Abstract
By combining an inducible genetic fate mapping strategy with electrophysiological analysis, we have systematically characterized the populations of cortical GABAergic interneurons that originate from the caudal ganglionic eminence (CGE). Interestingly, compared with medial ganglionic eminence (MGE)-derived cortical interneuron populations, the initiation [embryonic day 12.5 (E12.5)] and peak production (E16.5) of interneurons from this embryonic structure occurs 3 d later in development. Moreover, unlike either pyramidal cells or MGE-derived cortical interneurons, CGE-derived interneurons do not integrate into the cortex in an inside-out manner but preferentially (75%) occupy superficial cortical layers independent of birthdate. In contrast to previous estimates, CGE-derived interneurons are both considerably greater in number (∼30% of all cortical interneurons) and diversity (comprised by at least nine distinct subtypes). Furthermore, we found that a large proportion of CGE-derived interneurons, including the neurogliaform subtype, express the glycoprotein Reelin. In fact, most CGE-derived cortical interneurons express either Reelin or vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. Thus, in conjunction with previous studies, we have now determined the spatial and temporal origins of the vast majority of cortical interneuron subtypes.
Introduction
A wide variety of GABAergic interneuron subtypes exist within the mammalian neocortex (Markram et al., 2004). Establishing the contribution of each cortical interneuron subtype to the development of cortical circuits is complicated by the fact that these are assembled before most interneuron subtypes can be identified by their mature properties. The solution to this conundrum appears to lie in the growing body of evidence suggesting that the subtype identity of a given interneuron can be predicted by its place and time of origin (Xu et al., 2004; Butt et al., 2005; Wonders and Anderson, 2006; Flames et al., 2007; Fogarty et al., 2007; Ghanem et al., 2007; Miyoshi et al., 2007). Using this developmental strategy, it should be possible to elucidate how individual interneuron subtypes are integrated into the cortical network. Cortical interneurons, at least in rodents, are born within the ventral telencephalon and only subsequently migrate up into the cortex (Anderson et al., 1997). The embryonic ventral telencephalon is characterized by three morphologically distinct progenitor zones, the lateral, medial, and caudal ganglionic eminences (LGE, MGE, and CGE) (Corbin et al., 2001; Flames et al., 2007; Ghanem et al., 2007) (see Fig. 1C). In vivo fate mapping indicates that the MGE and CGE but not the LGE are the primary sources of cortical interneurons (Wichterle et al., 2001; Nery et al., 2002; Butt et al., 2005). The interneurons generated from each of these structures comprise distinct subtypes, with basket and Martinotti interneurons being MGE-derived and the bipolar populations arising from the CGE (Xu et al., 2004; Butt et al., 2005). These studies have suggested that the vast majority of interneurons (85%) are derived from the MGE, while the remainder arises from the CGE.
It has been shown that cortical interneurons, like pyramidal neurons (Angevine and Sidman, 1961), are largely generated in an inside-out layering pattern within the neocortex (Miller, 1985; Fairén et al., 1986; Hammond et al., 2004; Yozu et al., 2004; Rymar and Sadikot, 2007). We have previously shown that this is indeed the case for MGE-derived interneurons (Miyoshi et al., 2007). In addition, except for the fast-spiking basket cells, most of the MGE-derived interneuron subtypes were shown to have distinct temporal origins (Miyoshi et al., 2007). To further extend our understanding of the temporal origins of cortical interneurons, we established an inducible genetic fate mapping strategy to examine the CGE-derived populations.
This analysis revealed that CGE-derived interneurons target superficial cortical layers regardless of their birthdate. In addition, we found that a large proportion of interneuron subtypes, which had not been previously recognized to be derived from the CGE, express the glycoprotein Reelin. Among the more intriguing Reelin-expressing subtypes originating from the CGE are the late-spiking neurogliaform cells, whose embryonic origins had not been determined previously. In total, we found that the CGE-derived population comprises ∼30% of all cortical interneurons, approximately double the number that has been previously reported (Xu et al., 2004; Butt et al., 2005). Moreover, it is comprised by a much larger diversity of subtypes than would have been expected from previous analyses.
Materials and Methods
Mouse mutants.
In our previous fate mapping study (Miyoshi et al., 2007), we used the Z/EG reporter, driven under the regulation of a CAG hybrid promoter (Niwa et al., 1991). While this reporter has higher levels of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) expression in P21 cortical interneurons compared with R26R reporter lines (Soriano, 1999; Srinivas et al., 2001), it suffers from a relatively low level of recombination efficiency. To combine the advantages of the R26R reporter with the high expression levels of the Z/EG reporter, we inserted a CAG hybrid promoter (Niwa et al., 1991) 5′ adjacent to the splice acceptor cassette (Zong et al., 2005; Farago et al., 2006) to boost the endogenous R26R promoter (supplemental Fig. 5, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). This R26R CAG-boosted EGFP (RCE) reporter has two stop cassettes (RCE:dual), each of which can be removed independently by the Cre or Flpe site-specific recombinases, respectively (Branda and Dymecki, 2004; Miyoshi and Fishell, 2006). By removing one of the stop cassettes using a germline deleter strain with either TK-Cre (Bai et al., 2002) or hActB-Flpe (Rodríguez et al., 2000), we generated a single stop-cassette EGFP reporter (RCE:loxP or RCE:FRT) (supplemental Fig. 5, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). We confirmed that this RCE reporter is active in all cortical interneuron subtypes when the RCE:FRT is used in combination with a Dlx5/6-Flpe driver (supplemental Fig. 1, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material).
For generating a Dlx5/6-Flpe driver line (supplemental Fig. 1, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material), a FlpeMyc cDNA fragment (gift from Dr. Connie Cepko, Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA) was placed downstream of the intergenic enhancer region between Dlx5 and Dlx6 (id6/id5) (Zerucha et al., 2000), together with a core promoter (Stenman et al., 2003) and a chimeric intron sequence (AflII fragment from pCI vector, Promega). An SV40 polyA cassette was used to terminate transcription. This construct was linearized and the bacterial backbone was eliminated with Sal1 enzyme, and then injected into blastocysts (Skirball transgenic facility, New York University School of Medicine).
