Neuronal NT-3 Is not Required For Synaptic Transmission or Long-Term Potentiation in Area CA1 of the Adult Rat Hippocampus

  1. Long Ma1,3,
  2. Gerald Reis2,3,
  3. Luis F. Parada1, and
  4. Erin M. Schuman2,4
  1. 1University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center, Center for Developmental Biology, Dallas, Texas 75235-9133 USA 2Caltech/Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Division of Biology 216-76, Pasadena, California 91125 USA

Abstract

Neurotrophic factors, including BDNF and NT-3, have been implicated in the regulation of synaptic transmission and plasticity. Previous attempts to analyze synaptic transmission and plasticity in mice lacking the NT-3 gene have been hampered by the early death of the NT-3 homozygous knockout animals. We have bypassed this problem by examining synaptic transmission in mice in which the NT-3 gene is deleted in neurons later in development, by crossing animals expressing the CRE recombinase driven by the synapsin I promoter to animals in which the NT-3 gene is floxed. We conducted blind field potential recordings at the Schaffer collateral–CA1 synapse in hippocampal slices from homozygous knockout and wild-type mice. We examined the following indices of synaptic transmission: (1) input-output relationship; (2) paired-pulse facilitation; (3) post-tetanic potentiation; and (4) long-term potentiation: induced by two different protocols: (a) two trains of 100-Hz stimulation and (b) theta burst stimulation. We found no difference between the knockout and wild-type mice in any of the above measurements. These results suggest that neuronal NT-3 does not play an essential role in normal synaptic transmission and some forms of plasticity in the mouse hippocampus.

Footnotes

  • 3 These two authors contributed equally.

  • 4 Corresponding author.

    • Received June 7, 1999.
    • Accepted July 6, 1999.
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