurs et l'Aide à la Recherche du Québec, the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique–Université Louis Pasteur, and by the Institut UPSA de la douleur. J.A.M.C. is the recipient of a Canadian Pain Society–Janssen-Ortho Inc.–CIHR doctoral award. A.F.K. is a fellow of the Centre de Coopération Inter-Universitaire Franco-Québécois. Y.D.K. is a scholar of the Fonds de la Recherché en Santé du Québec (FRSQ). We thank A. Constantin for expert technical assistance and Hoffman-La Roche for the generous donation of benzodiazepines.
A.F.K. and J.A.M.C. contributed equally to this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Yves De Koninck, Neurobiologie Cellulaire, Centre de Recherche Université Laval Robert-Giffard, 2601, Chemin de la Canardière, Beauport, Québec, Canada G1J 2G3. E-mail:Yves.DeKoninck{at}crulrg.ulaval.ca.