Repository stock numbers at Jackson Laboratories for the lines we have generated are as follows: Dlx5/6-Flpe (#10815), RCE:FRT (#10812), RCE:loxP (#10701) and RCE:dual (#10675).
In vivo fate mapping.
Male mouse mutants for Mash1BAC-CreER (heterozygous or homozygous) (Battiste et al., 2007) and RCE:loxP (homozygous) were crossed to Swiss Webster females for inducible genetic fate mapping studies of the CGE. Four milligrams of tamoxifen was administered between noon and 2:00 P.M. at embryonic day 9.5 (E9.5), E10.5, E12.5, E14.5, E16.5 and E18.5. For the intersectional fate mapping of CGE-derived GABAergic lineages, we used males carrying homozygous Mash1BAC-CreER and RCE:dual and crossed them with Dlx5/6-Flpe females, and tamoxifen administration was performed at E16.5.
Histology and cell count.
For analyzing the molecular expression profiles and layering of fate-mapped interneurons, the somatosensory barrel cortex in three postnatal day 21 (P21) brains was analyzed using immunohistochemistry (E12.5: n = 1243, E14.5: n = 3005, E16.5: n = 4141, E18.5: n = 2528). Immunohistochemistry on 12 μm thickness cryosections was performed as described previously (Miyoshi et al., 2007). To assess the size of the four nonoverlapping interneuron populations (see Fig. 4B), we have performed either PV (parvalbumin)/VIP (vasoactive intestinal polypeptide)/EGFP or SST (somatostatin)/Reelin/EGFP triple stainings on P21 brains from mice with Dlx5/6-Flpe and RCE:FRT alleles. A total of 1604 EGFP-expressing cells from three brains were analyzed.
Antibodies were used at the following concentrations: mouse anti-Nkx2.1 (TTF-1) (1:200; PROGEN), rabbit anti-Lhx6 (1:1000; a gift from Dr. Vassilis Pachnis, Medical Research Council National Institute for Medical Research, London, UK), rabbit anti-Pax6 (1:1000; Covance), mouse anti-Mash1 (1:1000; BD PharMingen), mouse anti-Ki67 (1:1000; BD PharMingen), guinea pig anti-Six3 (1:1000; Covance), mouse anti-CoupTFII (1:500; Perseus Proteomics), rabbit anti-GFP (1:2000; Invitrogen), rat anti-GFP (1:2000; Nacalai Tesque), goat anti-GFP (1:2000; Rockland), mouse anti-parvalbumin (1:1000; Sigma), guinea pig anti-parvalbumin (1:1000; a gift from Dr. K. Baimbridge, University of British Columbia, BC, Canada) rat anti-somatostatin (1:500; Millipore Bioscience Research Reagents), rabbit anti-somatostatin (1:1000; Millipore Bioscience Research Reagents), rabbit anti-Neuropeptide Y (1:500; ImmunoStar), rabbit anti-vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (1:500; ImmunoStar), mouse anti-calretinin (CR) (1:1500; Millipore Bioscience Research Reagents), rabbit anti-calretinin (1:1500; Millipore Bioscience Research Reagents), mouse anti-Reelin (CR50) (1:500; MBL). Secondary antibodies conjugated with Alexa Fluoro dyes 488, 594 or 680 (Invitrogen) or AMCA (Jackson Immunoresearch) raised from the same host used for blocking serum were chosen for signal visualization. Fluorescent images were captured using a cooled-CCD camera (Princeton Scientific Instruments) using MetaMorph software (Universal Imaging). One-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post hoc test was used to detect differences in marker immunolabeling between cell cohorts arising from different developmental time points.
Acute in vitro cortical slice electrophysiology and morphological reconstruction.
Whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiological recordings were performed on EGFP-expressing cells in acute brain slices prepared from P14–P21 animals as previously described (Miyoshi et al., 2007), with the exception that biocytin, instead of Lucifer yellow, was used in the intracellular solution for filling the cells. Briefly, animals were deeply anesthetized, decapitated and the brain was quickly removed and transferred to ice-cold physiological Ringer's solution of the following composition (mm): 125 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 25 NaHCO3, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 1 MgCl2, 2 CaCl2 and 20 glucose. The brain was then fixed to a stage and 250 μm slices was cut on a vibratome (Vibratome 3000 EP). Slices were then individually transferred into an incubation chamber containing oxygenated Ringer's solution at room temperature for a minimum period of 1 h before recordings. During recording, slices were continually perfused with oxygenated Ringer's of the same composition. Whole-cell tight seal recordings were made from randomly selected EGFP-positive neurons located in all layers of the somatosensory cortex. Fifteen cells from E12.5 and 21 cells from E16.5 were not selected randomly and were excluded from the temporal profile of fate-mapped interneurons in Figure 5F. Patch electrodes were made from borosilicate glass (resistance 5–8 MΩ, Harvard Apparatus) and filled with a solution containing (in mm): 128 K-gluconate, 4 NaCl, 0.3 GTP, 5 ATP, 0.0001 CaCl2, 10 HEPES, 1 glucose, and 5 mg/ml biocytin (Sigma). All recordings were performed in current-clamp mode (Axoclamp 2B, Molecular Devices) and analyzed off-line in Clampfit version 9.2. Passive membrane properties were ascertained shortly after rupturing the patch and periodically during the course of the experiments to ensure that there was no significant deterioration in the health of the cell.
