Abstract
Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were made from CA1 pyramidal and dentate gyrus granule cells (GCs) in hippocampal slices to assess the effects of withdrawal from chronic flurazepam (FRZ) treatment on the function of synaptic GABAA receptors. In slices from control rats, acute perfusion of FRZ (30 μm) increased the monoexponential decay time constant of miniature IPSCs (mIPSCs) in CA1 and GCs (from 3.4 ± 0.6 to 7.6 ± 2.1 msec and from 4.2 ± 0.6 to 7.1 ± 1.8 msec, respectively) but did not change their mean conductance, 10–90% rise time, or frequency of occurrence. Withdrawal (2–5 d) from chronic in vivo FRZ treatment (40–110 mg/kg per day, per os) resulted in a dramatic loss of mIPSCs in CA1 neurons. On day 5 of withdrawal, no mIPSCs could be recorded in 40% of CA1 pyramidal cells. In the remaining 60% of the neurons, mIPSCs had a reduced mean conductance (from 0.78 ± 0.12 nS in vehicle-treated controls to 0.31 ± 0.05 nS) and a diminished frequency of occurrence (from 20.7 ± 7.9 to 4.1 ± 0.6 Hz). We have estimated that >80% of GABAA synapses on CA1 pyramidal cells had become silent, whereas at still-active synapses the number of functional GABAA receptor channels decreased by 60%. This reduction rapidly reverted to control levels on day 6 of withdrawal. FRZ withdrawal did not alter mIPSC properties in GCs. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that chronic benzodiazepine treatment leads to a reduced number of functional synaptic GABAA receptors in a region-specific manner that may stem from differences in the subunit composition of synaptic GABAA receptors.
Benzodiazepines (BZ) commonly are used as anxiolytic, antiepileptic, sedative hypnotic, and muscle relaxant agents. However, their usefulness in chronic therapy is limited by a combination of tolerance, side effects, abuse potential, and interaction with ethanol (File, 1993). Furthermore, withdrawal symptoms develop after prolonged exposure to BZs, and these symptoms may occur even after low to moderate doses (Gallager and Primus, 1993; Klein and Harris, 1996).
During prolonged BZ treatment tolerance develops and is associated with the progressive loss of drug effectiveness. It implies an increase of the dose required to obtain therapeutic effects. Cessation of drug treatment produces a behavioral syndrome called withdrawal, which is characterized by agitation, anxiety, tremor, insomnia, or convulsions (Schoch et al., 1993); these symptoms can be relieved by readministering the drug, and therefore they define a state of drug dependence. Animal studies have revealed that withdrawal symptoms after the termination of chronic BZ treatment may be blocked by the application of BZ receptor antagonists (Gonsalves and Gallager, 1985,1988).
The loss of anticonvulsant activity after chronic BZ treatment is thought to be associated with an uncoupling of BZ and GABA binding at the level of GABAA receptors (Gallager et al., 1984; Marley and Gallager, 1989). In some studies no or little change has been seen in the expression levels of GABAA receptor subunits and GABA/BZ binding (Gallager and Primus, 1993; Klein and Harris, 1996). Other studies indicate that chronic BZ exposure leads to a decrease in the number of BZ binding sites (Zhao et al., 1994b) and certain subunit GABAA receptor mRNAs (Heninger et al., 1990; Kang and Miller, 1991; O’Donovan et al., 1992; Primus and Gallager, 1992; Tietz et al., 1993; Wu et al., 1994; Zhao et al., 1994a,b; Holt et al., 1995). Intracellular second messengers also may be involved, because reduction of the α1 subunit expression induced by chronic flunitrazepam exposure is reversed completely by micromolar concentrations of the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine (Brown and Bristow, 1996).
