Abstract
AMPA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity is proposed to play a major pathogenic role in the selective motoneuron death of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Motoneurons have been shown in various models to be more susceptible to AMPA receptor-mediated injury than other spinal neurons. It has been hypothesized that this selective vulnerability of motoneurons is caused by the expression of highly Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors and a complete or relative lack of the AMPA receptor subunit Glu receptor 2 (GluR2). The aim of this study was to quantify the relative Ca2+permeability of AMPA receptors and the fractional expression of GluR2 in motoneurons by combining whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology and single-cell RT-PCR and to compare these properties with those of dorsal horn neurons. Spinal motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons were isolated from embryonic rats and cultured on spinal astrocytes. As in previous studies, motoneurons were significantly more vulnerable to AMPA and kainate than dorsal horn neurons. However, all motoneurons expressed GluR2 mRNA (∼40% of total AMPA receptor subunit mRNA), and their AMPA receptors had intermediate whole-cell relative Ca2+ permeability (PCa2+/PCs+∼ 0.4). AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+and the relative abundance of GluR2 varied more widely in dorsal horn neurons than in motoneurons, but the mean values did not differ significantly between the two cell populations. GluR2 was virtually completely edited at the Q/R site both in motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons. These results indicate that the selective vulnerability of motoneurons to AMPA receptor agonists is not determined solely by whole-cell relative Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized pathologically by the predominant loss of motoneurons. A growing body of circumstantial evidence suggests that AMPA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity contributes to the motoneuron death of ALS (Rothstein, 1996; Shaw and Ince, 1997). Motoneurons are more vulnerable to AMPA receptor agonists than other spinal neurons, both in vivo (Hugon et al., 1989;Ikonomidou et al., 1996) and in organotypic and dissociated spinal cord cultures (Rothstein et al., 1993; Carriedo et al., 1996; Bar-Peled et al., 1999). The mechanisms underlying this selective vulnerability of motoneurons to AMPA receptor overactivation are poorly understood.
AMPA receptors are cation-conducting complexes composed of various combinations of four subunits [Glu receptor 1 (GluR1) to GluR4 or GluR-A to GluR-D; Seeburg, 1993; Hollmann and Heinemann, 1994]. AMPA receptors lacking GluR2 have a high relative Ca2+ permeability (PCa2+/Pmonovalent), whereas PCa2+/Pmonovalentof receptors containing GluR2 is very low (Hollmann et al., 1991). This effect of GluR2 on AMPA receptor PCa2+/Pmonovalentis attributable to the presence of an arginine in its pore-forming segment, in a position occupied by glutamine in the other AMPA receptor subunits (Hume et al., 1991; Burnashev et al., 1992). This critical arginine residue is created at the pre-mRNA stage by RNA editing (Sommer et al., 1991). The relative Ca2+permeability of native AMPA receptors in neurons is inversely correlated with the relative abundance of edited GluR2 and ranges from almost 0 to >2 in different neuronal cell types (Jonas et al., 1994;Geiger et al., 1995).
Direct Ca2+ entry through AMPA receptors is capable of triggering neuronal death (Brorson et al., 1994). Therefore, the divergence in relative Ca2+permeability of AMPA receptors between different neuronal cell types could be an important determinant of selective neuronal vulnerability (Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1997). It has been proposed that the selective vulnerability of motoneurons to AMPA receptor agonists might result from expression of highly Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors and an absence or relative lack of GluR2 in this cell type (Williams et al., 1997; Shaw and Ince, 1997). A majority of spinal motoneurons have been demonstrated qualitatively to possess Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors by means of kainate (KA)-activated Co2+ uptake, a histochemical technique (Carriedo et al., 1996; Vandenberghe et al., 1998a; Bar-Peled et al., 1999). Quantitative measurements of relative Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors in motoneurons have not been reported.
Numerous authors have qualitatively assessed GluR2 expression in spinal motoneurons using in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry, but results have been conflicting. Most groups found evidence of GluR2 mRNA and protein expression in rat and human motoneurons (Furuyama et al., 1993; Tölle et al., 1993;Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1994; Jakowec et al., 1995; Tomiyama et al., 1996; Virgo et al., 1996; Petralia et al., 1997; Morrison et al., 1998; Vandenberghe et al., 1998a; Grossman et al., 1999), but an absence of GluR2 was reported in two studies (Williams et al., 1997;Bar-Peled et al., 1999). Quantitative measurements of the amount of GluR2 relative to the other AMPA receptor subunits in motoneurons have not been performed.