For post hoc morphological and immunohistochemical reconstruction, brain slices were fixed on ice for 1 h with 4% formaldehyde in PBS, rinsed with PBS, and incubated with primary antibodies at suitable concentrations in 1.5% donkey serum with 0.1% Triton X-100 for two to three nights at 4°C. After several washes with PBS, marker expressions were visualized by suitable secondary antibodies conjugated with Alexa fluorophores by incubating in the same solution used for primary antibody reaction overnight at 4°C. To better visualize cell morphology, Alexa Fluor 488-conjugated streptavidin (4 μg/ml, Invitrogen) was also included in this step. After the fluorescent imaging, the cells were developed using the ABC-peroxidase/DAB reaction with the Vectastain Elite kit (Vector Laboratories), and subsequent tracing was performed using a Neurolucida set-up (MBF Bioscience).
Analysis of intrinsic properties.
We used a similar 500 ms stimuli protocol as previously reported (Kawaguchi, 1995; Miyoshi et al., 2007). In brief: a ramp protocol [100 pA/3 s from resting membrane potential (RMP)], followed by a round of 100 pA steps to determine the approximate current injection needed to cause the cell to fire. The actual current injection necessary for threshold was determined with finer steps (5–20 pA) around that value. After this, both negative and positive current was injected to determine the intrinsic firing properties of the interneurons. Using these protocols we then analyzed the cells for 13 different parameters (see also Table 4): RMP, which was measured momentarily after breakthrough into the cell; input resistance (Rin), which was obtained by dividing the resulting hyper-polarization with the injected current at a current injection that was ¼ of the one needed to bring the cell to −100 mV; membrane constant (Tau), using the same trace as for Rin we applied the fitting function in Clampfit 9.2 (Axon); spike threshold, which was obtained using the first spike fired at either a ramp protocol (100 pA over 3 s) or at the lowest current injection (within 5–20 pA step) that elicited firing. The following parameters were measured from the threshold spike: spike height; spike width (at half of the spike height); afterhyperpolarization (AHP) Tnadir, the time from spike threshold to lowest point of the AHP, when there was a biphasic AHP we measured the value for the bigger component, upon burst firing at threshold we used the value from the initiation of the last spike in the train to the lowest point of the following AHP; AHP amplitude (mV), the difference in voltage from spike initiation to lowest point of AHP; delay to spike, the time from onset of current step to spike initiation at threshold stimulation; Max firing frequency, the average frequency (Hz) elicited by current injection that does not cause major spike height loss or failing of the cell [for fast-adapting cells (fADs) the frequency was calculated on the initial part of the stimuli before failing rather than throughout the entire 500 ms]; Adaptation, calculated as (f1–f2)/f1% where f1 is the frequency of the first 100 ms at maximum firing frequency and f2 is the last 100 ms of the 500 ms stimuli; Ih/sag, calculated as the voltage difference of the lowest point and the endpoint of a hyper-polarization to −100 mV. We also checked for subthreshold oscillations; if >70% of any subtype consistently showed oscillations we classified it as being present (Y) and if <25% exhibited this property we denoted it as a negative (N). Two-tailed Student's t test was used to detect morphological differences between LS-cell types.
Results
A genetic strategy for fate mapping temporally distinct cohorts derived from the CGE
We have previously estimated that CGE-derived interneurons comprise ∼15% of all cortical interneurons (Nery et al., 2002; Butt et al., 2005). However, this estimate was compromised by the fact that when we undertook this study we had no systematic method for analyzing the full extent of this population. To achieve this goal, we took advantage of the fortuitously restricted expression of a specific transgenic founder line, Mash1BAC-CreER (Fig. 1A, left) (Battiste et al., 2007). In this driver line, a tamoxifen inducible form of the site-specific recombinase Cre (CreER), is expressed under the regulation of a ∼300 kb DNA fragment (Parras et al., 2007) that includes cis-regulatory elements of the basic helix-loop-helix type transcription factor Mash1 (Ascl1) (Johnson et al., 1990; Guillemot and Joyner, 1993). Mash1 is normally strongly expressed throughout the subventricular zone of the entire ventral telencephalon (Fig. 1E,F) (Guillemot and Joyner, 1993; Casarosa et al., 1999; Horton et al., 1999; Fode et al., 2000; Parras et al., 2002; Yun et al., 2002). However, we were able to identify a driver line that, when paired with a Cre-dependent EGFP reporter line we have generated (RCE:loxP; Fig. 1A, left; supplemental Fig. 5, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material), broadly labeled Mash1-expressing cells in the CGE and LGE, but strikingly, did not label cells within the MGE (Fig. 1B, compare with C showing pan-GABAergic labeling with the method in A, right; for details of our Dlx5/6-Flpe transgenic driver and the RCE:FRT reporter, see supplemental Figs. 1, 5, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material, and Materials and Methods). This is presumably due to positional effects at the site of transgene insertion. In our previous work (Wichterle et al., 2001), we found that, at least at E13.5, the LGE does not generate appreciable numbers of cortical interneurons. We therefore reasoned that we could take advantage of this particular Mash1BAC-CreER driver to selectively fate map the CGE-derived cortical interneurons arising from different developmental time points.
We first characterized the cell populations labeled by our fate mapping approach through short-term analysis. To accomplish this, we administered 4 mg of tamoxifen to a pregnant mother carrying E10.5 Mash1BAC-CreER and RCE:loxP double transgenic embryos and analyzed the resulting labeled cell populations at E11.5 (Fig. 1B,D–H). Consistent with our initial assessment (Fig. 1B), the majority of labeling was observed within the LGE (Fig. 1E) and CGE (Fig. 1F) where Mash1 is strongly expressed in the progenitor domains. In contrast, virtually no cells were observed within the Nkx2–1-expressing MGE territory (Fig. 1D).
