| Literature DB >> 32138769 |
Hadir Mahmoud1,2, Newton Martin1, Michael E Hildebrand3,4,5.
Abstract
NMDA receptors are heteromeric complexes that contribute to excitatory synaptic transmission and plasticity. The presence of specific variants of GluN2 subunits in these complexes enables diversity in NMDA receptor function and regulation. At brain synapses, there is a switch from slow GluN2B-mediated NMDA receptors to faster GluN2A-dominated NMDA receptors as well as an increase in the ratio of AMPA to NMDA receptors during early postnatal development. This glutamate receptor switch is observed across brain regions and is critical for synaptic maturation, circuit development, and associative learning. However, whether a similar receptor subunit switch occurs within pain processing neurons in the developing spinal cord remains untested. To investigate this, we performed whole-cell patch clamp recordings of excitatory synaptic responses from lamina II dorsal horn neurons of one to three week-old rats. We found that GluN2B and GluN2A both prominently contribute to NMDA receptor responses at neonatal lamina II synapses, with a small contribution from GluN2D as well. Surprisingly, we found that this molecular identity of NMDA receptor responses as well as the relative contribution of AMPA receptors versus NMDA receptors did not change at lamina II synapses across early postnatal development (P7 to P21). The lack of a developmental switch and persistence of slow-decaying GluN2B- and GluN2D-mediated synaptic responses throughout neuronal maturation in the dorsal horn has implications for understanding both the regulation of synaptic glutamatergic receptors as well as spinal mechanisms of pain processing.Entities:
Keywords: AMPA receptor; Development; Dorsal horn; GluN2A; GluN2B; GluN2D; Lamina II; NMDA receptor; Spinal cord; Synapse
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32138769 PMCID: PMC7057509 DOI: 10.1186/s13041-020-00566-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Brain ISSN: 1756-6606 Impact factor: 4.041
Fig. 1The biophysical and pharmacological properties of AMPAR- and NMDAR-mediated synaptic responses in lamina II neurons do not change across early postnatal development. (A) Averaged mEPSC traces of lamina II neurons (n = 62) at both − 60 mV (gold) and + 60 mV (black) from early postnatal (P7-P21) male rats. (B) Ratio of mEPSC peak amplitude at − 60 mV versus peak amplitude at + 60 mV (at 20 ms from onset) from lamina II neurons of postnatal rats aged P7 to P11 (black, n = 22 neurons), P12 to P16 (teal, n = 19 neurons), and P17 to P21 (aqua, n = 21 neurons) (C) Averaged mEPSC traces at + 60 mV for rats and neurons in the same postnatal age bins described in B. (D) Charge transfer through the NMDAR component of mEPSCs at + 60 mV (from 20 to 500 ms). (E) The exponential decay constants measured from mEPSCs at + 60 mV. (F) Averaged mEPSCs at + 60 mV before (black) and after (red) application of the GluN2B antagonist, 1 uM Ro25–6981 (n = 13). Inset, Ro25–6981-sensitive NMDAR mEPSC difference current. (G) Averaged mEPSCs at + 60 mV before (black) and after (green) application of the GluN2A antagonist, 10 uM TCN-201 (n = 14). Inset, TCN-201-sensitive mEPSC difference current. (H) The percent reduction in NMDAR charge transfer by both 1 uM Ro25–6981 (red, left bars) and 10 uM TCN-201 (green, right bars) were not significantly different across the various developmental time points: P7-P11 (n = 4,5), P12-P16 (n = 5,5), P17–21 (n = 4,4). (I) Averaged NMDAR mEPSCs before (black) and after (blue) application of 10 uM DQP-1105 (n = 14). Inset, 10 uM DQP-1105-sensitive NMDAR mEPSC difference current. (J) Percent NMDAR charge transfer reduction produced by administration of 1 uM Ro25–6981 (red, n = 13), 10 uM TCN-201 (green, n = 14) or 10 uM DQP-1105 (blue, n = 14). Cells with a negative blockade reflect an antagonist-independent run-up in NMDAR charge transfer [12] during the course of recording. All traces are presented as mean (darker line) +/− standard error (lighter shaded area). Scale bar x axes = 100 ms, y axes = 5 pA