The aim of the present study was twofold: first, to quantify the relative Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors and the relative abundance of GluR2 in motoneurons by combining whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology and single-cell RT-PCR; and second, to compare these parameters between motoneurons and other spinal neurons to determine whether these properties can account for the selective vulnerability of motoneurons to AMPA receptor agonists.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Cell cultures. Motoneurons were cultured as previously described in detail (Vandenberghe et al., 1998a,b), with minor modifications. In brief, spinal cords were dissected from 15-d-old Holtzmann rat embryos (sperm-positive day = day 1). Procedures followed were in accordance with a protocol approved by the University of Chicago Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. A motoneuron-enriched neuronal population was purified from the ventral spinal cord by centrifugation on a 6.5% metrizamide (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) cushion and was cultured in immediate contact with a spinal astrocytic feeder layer, which had been pre-established on 15 mm round glass coverslips. The neuronal culture medium consisted of L15 (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) supplemented with glucose (3.6 mg/ml), progesterone (20 nm), insulin (5 μg/ml), putrescine (0.1 mm), conalbumin (0.1 mg/ml), sodium selenite (30 nm), penicillin (100 IU/ml), streptomycin (100 μg/ml), 2% horse serum (Life Technologies), 0.2% (w/v) sodium bicarbonate, and 5% chick embryo extract (Life Technologies).
Dorsal horn neurons were dissociated from the dorsal half of the spinal cord. The preparation procedure was exactly the same as for the motoneurons, except that the metrizamide centrifugation step was omitted. Dorsal horn neurons were seeded on pre-established spinal astrocytic feeder layers at a density of 3000/cm2 and cultured in identical conditions as the motoneurons.
All cultures were kept in a 6% CO2 humidified incubator at 37°C. Neurons were used for experiments between 10 and 15 d in vitro.
Immunocytochemistry. Peripherin and SMI-32 immunostaining was performed as previously described (Vandenberghe et al., 1998a,b). Neuronal cell body diameter (defined as the largest diameter of the soma) was quantified using a computer image analysis system (Quantimet 500; Leica, Cambridge, UK).
Toxicity experiments. Motoneuron-enriched cultures and dorsal horn cultures were exposed to excitotoxins for 24 hr at 37°C in a 6% CO2 incubator, using an exposure medium of L15 supplemented with glucose (3.6 mg/ml) and sodium bicarbonate (0.15%, w/v). The NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 (10 μm) was added during all agonist exposures. All neurons present on one coverslip were counted immediately before and after excitotoxin exposure under phase-contrast optics. All cells of neuronal morphology, without vacuolar inclusions and with intact neurites longer than two cell body diameters, were taken into account. Overall neuronal survival was determined as the ratio of the number of neurons present at the end of the exposure to the number of neurons before exposure and was normalized to the survival in negative controls treated with exposure medium without agonist. Cultures were subsequently fixed and stained with anti-peripherin. Motoneuron survival in each condition was calculated as the overall survival in that condition times the percent peripherin(+) cells in that condition, divided by the percent peripherin(+) neurons in the negative control. Dorsal horn neuron survival was calculated analogously, using overall survival and percent peripherin(−) neurons. All countings were performed by an observer blinded to the treatment protocol.
Electrophysiology. Whole-cell voltage-clamp experiments were performed using somatically placed, dichlorodimethylsilane- and diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC)-treated borosilicate pipettes without tip polishing (Brorson et al., 1999). Four microliters of intracellular solution were back-filled into the pipette after tip filling. Pipettes had a resistance of 1.8–2.5 MΩ when filled with intracellular solution. The reference electrode was connected to the bath by means of a 3 mm KCl-agar bridge. Cells were accepted for study if a stable seal formed with a whole-cell resistance of at least 120 MΩ and access resistance of <10 MΩ. Responses were recorded using an Axopatch 1D amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). All recordings were performed at room temperature. All surfaces of the patch-clamp setup were wiped with 70% ethanol, and gloves were worn during patch clamping.
The intracellular solution consisted of 120 mm CsF, 3 mm MgCl2, 5 mm EGTA, and 10 mm HEPES, pH adjusted to 7.25 with 12 mmCsOH, and was DEPC-treated and autoclaved. The usual extracellular perfusion buffer contained 145 mm NaCl, 3 mmKCl, 2 mm CaCl2, 1 mmMgCl2, 10 mm HEPES, and 10 mm glucose, pH 7.40 with NaOH. Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors was measured in Na+-free extracellular solutions containing either 15 or 50 mmCa2+. The 15 mmCa2+ solution consisted of 12.8 mm CaCl2, 2.2 mmCa(OH)2, 10 mm glucose, 10 mm HEPES, and 240 mm sucrose (osmolarity, 315 mOsm/l; pH 7.4). The 50 mmCa2+ solution consisted of 47.8 mm CaCl2, 2.2 mmCa(OH)2, 10 mm glucose, 10 mm HEPES, and 147 mm sucrose (osmolarity, 315 mOsm/l; pH 7.4). Extracellular solutions were supplemented with MK-801 (10 μm), tetrodotoxin (0.5 μm), and Cd2+ (100 μm) to block NMDA receptors, voltage-gated Na+ channels, and Ca2+ channels, respectively.