Previous analysis indicates that CreER-mediated reporter recombination initiates 6 h after tamoxifen administration and peaks within ∼24 h (Zervas et al., 2004). Hence, this inducible genetic fate mapping strategy allows us to label cells approximately within a 1-d time window. Furthermore, Mash1 is expressed within subventricular zone cells that are fated to become postmitotic and leave the progenitor domain quickly (Casarosa et al., 1999; Bertrand et al., 2002). Consistent with this, 1 d after tamoxifen administration, only a few cells within the genetically fate mapped population maintained high-levels of Mash1 expression (Fig. 1F,G). Conversely, those Mash1-expressing cells that did express EGFP, did so only at very low levels (Fig. 1G, arrowheads), strongly suggesting that the removal of the stop cassette in the reporter line had just occurred in this population. Indeed, 1 d after tamoxifen administration, very few of the labeled cells located proximal to the ventricle coexpressed the proliferation marker Ki67 (Kill, 1996) (Fig. 1H, inset). Two days after tamoxifen administration, no EGFP-expressing fate-mapped cells expressed Ki67 (Fig. 1I). Four days later (E14.5) all the fate-mapped cells were in the mantle zones (supplemental Fig. 2B, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). In comparison, a parallel analysis using a Nestin-CreER driver (Balordi and Fishell, 2007), which targets self-renewing progenitors in the ventricular zone, resulted in many labeled cells remaining in the ventricular zone 2 d after tamoxifen administration (Fig. 1J).
Together, these data demonstrate that by combining the Mash1BAC-CreER driver with the RCE:loxP reporter, and by administrating tamoxifen at different time points, we are able to fate map temporally distinct cohorts derived from the LGE and the CGE.
The CGE starts producing cortical interneurons at E12.5
The earliest time point where tamoxifen administration reliably resulted in cell labeling was E9.5 (data not shown). However, before E12.5 (i.e., E10.5; Fig. 1F), tamoxifen administration only resulted in fate-mapped cells contributing to the ventral telencephalon (see detailed characterizations in supplemental Fig. 2, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). This stands in stark contrast to our previous analysis, where we found that MGE-derived cortical interneurons could be labeled extensively after E9.5 tamoxifen administration (Miyoshi et al., 2007).
These observations suggest that the generation of cortical interneurons in the CGE is initiated later than in the MGE, and thus we set out to determine the time course of interneuron production from this structure. One day after E12.5 tamoxifen administration, we observed cell labeling in the CGE (Fig. 2A; supplemental Fig. 3A, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material), as well as a small population within the septum (data not shown). At this stage a portion of MGE-derived cells migrate dorsally through the CGE (Butt et al., 2005). These cells express Lhx6, a Lim-domain containing homeodomain transcription factor that is a downstream target of Nkx2–1 (Sussel et al., 1999; Butt et al., 2008; Du et al., 2008) and whose expression is retained in MGE-derived cortical interneurons as they mature (Fogarty et al., 2007). We thus confirmed the CGE-origin of our E12.5 labeled population by demonstrating that they uniformly lack Lhx6-expression (Fig. 2B,C).
Two days after tamoxifen administration at E12.5, some cells were observed within the cortex (most prominently in the caudal regions), and displayed morphologies indicative of active migration (Fig. 2D,E). Consistent with our acute analysis, the vast majority of these fate-mapped cells in the cortex did not coexpress Lhx6, further indicating a CGE-origin (Fig. 2E). While these cells are tangentially migrating through the cortex, they use the known two pathways in the marginal and the intermediate/subventricular zones (Marín and Rubenstein, 2003; Kriegstein and Noctor, 2004). Interestingly, more than half (58.8%) of the fate-mapped cells in the cortex expressed low levels of Mash1 (Fig. 2F, same section from Fig. 2D; note that the expression levels are much higher in the ventral telencephalon). We suspected that this resulted from the selective maintenance of Mash1 expression within the CGE-derived population. To test this hypothesis, we examined Nkx2–1BAC-Cre driver (Xu et al., 2008) on an RCE:loxP reporter background, to label the majority of MGE-derived populations. Only very few (9.0%) of MGE-derived cells in the cortex coexpressed Mash1 (Fig. 2H) suggesting that the expression of low levels of Mash1 in migrating cortical interneurons is largely a hallmark of the CGE-derived population. The transcription factor CoupTFII (Nr2f2) has previously been shown to be strongly expressed in the CGE progenitor domain but only in small portions of the LGE and MGE (Kanatani et al., 2008; Willi-Monnerat et al., 2008). Consistent with this, we found that CoupTFII is expressed in most fate-mapped interneurons from the CGE (84.6%) (Fig. 2G) but in very few MGE-derived interneurons (10.1%) (Fig. 2I). Hence, although CoupTFII is presently considered to be the gene whose expression is most confined to the CGE-derived cortical interneurons, our Mash1BAC-CreER fate-mapping strategy provided a greater degree of specificity for targeting these lineages. In addition, since CoupTFII is largely excluded from the LGE, this also provides further support that the cortical interneurons we fate map are CGE rather than LGE-derived. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that the CGE starts producing cortical interneurons a few days later than the MGE, and that the expression profiles of transcription factors are distinct in MGE- and CGE-derived interneurons at E14.5.
The peak production of cortical interneurons from the CGE isdelayed relative to the MGE
To fully delineate the temporal profiles of CGE-derived cortical interneurons, we administered tamoxifen to mice carrying the Mash1BAC-CreER driver and RCE:loxP reporter at E14.5, E16.5, and E18.5. Similar to the earlier time points, acute cell labeling was overwhelmingly restricted to the LGE and CGE regions, where Nkx2-1 is not expressed (supplemental Fig. 3, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). However, unlike the previous stages analyzed (E10.5 and E12.5 fate mapping), a small number of labeled cells were observed within the cortex 1 d after tamoxifen administration (most prominently in caudal regions of the cortex), especially at the E16.5 time point (supplemental Fig. 3E,F, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). As Mash1 is known to be expressed at low levels in pyramidal neuron progenitors (Britz et al., 2006), we confirmed that at P21, the observed EGFP-labeling is restricted to interneurons and excluded from the pyramidal cell population, based on the morphologies of the labeled cells (Fig. 3A). Furthermore, when we used the Mash1BAC-CreER driver in combination with a Dlx5/6-Flpe driver (Fig. 1A, right, 1C; supplemental Figure 1, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material) and our RCE:dual reporter (supplemental Fig. 5, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material) (where the expression of EGFP from the reporter requires the removal of two stop cassettes that are excised by Cre and Flpe, respectively), the cortical cell labeling was equivalent to that observed using our primary genetic labeling strategy (i.e., Mash1BAC-CreER; RCE:loxP, compare supplemental Fig. 3F,G, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). Together, these results confirm that our fate mapping of cells over this time period was restricted to GABAergic populations.