To date, few studies have focused on GABAAreceptor-mediated synaptic transmission during and after chronic BZ administration. Recently, a specific decrease of GABAAsubunit mRNAs and immunoreactivity in the hippocampal CA1 region has been correlated with a persistent decrease of the amplitude of evoked and spontaneous GABAA receptor-mediated synaptic potentials and currents (Zeng and Tietz, 1995; Zeng et al., 1995). To resolve further the possible long-term alterations of synaptic GABAA receptor function caused by BZ withdrawal in the adult rat hippocampus, we have compared miniature IPSCs (mIPSCs) of CA1 pyramidal and dentate gyrus granule cells (GCs) in slices from controls and animals after the withdrawal of chronic flurazepam (FRZ) treatment. As opposed to the study of stimulus-evoked or action potential-dependent spontaneous IPSCs, analysis of mIPSCs allowed us to resolve synaptic transmission at the level of each individual “bouton” and to exclude possible presynaptic mechanisms related to action potentials or calcium entry (Mody et al., 1994). We demonstrate BZ withdrawal to result in temporary “silent” inhibitory synapses in CA1 neurons, but not in GCs.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Chronic FRZ treatment. Rats were allowed to drink FRZ dissolved in distilled water containing 0.02% saccharine ad libitum. Treatment consisted of 4 d with a low concentration of FRZ (2 mm), followed by 3 d of a higher concentration (3 mm). The amount of FRZ effectively consumed was 40.0 ± 5.3 mg/kg per day (n = 6) during the first period (low dose) and 113.3 ± 35 mg/kg per day (n = 6) in the second period (high dose). Slices were prepared after 2–6 d of withdrawal. Vehicle-treated rats freely drank water containing only 0.02% saccharine, or, to avoid any bias because of differences in water consumption, another group of controls was allowed to drink the same amount of saccharine water as their FRZ-treated counterparts. No differences were found between the two vehicle-treated groups; therefore, data from these groups were pooled as “controls.”
Electrographic assessment of BZ administration and withdrawal.To assess changes of electrical activity in the hippocampal CA1 region during and after the BZ treatment, we implanted stainless steel bipolar electrodes in the CA1 pyramidal cell layer of male Wistar rats under Na-pentobarbital anesthesia (65 mg/kg, i.p.) The coordinates for electrode positions were 3.4 mm posterior to bregma, 1.7 lateral to midline, and 2.1 mm below the surface of the cortex. After at least 1 week of postsurgical recovery, the electrical activity was recorded and stored on videotape after being filtered at 30 kHz. Recordings were made every day (before, during, and after cessation of the chronic BZ treatment) at the same hour and in similar environmental conditions for 4–8 min. Two examples of such electrographic recordings are shown in Figure 1A in control conditions (before the beginning of the treatment, left traces) and after 5 d of withdrawal (right traces). To analyze these recordings further, we filtered traces off-line at 200 Hz and digitized them at 500 Hz with the Strathclyde Electrophysiology software (CDR; by J. Dempster, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK). These parameters were used routinely after it was verified that filtering and digitizing at higher frequencies gave similar results.
Spectral analysis of the recordings was performed with the “built-in” Fast Fourier Transform of Microcal Origin Software (Microcal Software, 1995). Examples of the frequency spectra obtained by this method are shown in Figure 1B (spectra 4–10 Hz) and Figure 1C (spectra 0–50 Hz). As shown by these examples, one major peak was detected at 7 Hz, corresponding to the range of theta oscillations. Compared with a vehicle-treated control animal (Fig. 1B, left graph; 1C, thick line), the power of this peak at 7 Hz was increased during the withdrawal period, reaching a maximum at day 9 (see Fig. 1 legend for details).
Slice preparation and solutions. Coronal slices were prepared from control, vehicle-, and FRZ-treated Wistar rats (350–400 gm) as previously described (Otis et al., 1991; Otis and Mody, 1992;Staley et al., 1992). Briefly, after ketamine xylazine anesthesia (10 mg/kg), animals were decapitated, and the brains were removed quickly and immersed for 1–2 min in cold (4°C) artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) containing (in mm): 126 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 10 glucose, and 2 kynurenic acid (Fluka BioChemika, Ronkonkoma, NY) continuously bubbled with 95% O2/5% CO2, pH 7.35 ± 0.05. The brain was glued, at its frontal surface, to a brass platform, and coronal brain slices (450 μm thick) were prepared with a Vibratome (Lancer Series 1000). Then the slices were hemisected and stored submerged in kynurenic acid containing ACSF at 32°C until individually transferred to the recording chamber. Recordings were performed at 34–35°C, with slices immobilized with a piece of lens paper and small platinum weights. Before recordings, 1 μm tetrodotoxin (TTX; Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA) was added to the ACSF in the presence of the glutamate receptor antagonist kynurenic acid (2 mm).