Cells were held at a membrane potential of −80 mV, andI–V relationships were generated with test potentials from −100 to + 20 mV by 10 mV intervals, with solenoid valve-based application of agonists via a theta tube applicator. For each cell, the I–V curve recording in 50 mm Ca2+ was bracketed between 2 I–V curve recordings in 15 mm Ca2+. Leak current before agonist application was subtracted from agonist-evoked steady-state current at each potential. The permeability ratio PCa2+/PCs+was calculated from the reversal potential (Er) in Na+-free solution according to the extended constant field equation (Mayer and Westbrook, 1987): where and R, T, and F have their conventional meanings. Ion activities were used. Activity coefficients were calculated from the Debye–Hückel equation (Dean, 1992) to be 0.718 for Cs+ and 0.416 for Mg2+ in the intracellular solution, 0.496 for Ca2+ in the 15 mm Ca2+ solution, and 0.357 for Ca2+ in the 50 mm Ca2+ solution. A value of 0.8 was used for PMg2+/PCs+(Iino et al., 1990).
The membrane surface area of a neuron was estimated from the measurement of whole-cell capacitance. The whole-cell capacitance was measured as the capacitance compensation needed to cancel the capacitive transient during a 10 mV voltage step in the whole-cell mode.
Single-cell RT-PCR and restriction analysis. After electrophysiological recording the cell content was aspirated into the patch pipette and expelled with the pipette solution (4 μl) into the reverse transcription mix containing: 5× first-strand buffer (2.5 μl; Life Technologies), dithiothreitol (1 μl; Life Technologies), dNTPs (4 μl of a 2.5 mm stock; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ), random hexamers (1 μl of a 2.5 μg/μl stock; Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN), RNase inhibitor (0.5 μl or 20 U; Promega, Madison, WI), and reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies Superscript II; 0.5 μl or 100 U) to a total of 13.5 μl. This RT mix was incubated at 42°C for 45 min, then at 99°C for 5 min, and finally at 5°C for 5 min and then stored at − 20°C until PCR was done.
PCR for relative quantification of the four AMPA receptor subunits was performed using a protocol similar to that described by Lambolez et al. (1992), except that we used only 40 instead of 75 PCR cycles. Upstream (“up”) and downstream (“lo”) primers were used that amplify all AMPA receptor subunit sequences in parallel (Lambolez et al., 1992). Three introns are present in the GluR1–4 genes between these two primer positions, so that the cDNA amplification product cannot be confounded with gene amplification product. The entire RT reaction product was added to a PCR mix containing PCR buffer (Perkin-Elmer, Foster City, CA), 10 pmol of each primer, 0.05 mm dNTPs (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech), 2.5 U of Taq polymerase (Perkin-Elmer) and 1.125 mmMgCl2 to a final volume of 100 μl. The PCR mix was put in a thin-walled reaction tube, covered with oil, and placed in the thermal cycler for five cycles of 94°C for 30 sec, 45°C for 30 sec, ramp to 72°C over 1 min 10 sec, and 72°C for 1 min, which were then followed by 35 cycles of 94°C for 30 sec, 49°C for 30 sec, and 72°C for 1 min. Extension was concluded with 72°C for 10 min. PCR product (10 μl) was run on a 1.5% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide, together with 10 ng of an approximately 600 bp fragment amplified from actin cDNA. Products of successful PCR reactions were ethanol-precipitated and resuspended in H2O for subsequent restriction digestion. PCR products of which the band on agarose gel was clearly weaker than the 10 ng calibration band were not used for restriction analysis; this was the case for 4 of a total of 27 positive PCR results from single cells. PCR products from two cells were excluded because of unclear labeling of the PCR tubes. Two types of negative controls were taken during each electrophysiological session, subjected to RT-PCR, and run on agarose gels together with the cell samples. The first type of negative control consisted of patch pipette content after aspiration of bath solution into the pipette for 20 sec. The second type of negative control consisted of patch pipette content after forming a cell-attached seal without breaking into the whole-cell configuration. None of these negative controls (n = 36) produced a visible PCR band.
The precipitate of successful PCR reactions was digested overnight at 37°C with a mixture of four subunit-specific enzymes (Lambolez et al., 1992): BglI (for GluR1), Bsp1286I (for GluR2), Eco47III (for GluR3), and EcoRI (for GluR4). Digestion products were separated on 5% polyacrylamide gels, treated with the fluorescent dye SYBR Green-1, and quantified by digital fluorimetric scanning (ImageQuant version 1.2; Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). All eight digestion fragments were well resolved, except for the upper fragments of GluR3 and GluR4, which partially overlapped. To correct for this, the total density of these two overlapping bands was divided proportionately to the relative densities of the lower, nonoverlapping bands for GluR3 and GluR4 (corrected for length difference). Fractions of the PCR product that remained uncut after restriction digestion always constituted <5% of the total product.