Having established that we could reproducibly label distinct cohorts of interneurons derived from the CGE at different embryonic stages, we began to study the temporal profile of their production. To be consistent with our previous studies (Butt et al., 2005; Miyoshi et al., 2007), we characterized the numbers, layering and molecular expression profiles of labeled interneurons at P21 within the somatosensory barrel field (S1BF) of the cortex (Fig. 3A). We first analyzed the proportion of CGE-derived interneurons fate mapped from different embryonic time points. Our data indicate that E12.5 represents the earliest stage at which cortical interneurons are generated from the CGE (Figs. 2D, 3B), while the peak of interneuron production appears to occur at E16.5 (Fig. 3B). Hence, both the initiation and peak of interneuron production in the CGE are delayed by 3 d relative to that seen in the MGE (Miyoshi et al., 2007).
CGE-derived interneurons primarily contribute to superficial cortical layers independent of their birthdates
Previous studies have indicated that GABAergic interneurons populate cortical layers in an “inside-out” manner depending on birthdate, similar to pyramidal neurons (Miller, 1985; Fairén et al., 1986). Indeed, our previous study confirmed that MGE-derived interneurons integrate into cortical layers largely in this manner (Miyoshi et al., 2007). The temporal dynamics of the generation of interneurons from the MGE and CGE are strikingly different in terms of their time of onset (Fig. 2D) and peak production (Fig. 3B). To assess whether CGE-derived cortical interneurons populate particular cortical laminae in accordance with their birthdate, we analyzed the cortical layering of CGE-derived interneurons fate mapped from four time points: E12.5, E14.5, E16.5 and E18.5 (Fig. 3A). In the mature cortex, ∼20% of the cells reside in layer I, and ∼55% of the cells are located in layers II and III (Fig. 3C). To our surprise, we discovered that, regardless of when they are generated, CGE-derived interneurons preferentially target the superficial layers of the cortex (Fig. 3C).
CGE-derived Reelin- and VIP-expressing populations constitute a large proportion of cortical interneurons
In the mouse somatosensory cortex, PV, SST, and VIP are expressed in mutually exclusive populations of cortical interneurons (Fig. 4A) (Kubota et al., 1994; Miyoshi et al., 2007). By fate mapping Lhx6-expressing lineages, it has recently been demonstrated that PV- and SST-expressing interneurons are exclusively derived from the MGE (Fogarty et al., 2007) (Fig. 4A). VIP immunoreactivity does not appear until postnatal stages (Emson et al., 1979) and is entirely confined to the GABAergic population within the neocortex (Rogers, 1992). Consistent with previous observations (Xu et al., 2004; Butt et al., 2005), using an Nkx2–1BAC-Cre driver (Xu et al., 2008) crossed with the RCE:loxP reporter, we confirmed that VIP-expressing interneurons are not derived from the MGE (Fig. 4A; Table 1). By using VIP as a CGE-derived interneuron-specific molecular marker, we analyzed genetically fate-mapped cells and found that around half of this population, particularly in superficial layers, did not express VIP. We therefore searched for other markers and discovered, by using the CR50 antibody (Ogawa et al., 1995), that the glycoprotein Reelin is expressed in a large percentage of CGE-derived interneurons (Fig. 4A). We first confirmed that Reelin is expressed exclusively in GABAergic interneurons within the P21 cortex (Fig. 4C,D). This was achieved by comparing Reelin expression to the entire GABAergic cortical interneuron population labeled with EGFP, by combining our Dlx5/6-Flpe driver and RCE:FRT reporter (Fig. 1A, right; supplemental Fig. 1, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material). This was also confirmed by using a GAD67-EGFP transgenic line, which targets EGFP expression to most of the GABAergic population (data not shown) (Tamamaki et al., 2003). Most strikingly, at P21, almost all the GABAergic interneurons within layer I expressed Reelin (Fig. 4C,D). In contrast, at P1, Reelin expression was excluded from the GABAergic population (Fig. 4E,F) but was present in layer I glutamatergic Cajal-Retzius populations (Fig. 4E,F), as has been previously reported (del Río et al., 1995). Consistent with what has been shown by others (del Río et al., 1995; Derer and Derer, 1990; Meyer et al., 1998), Reelin-expressing Cajal-Retzius cells disappear by P21. Instead, at this age we observed that Reelin is expressed in a subpopulation of cortical interneurons.
Next we tested whether Reelin expression in GABAergic interneurons was confined to a specific subtype. While Reelin had been previously demonstrated to be expressed in subpopulations of cortical interneurons (Alcántara et al., 1998; Pesold et al., 1998, 1999; Cobos et al., 2005; Cubelos et al., 2008), the specific subtypes expressing this protein have remained unexplored. We found that Reelin was not coexpressed within the PV-expressing interneurons (Table 2) and is very rarely coexpressed with VIP (1.4%) (Table 2). In contrast, Reelin is coexpressed within many SST-expressing interneurons (Pesold et al., 1999) (Fig. 4A; Table 2), a population which as noted above is exclusively derived from the MGE (Fogarty et al., 2007). We therefore tested whether any of the Reelin-positive interneurons without SST expression are derived from the MGE. We performed triple labeling comparing SST and Reelin expression to EGFP labeling in MGE-derived interneurons using a transgenic mouse carrying both the Nkx2–1BAC-Cre driver (Xu et al., 2008) and the RCE:loxP reporter (Fig. 4G; Table 3). We found that all of the Reelin-expressing interneurons derived from the MGE coexpress SST (Fig. 4A,G). These data strongly suggest that SST-negative Reelin-expressing interneurons are exclusively derived from the CGE and likely account for a large proportion of the CGE-derived interneurons for which no molecular marker has previously existed (Fig. 4A).
