| Literature DB >> 30352630 |
Michaela Kerstin Müller1, Eric Jacobi1, Kenji Sakimura2, Roberto Malinow3, Jakob von Engelhardt4,5.
Abstract
Amyloid beta (Aβ)-mediated synapse dysfunction and spine loss are considered to be early events in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) have previously been suggested to play a role for Amyloid beta (Aβ) toxicity. Pharmacological block of NMDAR subunits in cultured neurons and mice suggested that NMDARs containing the GluN2B subunit are necessary for Aβ-mediated changes in synapse number and function in hippocampal neurons. Interestingly, NMDARs undergo a developmental switch from GluN2B- to GluN2A-containing receptors. This indicates different functional roles of NMDARs in young mice compared to older animals. In addition, the lack of pharmacological tools to efficiently dissect the role of NMDARs containing the different subunits complicates the interpretation of their specific role. In order to address this problem and to investigate the specific role for Aβ toxicity of the distinct NMDAR subunits in dentate gyrus granule cells of adult mice, we used conditional knockout mouse lines for the subunits GluN1, GluN2A and GluN2B. Aβ-mediated changes in synaptic function and neuronal anatomy were investigated in several-months old mice with virus-mediated overproduction of Aβ and in 1-year old 5xFAD mice. We found that all three NMDAR subunits contribute to the Aβ-mediated decrease in the number of functional synapses. However, NMDARs are not required for the spine number reduction in dentate gyrus granule cells after chronic Aβ-overproduction in 5xFAD mice. Furthermore, the amplitude of synaptic and extrasynaptic NMDAR-mediated currents was reduced in dentate gyrus granule of 5xFAD mice without changes in current kinetics, suggesting that a redistribution or change in subunit composition of NMDARs does not play a role in mediating Amyloid beta (Aβ) toxicity. Our study indicates that NMDARs are involved in AD pathogenesis by compromising synapse function but not by affecting neuron morphology.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Amyloid Beta; GluN2A; GluN2B; NMDA receptor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30352630 PMCID: PMC6198500 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-018-0611-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1CT100(I716F)-mediated synaptic depression in granule cells of adult mice is NMDAR dependent. a Double infection with rAAV-Syn-Cre-T2A-GFP and rAAV-CaMKII-CT100(I716F)-T2A-tdTomato in DG neurons. The arrowhead points to a double-infected DG granule cell. b pAAV constructs were used to express CT100(I716F) or Cre-recombinase or tdTomato as control. c Example traces of mEPSC recordings from GluN1fl/fl mice injected with the different AAV constructs as indicated. d + e CT100(I716F) increases inter-event-interval (IEI) and reduces mEPSC frequency in DG granule cells in cells of GluN1fl/fl mice. Deletion of GluN1 (GluN1−/−) increases mEPSC frequency. Overexpression of CT100(I716F) does not significantly reduce mEPSC frequency in GluN1−/− granule cells. f To test if the effect of CT100(I716F) in GluN1fl/fl neurons is different from that in GluN1−/− granule cells, we calculated