The relative proportion of Q/R site edited and unedited GluR2 was determined as follows. Bands of successful first-round PCR reactions were excised from the agarose gel, purified with the QIAquick gel extraction kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA), and subjected to GluR2-specific, second-round PCR. This was performed in the same PCR mix given above with 1.5 mm MgCl2, using lo as downstream primer and a GluR2-specific upstream primer, to amplify a GluR2 cDNA fragment of 634 bp. The sequence of this primer was 5′-ATGGAAGAGAAACACAAAGTAG-3′. The temperature profile of the second-round PCR was 94°C for 30 sec, 55°C for 30 sec, and 72°C for 45 sec (30 cycles), followed by 72°C for 10 min. The second-round PCR product was ethanol-precipitated and resuspended in H2O for restriction analysis. Purity of the GluR2 product was verified for each sample by complete (>99.5%) digestion with the GluR2-specific enzyme Bsp1286I. The 634 bp GluR2 sequence was digested with the restriction enzyme TseI for 1 hr at 65°C. This enzyme cuts edited GluR2 at one site, yielding two fragments (444 and 190 bp), and cuts unedited GluR2 at an additional site, yielding three fragments (444, 106, and 84 bp). The fragments were again quantified by digital fluorimetric scanning after separation on 5% polyacrylamide gels. The fraction of GluR2 that was edited at the Q/R site was then determined by dividing the integrated density of the 190 bp fragment by the sum of the integrated densities of the 190, 106, and 84 bp fragments. As a control in this assay, a 634 bp GluR1 sequence was also amplified using the same second-round PCR protocol as for GluR2, except that a GluR1-specific upstream primer was used. The sequence of this primer was 5′-AGGGACGAGACCAGACAACCAG-3′. Purity of the GluR1 product was confirmed by complete digestion with the GluR1-specific enzyme BglI. TseI digestion of this (unedited) GluR1 fragment was predicted to produce three fragments (444, 106, and 84 bp), analogous to the digestion pattern of the unedited version of GluR2.
We have previously demonstrated the validity of this RT-PCR protocol for the quantification of relative levels of AMPA receptor subunit mRNAs (Brorson et al., 1999). Additional control experiments were performed for the present study. RNA was transcribed from cDNA clones of the four AMPA receptor subunits (gifts from Dr. P. Seeburg, Max-Planck-Institute for Medical Research, Heidelberg, Germany; and Dr. S. Heinemann, The Salk Institute, San Diego, CA). The RT-PCR protocol was applied to AMPA receptor subunit RNA mixtures of known composition, starting from amounts as little as ∼400 RNA molecules, with reliable reproduction of the relative abundance of each subunit (Fig.1). Thus, these control experiments again confirmed the ability of this assay to quantify the fractional expression of AMPA receptor subunit mRNAs.
Data analysis. All numerical values given denote mean ± SD. Error bars in the figures also indicate SD.
Statistical analysis was performed with SigmaStat (Jandel Scientific Software, San Rafael, CA). Statistical significance of differences was analyzed with two-tailed Student's t test for comparison between two groups with equal variances, with Mann–Whitney rank sum test for comparison between two groups with unequal variances, and with one-way ANOVA and Student–Newman–Keuls test for comparison between more than two groups with equal variances.
The relationship between relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA and PCa2+/PCs+was analyzed using an equation based on a model of subunit assembly proposed by Geiger et al. (1995): where Ptot is whole-cell PCa2+/PCs+; PI is PCa2+/PCs+of GluR2-lacking AMPA receptor channels; PII is PCa2+/PCs+of GluR2-containing receptors; f is relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA; and n = number of subunits per receptor. This equation was used to fit the data shown in Figure 7 by nonlinear regression, with PI and PIIas the only free parameters. Significance of the correlation between relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA and PCa2+/PCs+was assessed by computing the Spearman rank correlation coefficient (rs).
Materials. All restriction enzymes were purchased from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA). AMPA was purchased from Research Biochemicals (Natick, MA), and MK-801 was purchased from Tocris Cookson (Ballwin, MO). SYBR Green-1 and tetrodotoxin were purchased from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR). Other chemicals were obtained from Sigma.
RESULTS
Cultures of motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons
A highly motoneuron-enriched neuronal population was isolated from the ventral spinal cord of embryonic rats and was cultured on a pre-established feeder layer of spinal astrocytes. A large majority of these neurons were motoneurons, as shown by immunostaining with the motoneuron markers peripherin (Escurat et al., 1990) and SMI-32 (Carriedo et al., 1996). On days 10–14 in vitro, 84.7 ± 6.5% of neurons were peripherin-positive, and 81.6 ± 4.7% of neurons were large (>20 μm in cell body diameter), SMI-32-positive neurons (n = 3 for each marker; Fig.2A,B). Motoneurons displayed a typical, highly differentiated morphology: a large, multipolar cell body, a prominent nucleus with a conspicuous nucleolus, and several thick neurites. Size of the neuronal cell body clearly correlated with the probability of staining with motoneuron markers (Fig. 2D). Neurons with cell bodies >40 μm were invariably peripherin(+) and SMI-32(+).
Dissociated neurons from the dorsal spinal cord of embryonic rats were also grown on pre-established spinal astrocytic feeder layers in the same culture conditions as motoneurons. Only 3.4 ± 1.8% of neurons in dorsal horn cultures were peripherin(+) (n = 3 on days 10–14 in vitro; Fig. 2C).
