1 Medical Research Council, Anatomical Neuropharmacology Unit, University Department of Pharmacology, Mansfield Road, Oxford, UK and , 2 Division of Cerebral Structure, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Okazaki, CREST, Japan Science and Technology Corporation, Kawaguchi, Japan
Address correspondence to any of the authors. Emails: dalezios{at}med.uoc.gr, rlujan{at}med-ab.uclm.es, david.roberts{at}pharm.ox.ac.uk, shigemot{at}nips.ac.jp, peter.somogyi{at}pharm.ox.ac.uk.
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Abstract |
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Introduction |
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Immunocytochemical studies have demonstrated the presence of mGluR7a or mGluR7b in both type I or asymmetrical, mostly glutamatergic, synapses (Bradley et al., 1996; Shigemoto et al., 1996
, 1997
), and in type II or symmetrical, mostly GABAergic, synapses (Shigemoto et al., 1997
). Furthermore, in the islands of Calleja the presence of mGluR7a was directly shown in glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) immunopositive synaptic junctions by electron microscopic double immuno-labelling (Kinoshita et al., 1998
). The presence of mGluR7a in synapses at the presynaptic active zone of glutamatergic and GABAergic terminals indicates that it could act as an auto-receptor as well as a heteroreceptor regulating GABA release. Indeed, the selective group III receptor agonist, L-AP4, inhibits the release of GABA from cultured neurons (Schaffhauser et al., 1998
; Lafon-Cazal et al., 1999
), and in vivo activation of group III receptors by iontophoretically applied agonists can lead to disinhibition of responses evoked by natural stimulation in the somatosensory cortex (Wan and Cahusac, 1995
). Furthermore, electrophysiological experiments in the thalamus (Salt and Eaton, 1995
), hippocampus (Kogo et al., 1999
; Semyanov and Kullmann, 2000
), hypothalamus (van den Pol et al., 1998
) and entorhinal cortex (Woodhall et al., 2001
) show that presynaptic group III mGluRs depress GABAA receptor-mediated post-synaptic responses. In line with the physiological studies, some of the isocortical GABAergic interneurons were found to express mRNA for mGluR7 (Cauli et al., 2000
). However, there is no information about the presence of presynaptic mGluR7a on isocortical GABAergic axon terminals; therefore, we carried out an immunocytochemical analysis testing several synapse populations for the presence of mGluR7a.
There are multiple sources of glutamatergic innervation of neurons in the isocortex, and all tested pathways innervate both principal cells and several distinct types of cortical GABAergic cell. The latter show diversity in their molecular composition and input/output relationships supporting distinct roles in the cortical network (Somogyi et al., 1998). Therefore, potential presynaptic receptors influencing GABA release might have selective influence, depending not only on the cells that express them, but also on the postsynaptic targets of these cells. In the hippocampus, the main glutamatergic innervation of one type of GABAergic neuron, the mGluR1
/somatostatin-expressing interneuron, comes from local pyramidal cells (Blasco-Ibanez and Freund, 1995
). Pyramidal cell axons make synapses with spines of other pyramidal cells and several distinct types of interneuron but, when they form synaptic junctions with an mGluR1
-expressing cell, the synaptic terminal contains a much higher level of mGluR7a than synaptic terminals along the same axon innervating other cell types (Shigemoto et al., 1996
). The role of mGluR7a in synaptic transmission is not well understood, although it has been proposed that it may contribute to long-term depression of synaptic transmission in hippocampal interneurons (Laezza et al., 1999
). The mGluR1
/somatostatin-expressing cell occupies a specific place in the circuitry of the hippocampal formation because its GABAergic output is co-aligned with glutamatergic innervation of the distal dendrites of pyramidal cells from the entorhinal cortex (Maccaferri et al., 2000
).
At least some somatostatin-expressing cells in the isocortex show functional properties similar to the hippocampal neurons (Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1996; Reyes et al., 1998
; Kaiser et al., 2001
), but their place in the isocortical neuronal circuit remains undefined. The receptor subtype, mGluR1
, is also expressed in somatostatin immunopositive neurons throughout the cerebral cortex (Baude et al., 1993
; Stinehelfer et al., 2000
). However, it is not known whether the mGluR1
-expressing neurons of the neocortex are innervated by terminals showing a selective enrichment in presynaptic mGluR7a. In preliminary light microscopic experiments, we noticed that in addition to a homogeneous neuropil labelling, more strongly mGluR7a immunoreactive dots outlined the somata and dendrites of some neurons in the isocortex resembling the hippocampal distribution. The aim of the present study was to establish if these dots corresponded to nerve terminals and to characterize the cells outlined by mGluR7a immunoreactivity. We investigated the presence of mGluR7a in different populations of non-GABAergic and GABAergic terminals. The results demonstrate a strong expression of presynaptic mGluR7a in both GABAergic and presumed glutamatergic terminals targeting mGluR1
/somatostatin-expressing, GABAergic interneurons. Some preliminary results have been published in abstract form (Dalezios et al., 2001
).