the respective percent of CT100(I716F)-mediated reduction in mEPSC frequency. The mEPSC frequency is smaller in GluN1fl/fl/CT100(I716F) than in GluN1fl/fl cells (blue bar) and slightly bigger in GluN1−/−/CT100(I716F) than in GluN1−/− cells (gray bar). The reduction in GluN1fl/fl cells is significantly bigger than the effect of CT100(I716F) in GluN1−/− granule cells. g + h CT100(I716F) reduces mEPSC frequency in DG granule cells in cells of GluN2Afl/fl mice, but does not significantly reduce mEPSC frequency in GluN2A−/− granule cells. i The CT100(I716F)-mediated decrease in mEPSC frequency in GluN2Afl/fl cells is not significantly different from the decrease in GluN2A−/− cells. j + k CT100(I716F) increases IEI and reduces mEPSC frequency in DG granule cells of GluN2Bfl/fl mice. Deletion of GluN2B (GluN2B−/−) increases mEPSC frequency. Overexpression of CT100(I716F) does not significantly reduce mEPSC frequency in GluN2B−/− granule cells. l The CT100(I716F)-mediated decrease in mEPSC frequency in GluN2Bfl/fl cells is not significantly different from the decrease in GluN2B−/− cells. m Example traces of paired-pulse recordings (PPR) with pairs of inter-stimulus intervals (ISI) of 25 ms n The PPR of the amplitudes of two currents evoked with 25 ms or 50 ms ISIs is not different in control cells and CT100(I716F)-overexpressing cells. ISIs are shown on the top of the quantification. Bar graphs show median ± IQR. * = p < 0.05, ** = p < 0.01, *** = p < 0.001; cum. = cumulative
mEPSC recordings of CT100-overexpressing DG granule cells
| Adult mice | |||||
| 3w pi | Control ( | CT100 ( | |||
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.59 [0.37–0.77] | 0.48 [0.44–0.71] | MW test: | ||
| 10w pi | Control ( | CT100 (n = 19) | |||
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.71 [0.4–0.92] | 0.54 [0.42–0.77] | MW test | ||
| Young mice | |||||
| 9w pi | Control (n = 56) | CT100 (n = 26) | |||
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.81 [0.51–1.02] | 0.61 [0.41–0.81] | MW test: | ||
| GluN1fl/fl 9w pi | Control (n = 34) | CT100 (n = 10) | GluN1−/− (n = 21) | GluN1−/− + CT100 (n= 9) | |
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.69 [0.55–0.83] | 0.37 [0.32–0.55] | 0.99 [0.76–1.22] | 1.18 [1.08–1.47] | Kruskal-Wallis: |
| Amplitude [pA] | 10.47 [9.27–11.53] | 10.47 [9.94–11.53] | 14.85 [12.96–16.09] | 12.4 [10.99–13.81] | Kruskal-Wallis: |
NMDAR-mediated currents in 5xFAD DG granule cells and virus-infected cells
| Control (n = 16) | GluN1−/− (n = 15) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| NMDAR/AMPAR ratio | 1 ± 0.65 | 0.13 ± 0.04 | MW test: p < 0.0001 |
| WT (n = 22) | 5xFAD (n = 29) | ||
| NMDAR/AMPAR ratio | 1.18 [0.79–1.77] | 0.72 [0.43–1.2] | MW test: |
| WT (n = 18) | 5xFAD (n = 25) | ||
| Decay tau [ms] | 62.91 [57.75–67.48] | 66.51 [59.2–72.86] | MW test: |
| WT (n = 23) | 5xFAD (n = 22) | ||
| Extrasynaptic amplitude [pA] | 125.3 [85.8–178.6] | 77.57 [43.12–101.2] | MW test: |
| WT (n = 23) | 5xFAD (n = 22) | ||
| Deactivation [ms] | 74.76 [63.62–88.33] | 79.43 [71.22–104.3] | MW test: |
Morphological analysis of CT100-overexpressing DG granule cells
| GluN1fl/fl 9w pi | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spine numbers | Control (n = 23) | CT100 (n = 6) | GluN1−/−(n= 23) | GluN1−/− + CT100 (n = 10) | |