Vulnerability of motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons to AMPA receptor agonists
The vulnerability of motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons to prolonged AMPA receptor overactivation was studied by exposing motoneuron cultures and dorsal horn cultures for 24 hr to the AMPA receptor agonists AMPA (30 μm) and KA (20 and 100 μm). As shown in Figure 3, motoneurons were substantially more vulnerable to each of these prolonged treatments than were dorsal horn neurons. This finding is in agreement with data from other in vitro models (Rothstein et al., 1993; Carriedo et al., 1996; Bar-Peled et al., 1999).
Electrophysiological measurements of AMPA receptor Ca2+ permeability in motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons
For electrophysiological recordings from the motoneuron-enriched cultures, neurons with cell bodies >40 μm in diameter were selected, because neurons in this size category were invariably stained with the motoneuron markers peripherin and SMI-32 (Fig. 2D). To determine the relative Ca2+permeability of AMPA receptors in motoneurons, we measured reversal potentials of the I–V relationships of the responses to 100 μm KA in whole-cell voltage-clamp experiments. I–V relationships were recorded in a Na+-free, sucrose-based extracellular solution in which the only cation was Ca2+. MK-801 (10 μm), Cd2+ (100 μm), and tetrodotoxin (0.5 μm) were added to the extracellular solution to block NMDA receptors, voltage-gated Ca2+channels, and Na+ channels, respectively. To detect a positive shift in reversal potential with increase in the external Ca2+ concentration, consistent with permeability to Ca2+,I–V curves were recorded in each motoneuron in 15 and 50 mm extracellular [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]e).
An example of I–V curves recorded from a motoneuron in 15 and 50 mm[Ca2+]e is shown in Figure 4A. Under our experimental conditions, I–V curves from motoneurons were slightly outwardly rectifying. At the initial holding potential of −100 mV, KA evoked nondesensitizing inward currents in all motoneurons studied (n = 25; Fig.4A). This inward current is likely to be carried by Ca2+, because this was the only cation in the extracellular solution. KA can activate AMPA receptors and KA receptors (Partin et al., 1993), and both types of receptors can potentially flux Ca2+ (Egebjerg and Heinemann, 1993). We determined which class of receptors was responsible for the KA-induced inward Ca2+currents in motoneurons using the selective AMPA receptor antagonist GYKI 53655 (Bleakman et al., 1996). GYKI 53655 (50 μm) completely blocked KA-evoked inward currents (n = 4 motoneurons; data not shown), indicating that these currents were mediated by AMPA receptors. Thus, these observations qualitatively demonstrate the existence of AMPA receptors with measurable Ca2+permeability in motoneurons.
Reversal potentials in 15 mm[Ca2+]e were related to relative Ca2+ permeability (PCa2+/PCs+) of AMPA receptors by the extended constant field equation (Mayer and Westbrook, 1987). The average reversal potential in 15 mm[Ca2+]e was −61.1 ± 17.0 mV (n = 25; range, −97.2 to −35.2 mV), yielding an average PCa2+/PCs+of 0.40 ± 0.25 (range, 0.07–1.01). In 21 of 25 motoneurons (84%), PCa2+/PCs+had a value between 0.15 and 0.8. In three motoneurons, PCa2+/PCs+was very low (0.05–0.1), and one motoneuron had a PCa2+/PCs+of 1.01. There was a substantial positive shift in reversal potential in all motoneurons with increase of the [Ca2+]e from 15 to 50 mm (Fig. 4D). The average reversal potential in 50 mm[Ca2+]e was −37.6 ± 16.3 mV (n = 25; range, −73.1 to −15.5 mV).
I–V relationships of KA-evoked currents in 15 and 50 mm[Ca2+]e were also recorded from dorsal horn neurons (Fig. 4B–D).I–V curves from dorsal horn neurons were slightly outwardly rectifying. As in motoneurons, KA induced nondesensitizing inward currents in all dorsal horn neurons (n = 18) at the initial holding potential of −100 mV. Reversal potentials varied over a wider range in dorsal horn neurons than in motoneurons (Fig. 4B–D). The average reversal potential in 15 mm[Ca2+]e was −61.7 ± 23.1 mV (n = 18; range, −95.5 to −17.8 mV). The average PCa2+/PCs+ratio, calculated from these reversal potential values, was 0.57 ± 0.74 (n = 18; range, 0.08–2.45). As in motoneurons, there was a considerable positive shift in reversal potential in all dorsal horn neurons with increase of [Ca2+]e from 15 to 50 mm (Fig. 4D). The reversal potential in 50 mm[Ca2+]e was −39.5 ± 24.8 mV (n = 18; range, −68.6 to +12.4 mV). There was no significant difference between dorsal horn neurons and motoneurons with respect to the mean reversal potentials in 15 and 50 mm[Ca2+]e or PCa2+/PCs+.
