| Literature DB >> 22065950 |
Ilgam Khalilov1, Geneviève Chazal, Ilona Chudotvorova, Christophe Pellegrino, Séverine Corby, Nadine Ferrand, Olena Gubkina, Romain Nardou, Roman Tyzio, Sumii Yamamoto, Thomas J Jentsch, Christian A Hübner, Jean-Luc Gaiarsa, Yehezkel Ben-Ari, Igor Medina.
Abstract
The neuronal potassium-chloride co-transporter 2 [indicated thereafter as KCC2 (for protein) and Kcc2 (for gene)] is thought to play an important role in the post natal excitatory to inhibitory switch of GABA actions in the rodent hippocampus. Here, by studying hippocampi of wild-type (Kcc2(+/+)) and Kcc2 deficient (Kcc2(-/-)) mouse embryos, we unexpectedly found increased spontaneous neuronal network activity at E18.5, a developmental stage when KCC2 is thought not to be functional in the hippocampus. Embryonic Kcc2(-/-) hippocampi have also an augmented synapse density and a higher frequency of spontaneous glutamatergic and GABA-ergic postsynaptic currents than naïve age matched neurons. However, intracellular chloride concentration ([Cl(-)](i)) and the reversal potential of GABA-mediated currents (E(GABA)) were similar in embryonic Kcc2(+/+) and Kcc2(-/-) CA3 neurons. In addition, KCC2 immunolabeling was cytoplasmic in the majority of neurons suggesting that the molecule is not functional as a plasma membrane chloride co-transporter. Collectively, our results show that already at an embryonic stage, KCC2 controls the formation of synapses and, when deleted, the hippocampus has a higher density of GABA-ergic and glutamatergic synapses and generates spontaneous and evoked epileptiform activities. These results may be explained either by a small population of orchestrating neurons in which KCC2 operates early as a chloride exporter or by transporter independent actions of KCC2 that are instrumental in synapse formation and networks construction.Entities:
Keywords: GABA; KCC2; development; network; neuron; synapse
Year: 2011 PMID: 22065950 PMCID: PMC3206525 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2011.00023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1Ongoing neuronal network activities in hippocampi (E18.5) from wild-type (. (A) Examples of field potential recordings from intact hippocampi of Kcc2+/+ (left) and Kcc2−/− (right) mice. (B) Mean ± SEM data characterizing spontaneous events in experiments similar to those illustrated in (A), n = 9. * = P < 0.01, t-test.
Figure 2Differential effects of the bicuculline on the spontaneous network activity in . Field potential recordings from the CA3 region of E18.5 hippocampi. Notice that in Kcc2+/+ hippocampi the application of the bicuculline produced transient inhibition of spontaneous GDPs, whereas in Kcc2−/− hippocampi it produced long-lasting inhibition of spontaneous epileptiform activity.
Figure 3Increased synaptic activity of CA3 pyramidal neurons in . (A) Representative recordings of spontaneous synaptic activity in slices from Kcc2+/+ mouse hippocampus. Most neurons were synaptically silent (A although spikes could be induced by the application of positive voltage step (A. Only few neurons showed spontaneous synaptic activity (A. In the illustrated neuron all postsynaptic currents were GABA-mediated (GABA PSCs) as they had long-lasting kinetic, reversed at −30 mV and were inhibited by bicuculline (A. (B) Spontaneous postsynaptic currents in Kcc2−/− neurons (B. Application of bicuculline revealed the presence of spontaneous glutamatergic postsynaptic currents (glutamate PSCs) at Vh = −70 mV (B. The amplitude and kinetic of electrically isolated spontaneous GABA PSCs (Vh = 0 mV) did not differ in Kcc2+/+ and Kcc2−/− neurons (statistics not shown). (C) Evoked postsynaptic responses in Kcc2−/− neurons lasting from hundreds of milliseconds (C to few seconds (C. (D) Relative proportion of silent neurons and neurons generating spontaneous GABA PSCs and/or glutamate PSCs in CA3 region of Kcc2+/+ (19 neurons, six experiments) and Kcc2−/− (22 neurons, six experiments) hippocampal slices.
Figure 4Immunofluorescence of synaptophysin in CA3 hippocampal neurons. (A) Synaptophysin and DAPI fluorescence in CA3 pyramidal and radiatum cell layers of Kcc2+/+ and Kcc2−/− hippocampi as indicated. Immunofluorescence of synaptophysin was pseudocolored (see scale on the right) for better cluster visualization. Immunofluorescence of DAPI is shown in blue. (B) Normalized density and brightness of synaptophysin positive clusters in CA3 pyramidal layer and CA3 radiatum layer of Kcc2+/+ and Kcc2−/− hippocampi. Mean ± SEM, n = 3; * = P < 0.05, t-test.
Figure 5Expression of the KCC2 in CA3 hippocampal neurons. (A) Immunoreactivity of KCC2 (red) in CA3 pyramidal neurons of Kcc2+/+ and Kcc2−/− mouse as indicated. Notice the absence of the KCC2-positive immunoreactivity in Kcc2−/− samples characterizing high specificity of the antibody. The arrowhead in insert i1 illustrates typical KCC2-positive CA3 neuron in E18.5 Kcc2+/+ hippocampi with immunoreactivity localized in cytoplasm. Asterisks in insert i2 indicate KCC2-negative neurons, whereas arrow indicates a rare neuron with KCC2 immunoreactivity localized in membrane region. For comparison, insert i4 illustrates a typical KCC2 immunoreactivity distribution in CA3 neurons of P7 Kcc2+/+ mouse that is localized in most of neurons in membrane region (shown by arrows). n = nucleus. (B) Quantification of the KCC2 immunoreactivity in CA3 pyramidal and radiatum layers of Kcc2−/− (E18.5) and Kcc2+/+ (E18.5 and P7) hippocampi. Mean ± SEM, n = 3. The difference between any two values in both plots is highly significant (P < 0.01, t-test). (C) Age-dependent distribution of neurons’ populations expressing KCC2 in membrane region (“membrane”), in the cytoplasm only (“cytoplasm”), and without detectable KCC2 immunoreactivity (“no signal”). Normalized values obtained after analysis of 50–100 neurons per animal, n = 3 Kcc2+/+ mice per age. The background (no signal) level of fluorescence was determined after analysis of the immunofluorescence of sections prepared from E18.5 Kcc2−/− mice (n = 3; see Materials and Methods for details on fluorescence analysis). (D) Reversal potential of isoguvacine-induced responses in CA3 hippocampal neurons measured using gramicidin-perforated patch-clamp recording. Mean ± SEM, n = 6 mice per condition, two to four neurons per mouse. Dots show values in individual measurements. There was no difference in mean values of EGABA.