| 1.54 [1.25–1.84] | 2.22 [1.95–2.37] | 1.73 [1.54–1.9] | 1.51 [1.34–1.62] | Kruskal-Wallis: | |
Values for spine morphology in CT100 and CT100(I716F) overexpression experiments
| Spine morphology distribution [%] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Stubby | Thin | Mushroom | |
| 9w pi CT100 in P7 floxed GluN1 | |||
| Control (23) | 0.29 [0.26–0.31] | 0.62 [0.6–0.67] | 0.09 [0.47–0.11] |
| CT100 (6) | 0.36 [0.27–0.4] | 0.59 [0.54–0.64] | 0.06 [0.04–0.09] |
| GluN1−/− (10) | 0.29 [0.23–0.35] | 0.6 [0.57–0.7] | 0.07 [0.05–0.1] |
| GluN1−/− + CT100 (23) | 0.27 [0.23–0.32] | 0.64 [0.62–0.67] | 0.07 [0.05–0.11] |
| Kruskal Wallis test (Dunn’s posttest) | |||
| DG granule cells GluN1−/− line | |||
| Control (49) | 0.32 [0.27–0.36] | 0.61 [0.54–0.64] | 0.08 [0.05–0.10] |
| CT100(I716F) (19) | 0.29 [0.27–0.33] | 0.63 [0.59–0.66] | 0.08 [0.06–0.08] |
| GluN1−/− (22) | 0.32 [0.26–0.39] | 0.56 [0.49–0.64] | 0.1 [0.06–0.14] |
| GluN1−/− + CT100(I716F) (28) | 0.32 [0.27–0.37] | 0.61 [0.55–0.67] | 0.07 [0.05–0.85] |
| Kruskal Wallis test (Dunn’s posttest) | |||
| DG granule cells GluN2Afl/fl line | |||
| Control (11) | 0.35 [0.32–0.37] | 0.57 [0.53–0.62] | 0.08 [0.03–0.11] |
| CT100(I716F) (17) | 0.36 [0.29–0.38] | 0.57 [0.52–0.62] | 0.07 [0.06–0.11] |
| GluN2A−/− (26) | 0.38 [0.34–0.42] | 0.54 [0.49–0.58] | 0.1 [0.06–0.18] |
| GluN2A−/− + CT100(I716F) (21) | 0.34 [0.3–0.38] | 0.55 [0.52–0.61] | 0.1 [0.08–0.13] |
| Kruskal Wallis test (Dunn’s posttest) | |||
| DG granule cells GluN2Bfl/fl line | |||
| Control (31) | 0.36 [0.33–0.42] | 0.55 [0.49–0.58] | 0.08 [0.06–0.11] |
| CT100(I716F) (45) | 0.32 [0.28–0.4] | 0.59 [0.53–0.6442] | 0.07 [0.05–0.1] |
| GluN2B−/− (29) | 0.33 [0.28–0.39] | 0.56 [0.49–0.6] | 0.11 [0.09–0.14] |
| GluN2B−/− + CT100(I716F) (16) | 0.37 [0.33–0.44] | 0.57 [0.5–0.6] | 0.07 [0.04–0.09] |
| Kruskal Wallis test (Dunn’s posttest) | |||
mEPSC recordings of CT100(I716F)-overexpressing DG granule cells
| GluN1fl/fl | Control (n = 26) | CT100(I716F) ( | GluN1−/− ( | GluN1−/− + CT100(I716F) ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.66 [0.52–0.77] | 0.42 [0.3–0.64] | 0.89 [0.69–1.63] | 1.02 [0.68–1.23] | Kruskal-Wallis: p < 0.0001; Dunn’s posttest: control vs CT100(I716F) |
| Percentual reduction | 0.36 [0.02–0.55] | −0.15 [− 0.38–0.23] | |||
| Amplitude [pA] | 10.81 [10.03–11.47] | 10.62 [10.02–11.13] | 11.2 [10.34–12.44] | 11.05 [9.78–12] | Kruskal-Wallis: |
| GluN2Afl/fl | Control (n= 36) | CT100(I716F) (n= 37) | GluN2A−/− (n= 24) | GluN2A−/− + CT100(I716F) (n= 19) | |
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.61 [0.5–0.75] | 0.5 [0.31–0.68] | 0.76 [0.6–0.92] | 0.62 [0.46–0.85] | Kruskal-Wallis: |
| Percentual reduction | 0.19 [− 0.1–0.51] | 0.18 [− 0.11–0.39] | |||
| Amplitude [pA] | 9.67 [8.46–10.32] | 9.83 [9.3–10.82] | 10.47 [9.29–12.96] | 10.44 [9.84–11.95] | Kruskal-Wallis: p = 0.013; Dunn’s posttest: control vs CT100(I716F) |
| GluN2Bfl/fl | Control (n = 28) | CT100(I716F) (n= 25) | GluN2B−/− (n = 27) | GluN2B−/− + CT100(I716F) (n = 26) | |
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.71 [0.53–1.08] | 0.39 [0.28–0.75] | 1.01 [0.81–1.23] | 0.87 [0.72–1.03] | Kruskal-Wallis: p < 0.0001; Dunn’s posttest: control vs CT100(I716F) |