Motoneurons are larger cells than dorsal horn neurons. It was therefore not surprising that the amplitudes of KA-evoked inward and outward currents were consistently higher in motoneurons than in dorsal horn neurons (Fig. 4A–C). Interestingly, however, the difference in current amplitudes between both sets of neurons was considerably larger than would be expected from the difference in membrane surface area, as estimated from the measurements of whole-cell capacitance. Cell capacitance typically ranged from 70 to 110 pF in motoneurons and from 20 to 50 pF in dorsal horn neurons. Although this was not the primary purpose of these experiments, we calculated density of inward current by dividing inward current (in 15 mm[Ca2+]e at a membrane potential 20 mV more negative than the reversal potential) by the whole-cell capacitance. Inward current density of AMPA receptors in motoneurons was nearly threefold that in dorsal horn neurons: inward current density was −1.30 ± 0.74 pA/pF in motoneurons (n = 17; range, −0.48 to −3.37 pA/pF) and −0.45 ± 0.20 pA/pF in dorsal horn neurons (n = 17; range, −0.19 to −0.88 pA/pF). This difference was highly significant (p < 0.00001). Outward current density, primarily reflecting outward permeation of the monovalent ion Cs+, was calculated analogously, using outward currents at a membrane potential 20 mV more positive than the reversal potential. Outward current density was also considerably higher (p < 0.00001) in motoneurons (1.71 ± 0.76 pA/pF; range, 0.76–3.20 pA/pF; n = 18) than in dorsal horn neurons (0.54 ± 0.21 pA/pF; range, 0.32–0.92 pA/pF;n = 18).
AMPA receptor subunit expression patterns in motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons
Single-cell RT-PCR amplification of AMPA receptor subunit mRNA after whole-cell patch-clamp studies was successful in 10 of 18 attempts in motoneurons and in 11 of 16 attempts in dorsal horn neurons.
As illustrated in Figure 5, all motoneurons expressed substantial relative amounts of GluR2 (39 ± 11%; range, 25–59%), GluR1 (27 ± 15%; range, 13–63%), and GluR4 (25 ± 11%; range, 9–42%). GluR3 was expressed at a considerable level in 5 of 10 motoneurons (range, 15–23%) and was undetectable in the other 5.
Dorsal horn neurons showed a much more variable AMPA receptor subunit expression pattern, reflecting the heterogeneous makeup of this cell group (Fig. 5). All dorsal horn neurons expressed GluR2, in a relative amount ranging from 6 to 85%. There was no significant difference in the average fraction of GluR2 between motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons. The relative abundance of GluR1 and GluR4 in dorsal horn neurons varied from 0 to 46% and from 0 to 50%, respectively. GluR3 was detected in only 2 of 11 dorsal horn neurons.
The GluR2 subunit reduces the relative Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors because of the presence of an arginine at a critical position (the “Q/R site”) in its pore-forming segment (Hume et al., 1991;Burnashev et al., 1992). This arginine codon is created at the pre-mRNA stage by RNA editing (Sommer et al., 1991). In rodent brain, GluR2 has been shown to be almost completely edited at the Q/R site (Sommer et al., 1991; Burnashev et al., 1992). However, no data are available about the Q/R site editing status of GluR2 in the mammalian spinal cord. Incomplete editing of GluR2 in spinal neurons might produce a deviation from the relative Ca2+permeability predicted on the basis of their relative expression of GluR2. We therefore determined whether single motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons expressed any GluR2 in its Q/R site unedited version. As illustrated in Figure 6, GluR2 was completely edited at the Q/R site in 9 of 10 motoneurons and in 9 of 11 dorsal horn neurons. In one motoneuron and two dorsal horn neurons, unedited GluR2 was detected at very low levels (3, 5, and 5% of total GluR2 mRNA, respectively). As expected, GluR1 from motoneurons was completely unedited at the Q/R site (Fig. 6).
Relationship between AMPA receptor relative Ca2+permeability and relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA
In 21 cells (10 motoneurons and 11 dorsal horn neurons), both AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+and relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA were determined, allowing a comparison of both parameters on a cell-by-cell basis (Fig.7). There was a strong negative correlation between PCa2+/PCs+and the relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA (rs = −0.83; p < 0.005). The relationship between these parameters was fit by nonlinear regression using an equation based on a model similar to that proposed by Geiger et al. (1995). This model makes four assumptions. The first assumption is that channels containing one or more GluR2 subunits have a uniformly low PCa2+/PCs+, whereas channels lacking GluR2 have a uniformly high PCa2+/PCs+. Second, the relative abundances of GluR2 mRNA and protein are the same. Third, all subunits assemble freely with each other with the same probability. The final assumption is that the receptor is a tetramer (Rosenmund et al., 1998). This model predicts the fraction of highly Ca2+-permeable (GluR2-lacking) AMPA receptors in a cell to be (1 −f)4, with frepresenting the relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA, so that, for example, in an average motoneuron with a fractional GluR2 mRNA expression of 0.39, approximately one of seven AMPA receptors would be highly Ca2+-permeable. The data were well fit by this model (r = 0.85; p < 0.0001), although AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+still varied substantially between some individual cells with similar relative levels of GluR2 mRNA (especially with fractions of GluR2 mRNA in the range of 25–40% of total AMPA receptor mRNA). A model assuming a pentameric channel structure also produced a highly significant fit (r = 0.87; p < 0.0001; data not shown).