By using Reelin (SST-negative) and VIP as markers specific to CGE-derived interneurons, and combining these with pan-GABAergic labeling (Dlx5/6-Flpe; RCE:FRT), we found that ∼30% of all cortical interneurons appear to be CGE-derived (Fig. 4B). In addition, we found that most of the GABAergic cortical interneurons (95%) can be accounted for with one of the four nonoverlapping markers of PV, SST, Reelin (without SST), and VIP (Fig. 4A,B). By using these molecular markers to delineate interneuron subpopulations, we have characterized the cortical interneurons fate mapped from four sequential embryonic time points (E12.5, E14.5, E16.5, and E18.5) in Mash1BAC-CreER; RCE:loxP animals (Fig. 5E). As expected, we fate mapped only a small number of PV- and SST-expressing interneurons, which are known to be MGE-derived subtypes (Fogarty et al., 2007). These data confirm that the Reelin-expressing population arising from the CGE do not include interneurons coexpressing Reelin and SST (Fig. 4A). We found that Reelin- (Fig. 5A,B) and VIP- (Fig. 5C,D) expressing interneuron subtypes collectively comprise the majority of CGE-derived populations at all time points that we assessed during development (Fig. 5E). With the exception of a small but significant peak in the generation of VIP-expressing neurons at E14.5 (p ≤ 0.001), the ratio of the production of Reelin- versus VIP-expressing cells was similar. In accordance with these findings, our electrophysiological recordings of randomly sampled cells fate mapped from E12.5 (n = 33) and E16.5 (n = 46) yielded similar numbers of Reelin- and VIP-expressing interneuron subtypes (Fig. 5F).
Physiologically and morphologically diverse subtypes of cortical interneurons are derived from the CGE
Next, we performed a comprehensive electrophysiological and morphological analysis to determine the diversity of CGE-derived interneurons. Similar to the approach taken in our previous studies, we generated acute brain slices of P14–P21 somatosensory cortex and analyzed fate-mapped interneurons expressing EGFP by whole-cell current-clamp analysis of intrinsic properties, combined with post hoc morphological and immunohistochemical analyses. In line with our previous efforts on the classification of interneurons we are introducing an electrophysiology-based naming system for CGE-derived interneurons that follows the Petilla convention (Ascoli et al., 2008) (also see note on interneuron nomenclature, Miyoshi et al., 2007). This resulted in the renaming of cell types we have previously reported (Butt et al., 2005; Miyoshi et al., 2007). We analyzed a total of 138 interneurons fate mapped from two time points (E12.5, n = 60; E16.5, n = 78). Consistent with our immunohistochemical analysis resulting in a small numbers of PV- and SST-expressing interneurons (Fig. 5E), only a small fraction of fate mapped cells displayed firing patterns for MGE-derived subtypes (E12.5: n = 5, E16.5: n = 8) (Miyoshi et al., 2007). Based on our analysis we propose the existence of at least nine distinct subtypes (Fig. 6; Table 4).
The largest population of CGE-derived interneurons (∼50%) was late spiking (LS). These can be subdivided into two subtypes LS1 (30%) and LS2 (20%), both of which expressed Reelin (3/6 and 4/6 tested, respectively). Although the two LS subtypes shared many features, some aspects of their intrinsic firing properties and morphologies are distinct (see supplemental Fig. 4, available at www.jneurosci.org as supplemental material, for a detailed comparison). The LS1 subtype (n = 30) (no CR-expression, 0/4 tested) was characterized by a pronounced delay of the threshold spike, preceded by a steady ramp depolarization, on a 500-ms-long square current pulse. Importantly, this delay persisted even when up to 3–5 spikes were induced. At more depolarized potentials these cells showed a pronounced adaptation in both firing frequency and spike height although the latter recovered later in the train. The cells were mostly located in layer I or on the I-II border (58%), but were also found to lesser extents in layers II/III (15%) and deeper layers (27%). They all exhibited a dense dendritic tree with multiple branching points close to the soma, which morphologically resembled previous descriptions of cortical neurogliaform cells (Kawaguchi, 1995; Chu et al., 2003; Tamás et al., 2003; Miyoshi et al., 2007; Oláh et al., 2007). The LS2 subtype (n = 23) (CR-expression 2/4 tested) had many features that resembled the LS1 subtype but never showed a delay to the first spike when firing two or more spikes. Compared with the LS1 subtype, the LS2 interneurons exhibited lower input resistance (273.0 ± 95.8 vs 355.1 ± 149.5 MΩ, p = 0.015) as well as lower max firing frequency (54.4 ± 21.3 vs 66.6 ± 20.7 Hz, p = 0.010). The LS2 subtype had larger cell bodies and longer dendrites with fewer branch points close to the soma. They were found in all cortical layers but the majority (65%) were located in layer I or on the I-II border (15% and 20% were located in layers II/III and deeper layers, respectively). These cells have previously been described as regular-spiking nonpyramidal (RSNP) or initial adapting (iAD) with a “dense plexus” multipolar morphology (Butt et al., 2005; Miyoshi et al., 2007). In our previous analysis using an Olig2-CreER driver, which predominantly labels cells emerging from the MGE, we obtained significant numbers of LS1 and LS2 (iAD) interneurons after E15.5 tamoxifen administration (Miyoshi et al., 2007). In that study, we speculated that these cells were of CGE origin since Olig2 expression is upregulated within the CGE by E15.5. This is now confirmed through the observation that both the LS1 and LS2 interneurons are the Reelin-positive, but SST-negative cell class, a molecular expression profile not found in cells that originate in the MGE (Fig. 4A). Interestingly, using similar genetic fate mapping approaches, hippocampal LS neurogliaform interneurons appear to have a dual origin, with a subpopulation being MGE-derived (G. Fishell, C. McBain, unpublished observations).