| Percentual reduction | 0.45 [− 0.06–0.6] | 0.14 [− 0.02–0.29] | p = 0.1 | ||
| Amplitude [pA] | 9.58 [8.61–10.26] | 9.65 [8.43–10.51] | 9.8 [9.2–10.61] | 11.59 [10.16–12.69] | Kruskal-Wallis: |
Values of PPR of CT100(I716F)-overexpressing DG granule cells
| WT (n = 20) | CT100(I716F) (n = 20) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 ms ISI | 0.84 [0.78–0.88] | 0.81 [0.74–0.87] | MW-test: |
| 50 ms ISI | 1.1 [1.05–1.17] | 1.13 [1.07–1.26] | MW-test: |
Intrinsic and firing properties of CT100(I716F) overexpressing DG granule cells
| 3w pi CT100(I716F) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | CT100(I716F) | ||
| n = 31 | n = 20 | ||
| Passive properties | |||
| Input resistance [mΩ] | 182 [140–211.5] | 170 [129.5–184] | MW test: |
| Active properties | |||
| AP threshold [mV] | −37.27 [−39.18 - -33.78] | −35.84 [− 39.04 - -30.2] | MW test: |
| AP width [ms] | 1.26 [1.2–1.32] | 1.24 [1.15–1.28] | MW test: |
| AP amplitude [mV] | 94.03 [90.88–97.7] | 91.25 [87.12–95.74] | MW test: p = 0.1308 |
| AHP [mV] | −13.83 [−16–58- -10] | −13.76 [−15.77- - 11.23] | MW test: |
| Firing properties | |||
| Firing frequency [Hz] | 22 [16–26] | 20.5 [17.25–23.75] | MW test: |
| Early adaptation [%] | 451.7 [356–563.4] | 391.4 [347.1–543.1] | MW test: |
| Late adaptation [%] | 41.98 [24.16–61.51] | 42.37 [20.43–102.4] | MW test: |
Fig. 2CT100(I716F) overexpression does not affect morphology of granule cells in adult mice. a Examples of traced DG granule cells after biocytin filling. b Sholl analysis shows that neither CT100(I716F)-overexpression nor GluN1 knockout affects the number of intersections of granule cell dendrites. There is no difference in the total dendritic length of neurons in the different groups. c Examples of maximum intensity projections of z-stacks of GluN2Bfl/fl, GluN2Bfl/fl/CT100(I716F), GluN2B−/− and GluN2B−/−/CT100(I716F) granule cell dendrites. d + e + f Spine number is not affected after three weeks of CT100(I716F)-overexpression. Spine number is reduced in GluN1−/− (d), and GluN2B−/− (f) granule cells. g + i + j The distribution of stubby, thin and mushroom spines is slightly affected by CT100(I716F)-overexpression and/or NMDAR subunit knockout with fewer thin spines in GluN2Bfl/fl vs GluN2B−/−; GluN2B−/− vs GluN2B−/−/CT100(I716F) and an increase in stubby spines in GluN2A−/− vs GluN2A−/−/CT100(I716F); GluN2Bfl/fl vs GluN2Bfl/fl/CT100(I716F); GluN2Bfl/fl vs GluN2B−/−. Bar graphs show median ± IQR. * = p < 0.05, ** = p < 0.01, *** = p < 0.001; morph. = morphology
Morphology of CT100(I716F)-overexpressing DG granule cells
| GluN1fl/fl | |||||
| Spine numbers | Control ( | CT100(I716F) ( | GluN1−/− ( | GluN1−/− + CT100(I716F) ( | |
| 1.7 [1.45–1.97] | 1.96 [1.69–2.27] | 1.46 [1.16–1.72] | 1.51 [1.23–1.98] | Kruskal-Wallis: | |
| Total dendritic length [μm] | Control ( | CT100(I716F) (n = 27) | GluN1−/− ( | GluN1−/− + CT100(I716F) ( | |
| 2106 [1843–2325] | 2155 [2018–2533] | 2090 [1782–2418] | 2019 [1495–2343] | Kruskal-Wallis: | |
| GluN2Afl/fl | |||||
| Spine numbers | Control (n = 11) | CT100(I716F) (n = 17) | GluN2A−/−(n = 26) | GluN2A−/− + CT100(I716F) (n = 21) | |