DISCUSSION
Relative Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors in motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons
The first aim of this study was to quantify the relative Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors in spinal motoneurons and to compare this parameter between motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons.
We found an average AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+of 0.4 in spinal motoneurons. Although caution is required when making direct comparisons between the PCa2+/Pmonovalentvalues reported by different groups because of differences in experimental conditions and calculation factors, the PCa2+/Pmonovalentvalues of motoneurons are clearly “intermediate” between the high and low PCa2+/Pmonovalentvalues that have been found in several other cell types. Classical examples of cell types with high AMPA receptor PCa2+/Pmonovalentvalues (PCa2+/Pmonovalent> 2) are hippocampal type II neurons (Iino et al., 1990) and Bergman glia (Geiger et al., 1995); these cell types express no or virtually no GluR2 mRNA (Bochet et al., 1994; Geiger et al., 1995) and therefore probably express a rather uniform population of GluR2-less, highly Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors. At the other end of the spectrum, several types of neurons are known to have very low PCa2+/Pmonovalentvalues, e.g., hippocampal type I neurons (Iino et al., 1990) and neocortical layer V pyramidal neurons (Jonas et al., 1994; Geiger et al., 1995); these cell types express a high relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA and are therefore likely to possess a population of predominantly GluR2-containing AMPA receptors (Bochet et al., 1994; Jonas et al., 1994; Geiger et al., 1995). Intermediate PCa2+/Pmonovalentvalues of AMPA receptors, similar to those of motoneurons, have previously been reported in, e.g., type III hippocampal neurons (Iino et al., 1994; Lerma et al., 1994) and neocortical layer IV nonpyramidal neurons (Jonas et al., 1994; Geiger et al., 1995). The most plausible interpretation of such intermediate PCa2+/Pmonovalentvalues is that they result from the presence of a mixed population (“mosaic”) of Ca2+-permeable and -impermeable AMPA receptors in these cell types (Jonas and Burnashev, 1995). It is interesting to note that the AMPA receptor PCa2+/Pmonovalentof spinal motoneurons is considerably higher than that of large principal neurons in other neuronal circuitries, e.g., cerebellar Purkinje neurons (Brorson et al., 1999) and hippocampal and neocortical pyramidal neurons (Jonas et al., 1994; Geiger et al., 1995).
The PCa2+/PCs+values we measured in dorsal horn neurons were more widely distributed than in motoneurons. This was not unexpected given the heterogeneous cellular composition of the dorsal horn. The mean and distribution of the PCa2+/PCs+values in dorsal horn neurons are consistent with results published byGoldstein et al. (1995). Our results confirm their finding that >95% of dorsal horn neurons express electrophysiologically detectable levels of Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors, and that a subset of dorsal horn neurons (∼10% of our sample) have very high (>2.0) PCa2+/PCs+values.
There was no clear difference in mean AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+between motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons. This may seem surprising in light of previous studies using KA-activated Co2+ uptake. KA-activated Co2+ uptake is a qualitative staining technique that reflects the intracellular Co2+ concentration after KA-induced Co2+ entry through AMPA receptors (Pruss et al., 1991). Labeling of a neuron with this technique is considered evidence for the presence of Co2+-permeable (and therefore presumably also Ca2+-permeable) AMPA receptors in its membrane. Between 60 and 80% of cultured spinal motoneurons are labeled with this technique (Carriedo et al., 1996; Vandenberghe et al., 1998a; Bar-Peled et al., 1999), compared with a lower percentage of labeled neurons in dissociated total spinal cord cultures (30–45%;Yin et al., 1995; Bar-Peled et al., 1999) and dissociated dorsal horn cultures (∼50%; Albuquerque et al., 1999). To understand this seeming discrepancy between the PCa2+/PCs+data and the Co2+ uptake results, it is important to realize that these techniques measure different aspects of AMPA receptor divalent cation permeability. KA-activated Co2+ uptake staining can be influenced by any factor that affects the magnitude of AMPA receptor-mediated Co2+ influx and the resulting intracellular and subcellular Co2+concentrations. AMPA receptor Pdivalent/Pmonovalent is only one of those factors; other factors include, for example, density, single-channel conductance and subcellular distribution of AMPA receptors, and cell volume and architecture, all of which may differ between neuronal cell types. The difference in KA-activated Co2+ uptake between motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons, despite similar mean AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+, could therefore be attributable to other factors, such as a difference in AMPA receptor density between both populations. In keeping with this idea, we found an approximately threefold larger AMPA receptor current density in motoneurons than in dorsal horn neurons. This suggests that motoneurons express AMPA receptors with considerably higher density and/or single-channel conductance and/or open probability than do dorsal horn neurons.
Relative abundance of GluR2 in motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons
The second aim of this study was to quantify the expression of GluR2 relative to the other AMPA receptor subunits in spinal motoneurons and to compare this parameter between motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons.