Whole-cell recordings and data collection. Whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings were obtained by using borosilicate glass capillaries with an inner filament [KG-33; 1.12 mm inner diameter, 1.5 mm outer diameter (o.d.); Garner Glass] pulled to 1.5–3 μm (o.d.) in two stages with a vertical puller (Narishige PP-83). Intrapipette solutions contained (in mm): 130 CsCl, 2 MgCl2, 10 HEPES, 0.2 bis-aminophenoxy-ethane-N,N,N′,N′-tetra-acetic acid (BAPTA), 0.8 CsOH, and 2 MgATP (pH was adjusted with CsOH; total osmolality, 255–285 mOsm).
Recordings were obtained by lowering patch electrodes into the CA1 and/or granule cell layer while monitoring current responses to 5 mV voltage pulses and applying suction to form >GΩ seals. Axopatch 200A and 1D amplifiers (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) were used; series resistance was compensated by >70%. Access resistance was monitored throughout each experiment, and only recordings with access resistances of 5–15 MΩ were considered acceptable for analysis. Recorded membrane currents were filtered (DC to 10 kHz), digitized (44 kHz; Neurocorder, Neurodata), and stored on videotape. Off-line, recordings were filtered (DC to 3 kHz; −3 dB, 8-pole Bessel, Frequency Devices 9002) and sampled at 20 kHz on a microcomputer. Data were analyzed with the Strathclyde Electrophysiology software and in-house software designed by Y. De Koninck and I. Mody.
Event detection and selection. Detection of individual mIPSCs was performed by using a software trigger previously described in detail (Otis and Mody, 1992; Soltesz et al., 1995); >95% of events that satisfied the trigger criteria were detected, even during compound mIPSCs. For each experiment all detected events were examined, and any noise that spuriously met trigger specification was rejected.
Statistical analysis and curve fitting. The mean values of the conductances, decay time constants, and frequency of occurrence of mIPSCs were compared among groups with Student’s t test. Decay time constants of mIPSCs were fitted by nonlinear least square methods; goodness of fit was evaluated on the basis of fitting subsets of points drawn from the whole set of data points and from evaluation of the reduced χ2 values. The change in the Fvalues was calculated from the sum of squared differences from the fitted line (Soltesz and Mody, 1995). The conductance, decay time constant, and 10–90% rise time of mIPSCs are represented graphically in cumulative probability plots drawn on a probability scale ordinate. All numerical data are expressed as mean ± SD.
RESULTS
Characteristics and potentiation by FRZ of GABAAreceptor-mediated mIPSCs in control CA1 and GCs.
As a preliminary step in the study of the effects of FRZ withdrawal on mIPSCs, we ascertained that acute FRZ application altered the properties of mIPSCs, as has been demonstrated for other BZ agonists (Otis and Mody, 1992; Mody et al., 1994). At a holding potential of −60 mV, GABAA receptor-mediated mIPSCs recorded in both CA1 (n = 18) and GCs (n = 15) were inward as a consequence of Cl− loading and were characterized by the 10–90% rise times, decay time constants, conductances at the peak of mIPSCs, and frequency of occurrence indicated in Table 1. The major difference between mIPSCs recorded from these two cell groups was their frequency of occurrence. Bath application of FRZ (30 μm) prolonged the decay time constant of mIPSCs (from 3.4 ± 0.6 to 7.6 ± 2.1 msec in CA1, n = 12; from 4.2 ± 0.6 to 7.1 ± 1.8 msec in GCs, n = 6) but did not alter their mean 10–90% rise time, conductance, or frequency of occurrence in either CA1 or GCs (Table 1, Fig. 2). Cumulative probability plots (Fig. 2, right panels) of the decay time constants were shifted to the right in a parallel manner, indicating that FRZ elicited a proportional increase of the decay time constants of all detected mIPSCs.