| 1.81 [1.56–1.09] | 2.97 [1.84–2.25] | 1.65 [1.42–1.95] | 1.67 [1.46–1.96] | Kruskal-Wallis: | |
| Total dendritic length [μm] | Control (n = 16) | CT100(I716F) ( | GluN2A−/−(n = 17) | GluN2A−/− + CT100(I716F) ( | |
| 2162 [1657–2391] | 1889 [1577–2155] | 1862 [1528–2254] | 2046 [1885–2189] | Kruskal-Wallis: | |
| GluN2Bfl/fl | |||||
| Spine numbers | Control ( | CT100(I716F) ( | GluN2B−/−( | GluN2B−/− + CT100(I716F) ( | |
| 1.91 [1.8–2.2] | 1.88 [1.65–2.13] | 1.63 [1.29–2.06] | 1.55 [1.18–1.87] | Kruskal-Wallis: | |
| Total dendritic length [μm] | Control ( | CT100(I716F) (n = 26) | GluN2B−/−( | GluN2B−/− + CT100(I716F) (n = 16) | |
| 2248 [2013–2577] | 2223 [1882–2364] | 2336 [2064–2681] | 1882 [1668–2437] | Kruskal-Wallis: | |
Fig. 3The synaptic depression in DG granule cells of 5xFAD mice is NMDAR dependent. a Biocytin filled granule cells (red) in brain slices of WT and 5xFAD mice. Aβ plaques in 5xFAD mice were visualized using a 6E10-coupled A488 antibody. No plaques are seen in WT mice. b Example traces of mEPSC recordings from granule cells of WT and 5xFAD mice with NMDAR subunit deletions. c + d + e + f Cumulative probability of the IEIs is shifted towards larger IEIs in cells of 5xFAD mice, but not in cells of 5xFAD/GluN1−/−, 5xFAD/GluN2A−/− and 5xFAD/GluN2B−/− mice. g mEPSC frequency is reduced in granule cells of 5xFAD mice. There is no difference in mEPSC frequency in granule cells of GluN1−/− and 5xFAD/GluN1−/−, GluN2A−/− and 5xFAD/GluN2A−/− or GluN2B−/− and 5xFAD/GluN2B−/− mice. h The number of intersections is not changed in granule cells of 5xFAD mice. Number of intersections: Mean ± SEM. i Total dendritic length is not affected in granule cells of 5xFAD mice. j Examples of traced DG granule cells from one year old 5xFAD mice and WT littermates. k Spine number is decreased in granule cells of 5xFAD mice. There is a trend to a reduced spine numbers in 5xFAD/GluN1−/− cells and a significantly decreased spine number in 5xFAD/GluN2A−/− and 5xFAD/GluN2B−/− granule cells. l Example images of maximum intensity projections of z-stacks from the different conditions analyzed for the spine counting. m Quantification of spine morphology distribution indicates that the decrease in spine number in DG granule cells of 5xFAD mice is not due to a loss of a specific spine subtype except for the 5xFAD/GluN2A−/− cells, in which thin spines were reduced. Bar graphs show median ± IQR. * = p < 0.05, ** = p < 0.01, *** = p < 0.001; cum. = cumulative; morph. = morphology
Morphological analysis of the 5xFAD mouse model
| 6 m DG | |||
| Spine numbers | WT (n = 17) | 5xFAD (n = 20) | |
| 1.25 [0.93–1.56] | 1.36 [1–1.6] | MW-test: | |
| Total dendritic length | WT ( | 5xFAD (n = 20) | |
| 2707 [2131–3003] | 2425 [2134–2630] | MW-test: | |
| 1a DG | |||
| Spine numbers | WT (n = 27) | 5xFAD (n = 28) | |
| 1.54 [1.35–1.99] | 1.07 [0.73–1.46] | MW-test: p < 0.0001 | |
| GluN1−/− ( | 5xFAD/GluN1−/− ( | ||
| 1.62 [1.36–1.76] | 1.13 [0.96–2.02] | MW-test: | |
| GluN2A−/− (n = 12) | 5xFAD/GluN2A−/− ( | ||
| 1.7 [1.36–1.98] | 0.87 [0.64–1.04] | MW-test: | |
| GluN2B−/− (n = 28) | 5xFAD/GluN2B−/− (n = 13) | ||
| 1.73 [1.29–1.96] | 1.33 [1.02–1.6] | MW-test: | |
| Total dendritic length [μm] | WT (n = 22) | 5xFAD (n = 19) | |