Because it is technically impossible to quantify the relative abundance of GluR2 protein in single cells, we used a single-cell RT-PCR method to provide a relative quantification of GluR2 at the mRNA level. All motoneurons expressed substantial relative amounts of GluR2, with an average value of ∼40% of total AMPA receptor subunit mRNA. This result is in agreement with previous qualitative evidence of GluR2 mRNA and protein expression in rat and human spinal motoneurons (Furuyama et al., 1993; Tölle et al., 1993; Pellegrini-Giampietro et al., 1994; Jakowec et al., 1995; Tomiyama et al., 1996; Virgo et al., 1996;Petralia et al., 1997; Temkin et al., 1997; Morrison et al., 1998;Vandenberghe et al., 1998a; Grossman et al., 1999), although in two studies an absence of GluR2 in spinal motoneurons was described (Williams et al., 1997; Bar-Peled et al., 1999). In the present study, the moderate fractional expression of GluR2 in motoneurons was consistent with the intermediate relative Ca2+ permeability of their AMPA receptors (Geiger et al., 1995). The relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA varied much more widely in dorsal horn neurons than in motoneurons, but the mean values did not differ significantly between the two cell groups.
At least 99% of GluR2 mRNA undergoes Q/R site editing in embryonic, neonatal, and adult rat brain (Burnashev et al., 1992). Whether Q/R site editing of GluR2 also occurs in the mammalian spinal cord has never been investigated. We found GluR2 to be virtually completely edited at the Q/R site in motoneurons and dorsal horn neurons. Thus, there does not appear to be a major difference in the degree of Q/R site editing of GluR2 between brain and spinal cord.
We found a strong negative correlation between whole-cell AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+and relative abundance of GluR2 mRNA in individual cells. In addition, the data were well fit by a model that predicts PCa2+/PCs+from the relative level of GluR2 mRNA. This is in agreement with previous work (Geiger et al., 1995; Washburn et al., 1997; Brorson et al., 1999) and indicates that AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+may be determined primarily by the relative level of GluR2 transcription. However, considerable variations in AMPA receptor PCa2+/PCs+were still found between some individual cells with similar, moderate GluR2 expression levels. This may indicate that post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms are also involved in fine tuning whole-cell relative Ca2+ permeability of native AMPA receptors.
Implications for selective motoneuron vulnerability
The final aim of this study was to determine whether the relative Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors and the relative abundance of GluR2 could account for the selective vulnerability of spinal motoneurons to AMPA receptor agonists.
Our finding that spinal motoneurons are considerably more vulnerable than dorsal horn neurons to prolonged AMPA receptor overactivation confirms earlier findings in vivo (Hugon et al., 1989;Ikonomidou et al., 1996) and in organotypic (Rothstein et al., 1993) and dissociated (Carriedo et al., 1996; Bar-Peled et al., 1999) spinal cord cultures. The selective vulnerability of motoneurons to AMPA receptor agonists thus appears to be a robust, model-independent phenomenon. The present study demonstrates that this phenomenon cannot be explained by whole-cell relative Ca2+permeability of AMPA receptors or whole-cell relative GluR2 abundance, because these two parameters do not clearly differ between motoneurons and other spinal neurons.
This conclusion does not rule out a role for Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors in selective motoneuron vulnerability. As discussed above, the magnitude of AMPA receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx and the resulting changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration are determined not only by AMPA receptor PCa2+/Pmonovalentbut also by many other factors such as density, desensitization (Brorson et al., 1995), and subcellular distribution of AMPA receptors, and Ca2+ buffering mechanisms. Any of these factors may differ between motoneurons and other spinal neurons and render motoneurons selectively vulnerable to AMPA receptor-mediated Ca2+ influx. Finally, it is important to emphasize that this study was performed on motoneurons from healthy animals that do not develop motoneuron disease. It is conceivable that the molecular and functional properties of AMPA receptors in motoneurons may be altered in certain disease states. This is illustrated by a recent transgenic mouse study (Feldmeyer et al., 1999;Kolhekar et al., 1998). A mouse was generated, which, in addition to both endogenous GluR2 alleles, carries multiple copies of a GluR2(N) minigene encoding a GluR2 subunit with asparagine at the Q/Rsite. AMPA receptors incorporating GluR2(N) are highly Ca2+-permeable. This mouse shows an increase in the relative Ca2+ permeability of neuronal AMPA receptors and an increase in total GluR2 protein expression levels, and displays a striking phenotype consisting of late-onset, selective motoneuron degeneration. This raises the possibility that certain forms of naturally occurring motoneuron disease may arise from alterations in AMPA receptor structure and function.
Footnotes
This work was supported by the ALS Association and by National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke Grant NS36260 (J.R.B.). W.V. is supported as Aspirant of the Fund for Scientific Research (FWO)-Flanders. W.R. is supported as Clinical Investigator of the FWO-Flanders and by the Research Council of the University of Leuven. We thank Dr. Stephen Heinemann and Dr. Peter Seeburg for providing AMPA receptor subunit cDNA clones, Dr. Vytautas Bindokas for help with photographs, and Dr. Doris Patneau for discussion.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. James R. Brorson, Department of Neurology, MC2030, The University of Chicago, 5841 South Maryland Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637. E-mail:jbrorson{at}neurology.bsd.uchicago.edu.