Withdrawal from FRZ alters mIPSCs in CA1, but not GCs
The properties of mIPSCs recorded in CA1 and GCs in slices obtained from rats after withdrawal from FRZ treatment were compared with those in slices from vehicle-treated (control) animals. mIPSCs in CA1 and GCs of vehicle-treated animals had kinetic properties similar to those of untreated animals (compare values in Table 2with those in Table 1). After 2–5 d of withdrawal from FRZ treatment, however, the properties of mIPSCs recorded in CA1, but not in GCs, became altered. Figure 3 illustrates an example of the massive reduction of the amplitude and frequency of mIPSCs in CA1, but not GCs, after FRZ withdrawal. In 40% (n = 20) of the CA1 pyramidal cells recorded after 5 d of FRZ withdrawal, no mIPSCs could be detected at all. This effect was not a consequence of changes in the input resistance of the CA1 neurons nor a failure to detect mIPSC. First, input resistances measured during seal test pulses were similar between control and FRZ-treated cells. Second, if small, undetected events were still present but were buried in the baseline noise, one would expect the baseline current to have different spectral characteristics from “eventless” traces in vehicle-treated controls. Yet stationary noise analysis of current traces devoid of mIPSCs in CA1 neurons from control and FRZ-treated animals yielded similar power spectra with comparable corner frequencies (data not shown).
The reduction of mIPSCs in CA1 neurons consisted of a 2.5-fold decrease (−60%) in their mean conductance at peak and a fivefold (−80%) reduction in their frequency of occurrence (Fig. 4). The values for the various mIPSC parameters for groups of neurons recorded in control slices and after 5 d of FRZ withdrawal are presented in Table 2. Note that these data do not include the 40% of CA1 neurons on day 5 of the withdrawal in which mIPSCs were abolished completely. Cumulative probability plots demonstrate that the distribution of the mIPSCs conductance generated in CA1 neurons recorded after FRZ withdrawal were shifted to the left in an approximately parallel manner (Fig. 4, top left panel), regardless of individual mIPSC size. This was not the case for GCs recorded from the same slices and with identical methods as for CA1 neurons, in which FRZ withdrawal failed to alter the conductance or the frequency of occurrence of mIPSCs (Fig. 4).
In contrast to the conductance at the peak, the decay time constants and 10–90% rise times of mIPSCs generated in CA1 and GCs did not change after FRZ withdrawal (Figs. 5, 6, Table 3). In summary, these data indicate that the frequency of occurrence and conductance of mIPSCs are decreased greatly after FRZ withdrawal in CA1, but not in GCs.
The magnitude of the selective reduction of tonic inhibition in the CA1 region was dependent on the withdrawal time period (Table 3). The mean conductance of GABAA receptor-mediated mIPSCs decreased progressively from 2–5 d of withdrawal and was found to be statistically different over this period (p < 0.01). The mean frequency of occurrence became reduced only between days 3–5 of withdrawal but not after 2 d after the cessation of chronic BZ treatment. However, mIPSC properties returned to control values after 6 d of withdrawal. The time course of these actions is summarized in Table 3.
DISCUSSION
The aim of the present study was to examine the effects of withdrawal from chronic BZ exposure on synaptic GABAAreceptor function by recording mIPSCs in the hippocampal CA1 and dentate gyrus region. After 3–5 d of withdrawal from oral FRZ treatment, we observed a massive loss of synaptic GABAAreceptor-mediated currents in CA1, but not in GCs. This effect was maximal after 5 d of withdrawal when 40% of CA1 neurons exhibited no mIPSCs, whereas in the remaining 60% of the neurons, mIPSCs occurred less frequently and had a reduced conductance.