The majority of CGE-derived interneurons that do not express Reelin express VIP (Figs. 4A, 5E). In our fate mapping study, the largest class of VIP-expressing interneurons is comparable in number to the two Reelin-expressing subtypes of LS1 and LS2 (∼25%). This VIP-expressing subtype is characterized by a fast sizeable adaptation leading to an inability to fire throughout the 500 ms current injection. We therefore refer to these neurons as fast-adapting (fAD) cells (3/3 and 0/3 tested for VIP and CR, respectively) [previously referred to as “rAD” (Butt et al., 2005)]. The fAD interneurons are electrically small and fire spikes with relatively short half-width (1.0 ± 0.2 ms) and are located mainly in layer II/III (63%, the remainder were located within the I-II border [32%] and in deeper layers [6%]). They had bipolar/tripolar morphology with dendrites stretching toward the pia, and an axon that branched close to the cell soma, as well as extending into deeper layers.
In addition to the three major subtypes described above (that in total accounted for ∼75% of all CGE-derived interneurons), we identified another six classes of interneurons that possess distinct firing properties and morphologies (see supplemental material, available at www.jneurosci.org, for description of the detailed intrinsic firing properties of these six subtypes). Of these, the irregular-spiking (IS) subtype (Butt et al., 2005) was the most prominent, comprising ∼10% of all CGE-derived interneurons. The IS subtype is VIP- and CR-expressing (3/4 and 3/5 tested, respectively) and bipolar/tripolar in morphology. We also found one subtype with intrinsic firing properties similar to MGE-derived SST-expressing delayed non-fast spiking interneurons (dNFS1 and dNFS2) (Miyoshi et al., 2007) that we named dNFS3. The dNFS3 subtype had a distinct axon-arcade morphology and has previously been described as VIP-positive (Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1996; Butt et al., 2005).
We also recorded two intrinsic-bursting subtypes (delayed and sigmoid; dIB and sIB, respectively), which exhibited a burst of action potentials (APs) at threshold. These subtypes were distinct from the previously described MGE-derived intrinsic or rebound bursting classes (iIB and rIB respectively) (Miyoshi et al., 2007). Interestingly, the dIB subtype had a firing pattern that strongly resembles that of another multipolar layer II cell described as PV and calbindin (CB) positive but CR negative (Blatow et al., 2003). The last two subtypes we found were burst nonadapting (bNA1 and bNA2) cells, which fired a burst of APs above but not at threshold. The bNA2 subtype had morphologies and firing patterns that resembled previously described VIP-expressing cell types (Butt et al., 2005; Caputi et al., 2009; Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1996; Rozov et al., 2001) (2/4 and 2/5 bNA2 cells were positive for VIP and CR, respectively). Together, these data suggest that an equivalent degree of diversity exists within MGE- and CGE-derived interneurons. Hence, to date the total population of CGE-derived interneurons has been both quantitatively, as well as qualitatively underestimated.
Discussion
Our analysis of CGE-derived cortical interneurons revealed that both the initiation and peak production of CGE-derived interneurons occur several days later in development than that observed in MGE-derived populations. Moreover, unlike interneurons derived from the MGE, which are born in an inside-out manner, CGE-derived interneurons preferentially contribute to the superficial cortical layers regardless of their birthdate. We also demonstrated that the populations of cortical interneurons arising from the CGE are both considerably larger in number and greater in diversity than previously appreciated. This in part is because both the molecular markers for, and the origins of some prominent CGE-derived interneuron subtypes, such as the neurogliaform subclass, had not been determined previously. Our present findings indicate that a large percentage of the interneurons whose origins were unaccounted for are derived from the CGE and express the glycoprotein Reelin. With this finding, the majority of cortical interneurons (∼95%) can be assigned to one of four nonoverlapping molecular markers: PV, SST, Reelin (without SST) and VIP. Therefore, all major subclasses of cortical interneurons can now be assigned to either MGE- or CGE-derived lineages.
Do cortical interneurons solely originate from the MGEand the CGE?
The original observation that cortical interneurons are ventrally derived suggested that the LGE might be a source of these cells (Anderson et al., 1997). However, in vivo fate mapping using transplantation of genetically marked donor tissues argued against this interpretation (Wichterle et al., 2001). This later work indicated that at least at E13.5, while the MGE produced large numbers of cortical interneurons, the LGE produced few if any. However, a caveat to this conclusion is that this study restricted itself to a single, relatively early developmental time point. Complicating matters further, significant numbers of MGE-derived cortical interneurons migrate through the LGE (Wichterle et al., 2001) at later developmental stages. This contamination precluded this approach from being a useful method for resolving this issue.
The possibility that the LGE contributes to cortical interneuron production was again suggested by subsequent analysis by our laboratory and others that indicated the CGE provided an additional source of cortical interneurons (Nery et al., 2002; Xu et al., 2004; Butt et al., 2005). The close molecular resemblance between the CGE and LGE raised the question as to whether at later developmental time points the LGE might also generate a subpopulation of cortical interneurons. Indeed, one group has gone so far as to argue that the CGE might be better classified as a caudal extension of the LGE (Flames et al., 2007).
Since the Mash1BAC-CreER driver line we used in this study labeled precursors arising from the LGE, as well as the CGE, and given that the “CGE-derived” population was larger, more diverse and originated considerably later than previously recognized, it seems reasonable to consider the possibility that some cortical interneurons are LGE-derived. While we cannot entirely rule this out, a number of circumstantial observations suggest that the vast majority of the cortical interneurons fate mapped in this study are truly derived from the CGE. First, our analysis of short-term fate mapping revealed the migration of cells toward the cortex at CGE but not LGE-levels of the telencephalon. Second, 84.6% of the fate-mapped cells expressed CoupTFII as they migrate tangentially. During embryogenesis, CoupTFII is almost exclusively confined to the CGE, with only sparse expression within the LGE (Kanatani et al., 2008; Willi-Monnerat et al., 2008). In addition, this expression might well represent migration of CGE-derived cells rostrally through the LGE. Assuming that the expression of this protein is not dynamic, one could infer that the overwhelming majority of cortical interneurons we observe arise solely from the CGE. Inducible genetic fate mapping of CoupTFII-expressing cells would no doubt help to definitively resolve this issue.
