| Literature DB >> 24062646 |
Daniel S Razik1, David J Hawellek, Bernd Antkowiak, Harald Hentschke.
Abstract
In the central nervous system, GABA transporters (GATs) very efficiently clear synaptically released GABA from the extracellular space, and thus exert a tight control on GABAergic inhibition. In neocortex, GABAergic inhibition is heavily recruited during recurrent phases of spontaneous action potential activity which alternate with neuronally quiet periods. Therefore, such activity should be quite sensitive to minute alterations of GAT function. Here, we explored the effects of a gradual impairment of GAT-1 and GAT-2/3 on spontaneous recurrent network activity--termed network bursts and silent periods--in organotypic slice cultures of rat neocortex. The GAT-1 specific antagonist NO-711 depressed activity already at nanomolar concentrations (IC50 for depression of spontaneous multiunit firing rate of 42 nM), reaching a level of 80% at 500-1000 nM. By contrast, the GAT-2/3 preferring antagonist SNAP-5114 had weaker and less consistent effects. Several lines of evidence pointed toward an enhancement of phasic GABAergic inhibition as the dominant activity-depressing mechanism: network bursts were drastically shortened, phasic GABAergic currents decayed slower, and neuronal excitability during ongoing activity was diminished. In silent periods, NO-711 had little effect on neuronal excitability or membrane resistance, quite in contrast to the effects of muscimol, a GABA mimetic which activates GABAA receptors tonically. Our results suggest that an enhancement of phasic GABAergic inhibition efficiently curtails cortical recurrent activity and may mediate antiepileptic effects of therapeutically relevant concentrations of GAT-1 antagonists.Entities:
Keywords: GABA receptor; GABA reuptake; GABA transporter; NO-711; SNAP-5114; phasic inhibition; spillover; tonic inhibition
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24062646 PMCID: PMC3769619 DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2013.00141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neural Circuits ISSN: 1662-5110 Impact factor: 3.492
FIGURE 8Spontaneous activity patterns induced by NO-711 and the GABA-mimetic muscimol. (A) Concentration–response relationships of muscimol for average firing rate (left) and proportion of time spent in bursts (right). (B) Plot of average firing rate versus burst rate for NO-711 data and muscimol data. The data were normalized to the respective control conditions. Symbols and lines correspond to means and standard deviations, respectively. (C) Peri-burst time histograms (PETHs) of median multiunit firing activity during control and 250 nM muscimol (n = 9, paired data). (D), AUROC and bootstrapped 95% confidence intervals (shown only for 250 nM) for the bin-by-bin comparison of PETHs during control and drug application. Same conventions apply as in Figures .