Flurazepam prolongs mIPSCs
The properties of mIPSCs generated in CA1 and GCs of untreated and vehicle-treated animals were similar to those recorded previously by us and others in similar preparations (Mody et al., 1991; Cohen et al., 1992; Otis and Mody, 1992; De Koninck and Mody, 1994; Pitler and Alger, 1994; Soltesz and Mody, 1995). We found no differences between the properties of mIPSCs generated in GCs and CA1 neurons, apart from the relatively greater frequency of occurrence in CA1 neurons, which may indicate a greater release probability at, or a greater number of GABAergic synapses on, CA1 neurons (Li et al., 1992; Halasy and Somogyi, 1993; Buhl et al., 1994). Perfusion of FRZ (30 μm) prolonged the decay of mIPSCs without affecting their amplitude, rise time, or frequency of occurrence. This observation is consistent with a high degree of saturation of hippocampal synaptic GABAA receptors (Otis and Mody, 1992; Mody et al., 1994). The similar increase in mIPSC decay time constant induced by acute FRZ in control CA1 and GCs indicates that possible differences in the distribution of GABAA receptor subunits between the CA1 region and the dentate gyrus (Laurie et al., 1992; Persohn et al., 1992; Wisden et al., 1992; Fritschy et al., 1994) do not influence the modulation of synaptic GABAA receptor channels by this BZ.
BZ withdrawal modifies mIPSCs
Withdrawal from chronic exposure to FRZ led to a major reduction of the tonic action potential-independent inhibition in CA1 neurons but did not alter the properties of mIPSCs in GCs. In CA1 neurons a large decrease of the conductance and frequency of occurrence of mIPSCs was observed, but these effects were not accompanied by a change in their decay time constants, whereas in GCs recorded from the same slices, no changes in mIPSC properties were noted. The loss of mIPSCs in CA1 neurons after FRZ withdrawal extends the observations of previous studies to the level of synaptic GABAA receptors. The decreased number of GABA binding sites (Gallager et al., 1984; Marley and Gallager, 1989), the loss of certain GABAA receptor subunit mRNAs (Heninger et al., 1990; Kang and Miller, 1991; O’Donovan et al., 1992; Primus and Gallager, 1992; Tietz et al., 1993; Wu et al., 1994; Zhao et al., 1994a,b; Holt et al., 1995), the diminished potency of GABA on evoked field potentials (Xie and Tietz, 1992), and the reduction of evoked inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (Zeng et al., 1995) are all consistent with our findings of reduced GABAergic inhibition at individual CA1 synapses. However, the magnitude of the reduction of synaptic GABAA receptor channel function in the CA1 pyramidal neurons of our study is considerably greater than that detected previously by more indirect methods. The effects of FRZ withdrawal were time-dependent, reaching a maximum at 5 d of withdrawal and then recovered abruptly so that at 6 d of withdrawal the properties of mIPSCs approached those recorded in control cells. A recovery of evoked IPSPs 7 d after FRZ withdrawal also was noted by Zeng et al. (1995).
We have studied the full time course (2–6 d of withdrawal) of alterations in mIPSCs recorded from CA1 pyramidal neurons. After 5 d of withdrawal, no mIPSCs could be recorded in 40% of CA1 neurons. In the remaining 60% of the neurons with recordable mIPSCs, a 95% reduction of frequency and 75% decrease in conductance were noted. Furthermore, at 3–5 d of withdrawal, the reduction of mIPSC frequency and conductance occurred in parallel, indicating a possible common underlying mechanism. We suggest that withdrawal from chronic FRZ treatment forces synaptic GABAA receptor channels into a nonfunctional state so that at many synapses all subsynaptic receptor channels become nonfunctional, whereas at other synapses only some fraction of the total number of receptor channels remains functional. On the basis of the 80% decrease in frequency, after 5 d of withdrawal only an estimated 12% of CA1 pyramidal cell GABA synapses possess functional GABAA receptor channels activated by action potential-independent GABA release. In this small fraction of functioning synapses, only 40% of GABAA receptor channels appear to be activated because mIPSC conductance was reduced by 60%. Our conclusions are supported by the stringent criteria used to detect all small amplitude mIPSCs. The failure of the stationary noise analysis to discern mIPSCs collapsed into the baseline noise indicates the unlikely possibility that small events were missed by our detection. The reduced mIPSC conductance is consistent with a reduction in the number of functional postsynaptic GABAA receptors on inhibitory synapses of CA1 pyramidal cells. Because the mIPSCs we studied are independent of presynaptic action potentials or calcium entry, alterations in any of these presynaptic parameters are unlikely to have played a role in the observed changes.