| 2222 [1704–2660] | 1882 [1708–2480] | MW-test: | |
mEPSC recordings from the 5xFAD mouse model
| 6 m DG | |||
| WT (n = 24) | 5xFAD (n = 23) | ||
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.73 [0.44–0.91] | 0.66 [0.45–1.2] | MW-test: |
| Amplitude [pA] | 10.08 [9.15–10.52] | 10.64 [10.15–11.7] | MW-test: |
| 1a DG | |||
| WT (n = 27) | 5xFAD (n = 21) | ||
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.80 [0.61–1.07] | 0.61 [0.44–0.89] | MW-test: |
| Amplitude [pA] | 10.44 [8.54–11.95] | 11.2 [8.94–11.86] | MW-test: |
| GluN1−/− (n = 17) | 5xFAD/ GluN1−/− (n = 17) | ||
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.85 [0.68–1.26] | 1.02 [0.55–1.56] | MW-test: |
| Amplitude [pA] | 11.2 [10.24–12.84] | 10.43 [9.66–12.31] | MW-test: |
| GluN2A−/− (n = 23) | 5xFAD/ GluN2A−/− (n = 17) | ||
| Frequency [Hz] | 0.97 [0.61–1.13] | 1.01 [0.64–1.98] | MW-test: |
| Amplitude [pA] | 9.0 [8.38–9.93] | 9.45 [8.97–10.72] | MW-test: |
| GluN2B−/− (n = 21) | 5xFAD/ GluN2B−/− (n = 16) | ||
| Frequency [Hz] | 1.26 [0.89–1.61] | 1.31 [0.6–1.63] | MW-test: p > 0.999 |
| Amplitude [pA] | 11.63 [10.72–12.14] | 10.06 [9.88–12.92] | MW-test: |
Overview of values for spine morphology in 5xFAD mice
| Spine Morphology distribution [%] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Stubby | Thin | Mushroom | |
| 6 m 5xFAD DG | |||
| WT (17) | 0.31 [0.25–0.34] | 0.6 [0.56–0.64] | 0.1 [0.06–0.1] |
| 5xFAD (18) | 0.32 [0.27–0.35] | 0.58 [0.56–0.61] | 0.1 [0.09–0.11] |
| Mann-Whitney test | |||
| 1a 5xFAD DG | |||
| WT (29) | 0.26 [0.22–0.35] | 0.64 [0.6–0.7] | 0.08 [0.04–0.11] |
| 5xFAD (28) | 0.32 [0.23–0.38] | 0.59 [0.23–0.38] | 0.09 [0.06–0.16] |
| Mann-Whitney test | |||
| GluN1−/− (7) | 0.32 [0.27–0.39] | 0.56 [0.45–0.62] | 0.12 [0.12–0.16] |
| 5xFAD/GluN21−/− (12) | 0.29 [0.25–0.31] | 0.57 [0.47–0.63] | 0.14 [0.12–0.21] |
| Mann-Whitney test | |||
| GluN2A−/− (12) | 0.31 [0.24–0.36] | 0.58 [0.47–0.64] | 0.13 [0.09–0.17] |
| 5xFAD/GluN2A−/− (10) | 0.39 [0.32–0.5] | 0.39 [0.29–0.46] | 0.19 [0.14–0.26] |
| Mann-Whitney test | |||
| GluN2B−/− (15) | 0.35 [0.27–0.4] | 0.53 [0.45–0.62] | 0.1 [0.08–0.14] |
| 5xFAD/GluN2B−/− (11) | 0.42 [0.34–0.52] | 0.47 [0.37–0.54] | 0.13 [0.1–0.16] |
| Mann-Whitney test | |||
Fig. 4The amplitude of synaptic and extrasynaptic NMDAR-mediated currents is reduced in 5xFAD mice. a Example traces of NMDAR- and AMPAR-mediated currents recorded at holding potential of − 70 mV and + 40 mV, respectively, in DG granule cells of WT and 5xFAD mice. b The NMDAR/AMPAR (N/A) ratio is significantly reduced in DG granule cells of 5xFAD mice. c Example traces of NMDAR-mediated currents recorded at -30 mV. d The time constant of decay currents is not different between WT and 5xFAD cells. e Example traces of extrasynaptic NMDAR-mediated currents evoked by ultrafast-application of glutamate onto nucleated patches. f The peak amplitude of NMDAR-mediated currents is significantly reduced in granule cells of 5xFAD mice. g Example traces of normalized extrasynaptic NMDAR-mediated currents. h There is no difference in the deactivation time constant between DG granule cells of WT and 5xFAD mice. Bar graphs show median ± IQR. * = p < 0.05, ** = p < 0.01, *** = p < 0.001, ampl. = amplitude, deact. = deactivation