Assuming that the MGE and CGE generate the majority of cortical interneurons, is there reason to believe that additional sources of cortical interneurons remain to be identified? In this regard, a recent study demonstrated that genetic fate mapping of Nkx5-1-expressing cells confined to the preoptic area (POA) resulted in the labeling of a relatively small population of cortical interneurons, 30% of which expressed NPY (Gelman et al., 2009). As Nkx5-1 expression is confined to a subregion of the POA, additional cortical interneuron populations could possibly arise from this structure as well. In addition, a number of regions of the ventral, and possibly dorsal (Letinic et al., 2002) telencephalon may ultimately prove to be a source for subpopulations of cortical interneurons. This aside, comparing both the numbers and the diversity of cortical interneuron populations that can be attributed to arise from the MGE (Miyoshi et al., 2007) and the CGE (the present study), additional sources likely account for <5% of the total cortical interneuron population.
The role of spatial and temporal cues in the generation of CGE-derived interneuron subtypes
Previous analysis has suggested that subtype diversity within MGE-derived interneurons may arise from either spatial or temporal constraints. Recent work has shown that the presumptive PV-expressing basket cells arise preferentially in the ventral MGE, while SST-expressing Martinotti cells are produced in greater number in the dorsal MGE (Flames et al., 2007; Fogarty et al., 2007; Ghanem et al., 2007; Wonders et al., 2008). It has been shown that MGE-derived interneurons are born in an inside-out manner, suggesting that cortical interneuron diversity may be linked to their time of origin (Xu et al., 2004; Yozu et al., 2004; Miyoshi et al., 2007; Rymar and Sadikot, 2007). Indeed, our recent electrophysiological analysis of MGE-derived interneuron subtypes supports this notion by showing that different subtypes are generated at distinct developmental stages (Miyoshi et al., 2007). Together, these findings suggest that the diversity of MGE-derived interneurons might be generated both by spatially distinct progenitor pools that are restricted to give rise to only certain subtypes, as well as temporal changes in their specification programs within these progenitor pools.
What then is the mechanism for generating diverse subtypes of interneurons derived from the CGE? CGE-derived interneurons, which are comprised largely by Reelin- and VIP-expressing (Cavanagh and Parnavelas, 1989) subtypes, are not generated in an inside-out manner but rather show a preference for superficial cortical layers regardless to their birthdates. These findings appear to support the notion that temporal changes in the production of different CGE-derived subtypes is less prominent than in the MGE. The observation that the ratio of Reelin- versus VIP-expressing cortical interneurons is largely maintained throughout development seems to support this idea. This, however, is somewhat misleading, as fine-grained electrophysiological analysis suggests that while sIB interneurons are only found in the earliest born CGE-derived subtypes, fAD interneurons are preferentially produced at the peak of interneuron production (This study and Butt et al., 2005). Even so, the temporal shifts in CGE-derived interneuron subtypes do appear on the whole to be less pronounced than what is observed in the MGE. It is intriguing to speculate as to whether the shift in the production of particular interneuron subtypes represents temporal alterations in the potential of progenitors or shifts in the instructive cues within the cortex as development progresses. However, only by experimentally challenging CGE-derived interneurons through approaches such as heterochronic transplantation can this question be properly addressed.
In summary, by taking advantage of an inducible genetic fate mapping strategy in combination with electrophysiological recordings of intrinsic properties, we have examined the temporal production and mature diversity of cortical interneurons generated from the CGE (and possibly the LGE). In the process we have determined that the CGE is considerably more robust in its contribution to cortical interneuron diversity than previously realized. Thus the present work, together with our previous fate mapping study on the MGE, demonstrates that CGE-derived interneurons possess both cellular characteristics and laminar specificities that are distinct from those of the populations derived from the MGE. Hence, through the use of these developmental genetics approaches, we have been able to determine the spatial and temporal origins of all major classes of cortical interneurons.
Footnotes
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Research in the Fishell laboratory is supported by National Institutes of Health grants (RO1NS039007, RO1MH071679) and generous support from both the Simons Foundation and New York State through their NYSTEM initiative. G.M. was supported by a grant from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. J.H.-L. was funded by a Swedish Brain Foundation (Hjärnfonden) postdoctoral grant and a European Molecular Biology Organization Long-Term Fellowship. S.J.B. was supported by a Long-Term Fellowship from the Human Frontier Science Program Organization. T.K. received support from a Patterson Trust Fellowship. We thank Dr. Vassilis Pachnis for supplying us with the Lhx6 antibody and Dr. Kenneth Baimbridge for his generous gift of parvalbumin antibody. We thank Drs. Chin Xu and Stewart Anderson for providing us with their Nkx2–1BAC-Cre driver, Dr. Yuchio Yanagawa for the GAD67-EGFP line, Dr. Alexandra Joyner for TK-Cre deleter mice, and Dr. Susan Dymecki for ACTB-Flpe deleter mice and for providing us with homology arms for targeting the R26R locus, and the CAG promoter. We are thankful for the DNA constructs from Drs. Takahiko Matsuda and Connie Cepko (CAGEN and FlpeMyc) and Dr. Kenneth Campbell (Dlx5/6-CreIRESEGFP). We also thank Dr. Rafael Yuste for his suggestions in making our nomenclature better conform to that proposed by the Petilla Convention. We appreciate Lihong Yin for technical help in genotyping. Finally, we are greatly appreciative to all of the Fishell laboratory members for their support and input on this work, especially Elsa Rossignol and Renata Batista-Brito.
- Correspondence should be addressed to Gord Fishell, Smilow Neuroscience Program and the Department of Cell Biology, Smilow Research Center, New York University School of Medicine, 522 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016. fisheg01{at}nyumc.org