It is still an open question as to how rapidly the nonfunctional GABAA receptors can be reconverted into functional ones. Based on our data at 6 d after FRZ withdrawal, this must happen within 24 hr. The rapid reversal of withdrawal effects by the benzodiazepine antagonist flumazenil (Gonsalves and Gallager, 1985,1988) may indicate that the conversion to functional receptors could be even more rapid (<1 hr). Accordingly, nonfunctional GABAAreceptors might be present at the level of the membrane during withdrawal. Therefore, the decreased function of synaptic GABAA receptor channels observed here may not necessarily result from an active process of receptor removal but, rather, may involve a “masking” mechanism. Alternatively, the reduction in the frequency and conductance of mIPSCs may stem from rapidly reversible alterations in the subunit composition of synaptic GABAAreceptor channels (Klein and Harris, 1996). Because our findings demonstrate a total absence of mIPSCs in some neurons, such subunit alterations, if present, should render GABAA receptors nonfunctional.
Region specificity of the withdrawal
Our findings are the first demonstration of a region-specific alteration of GABAergic inhibitory synaptic transmission during withdrawal from chronic benzodiazepine treatment. A possible explanation for the region specificity may be the inability of FRZ to reach equally the CA1 region and the dentate gyrus. This possibility is extremely unlikely, because there is no experimental evidence demonstrating that systematically administered excitatory or inhibitory receptor agonists/antagonists reach the CA1 region and the dentate gyrus in a quantitatively different manner. The regional differences thus may stem from distinct GABAA receptor subunit composition between the CA1 region and the dentate gyrus of the adult rat hippocampus (Laurie et al., 1992; Persohn et al., 1992; Wisden et al., 1992; Mertens et al., 1993; Fritschy et al., 1994). In particular, α4 and δ subunits are more abundant in the dentate gyrus, whereas α5 is expressed predominantly in CA1. Considering this heterogeneity, it is conceivable that some region-specific subunit composition-dependent alterations of synaptic GABAAreceptors occur after BZ withdrawal. Changes in hippocampal GABAA receptor subunits during tolerance/withdrawal to BZs include a downregulation of the expression of α1, α5, β2, β3, and γ2 (Tietz et al., 1993; Zhao et al., 1994a,b; Impagnatiello et al., 1996). The α5 subunit mRNAs specific to the CA1 region are downregulated consistently after FRZ treatment (O’Donovan et al., 1992; Zhao et al., 1994b). A replacement of certain α-subunits with another type of α-subunit or a different type of subunit altogether has been proposed to take place after chronic BZ treatment (Klein and Harris, 1996) but would not adequately explain the complete dysfunction of most synaptic GABAA receptors observed after 5 d withdrawal in our experiments. Alternatively, a reorganization of synaptic GABAA receptor subunits during and after chronic BZ treatment could produce drastic changes in their regulation by intracellular effectors such as kinases or phosphatases (Brown and Bristow, 1996), particularly because specific phosphorylation recognition consensus sequences exist on the intracellular loops of specific GABAA receptor subunits (Macdonald and Olsen, 1994).
In summary, we have demonstrated a decrease in tonic GABAergic synaptic inhibition in the CA1 region, but not in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampal formation after FRZ withdrawal. Our data are consistent with a reversible formation of “silent” inhibitory synapses during benzodiazepine withdrawal.
Footnotes
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NS-30549 to I.M. S.R.W. is supported by a fellowship from the American Epilepsy Foundation. P.P. is supported in part by the Philippe Foundation. We thank Dr. R. W. Olsen for valuable comments on this manuscript and Brian K. Oyama and Michael T. Kim for excellent technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Istvan Mody, Reed Neurological Research Center, University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, 710 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1769.