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Materials and Methods |
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Twelve adult (200250 g) and two 1517 days old male Wistar rats were deeply anaesthetized with Sagatal (pentobarbitone sodium, 60 mg/ml i.p.) and perfused transcardially first with 0.9% saline for 1 min. This was followed for ~15 min by freshly prepared fixative containing 4% paraformaldehyde, 0.05% glutaraldehyde and 15% (v/v) saturated picric acid made up in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (PB; pH 7.4). After perfusion, the brains were removed from the skull and blocks of tissue were dissected and washed in 0.1 M PB for several hours. For electron microscopic immunocytochemistry, the blocks were incubated for cryoprotection in 10%, followed by 20% sucrose made up in PB at 4°C overnight. To increase the penetration of the reagents, the blocks were quickly frozen using liquid nitrogen and thawed in PB. The blocks were sectioned at 70 mm thickness on a vibratome. For light microscopy, the cryoprotection and freeze-thawing steps were omitted and 60 mm thick sections were cut.
Antibodies
Polyclonal antibodies were raised to mGluR7a in a rabbit to bacterial fusion protein containing amino acid residues 874915 of rat mGluR7a (Shigemoto et al., 1996). Immunoblot results and tests in heterologous expression systems indicated that the antibodies do not react with other mGluRs or proteins. No immunolabelling was obtained in the brain of mice deficient in mGluR7 protein (Sansig et al., 2001
). Affinity purified antibodies were used at a final protein concentration of 1 µg/ml.
Human antibodies to GAD, purified from the plasma of a patient suffering from Stiff-man syndrome (Oe et al., 1996), were a gift from Dr K. Tanaka (Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Niigata University, Japan). They were used at 1 µg/ml protein concentration, and revealed immunolabelling in the isocortex, hippocampus and cerebellum identical to that published previously using different antibodies to GAD (Ribak, 1978
; Mugnaini and Oertel, 1985
).
Mouse monoclonal antibodies to synthetic porcine vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) were from two sources, which appear to derive from the same source originally raised by Dr J. Porter (University of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas). An early aliquot derived from East Acres Biologicals (Southbridge, MA); a more recent aliquot from Biogenesis (Poole, UK; cat. no. 9535-0504). Both aliquots were diluted to 1:5000. For specificity, the manufacturer refers to the paper of Dey et al. (1988), which reported results using immunocytochemistry and radioimmunoassay. Cortical immunolabelling under our conditions was identical to that reported using other antibodies [e.g. (Bayraktar et al., 2000)].
Mouse monoclonal antibodies to parvalbumin (diluted 1:2000) were from Sigma (Poole, UK; Product No. P-3171) and in immunoblots are reported to label the expected band at 12 kDa. A monoclonal antibody to somatostatin (code: SOMA8, ascites fluid, a gift from Dr A. Buchan, Department of Physiology, University of British Columbia, Canada), characterized by Vincent et al. (1985) as recognizing somatostatin and SOM-28, was diluted 1:500.
Polyclonal antibodies to mGluR1 were a generous gift from Dr M. Watanabe and were used at a dilution of 1:700. They were raised in a guinea pig to residues 9451127 of the mouse receptor sequence as described previously (Watanabe et al., 1998
; Tanaka et al., 2000
). The antibodies label a single protein band at 145 kDa in immunoblots of cerebellar membrane extracts. No membrane immunolabelling was obtained with this antibody in mGluR1-deficient mouse brain (Dr Francesco Ferraguti, MRC Laboratory, personal communication).
Immunocytochemistry for Light Microscopy
Floating sections were incubated in 20% normal goat serum (NGS) diluted in 50 mM Tris buffer (pH 7.4) containing 0.9% NaCl and 0.1% Triton X-100 (TBST) for 1 h. The sections were then incubated in a solution of primary antibodies diluted in TBST containing 1% NGS overnight at 4°C. After washes in TBST, the sections were incubated overnight at 4°C in a solution containing donkey anti-mouse 7-amino-4-methylcoumarin-3-acetic acid (AMCA, diluted 1:100; Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA), anti-rabbit Alexa®-488 (diluted 1:1000; Molecular Probes, Leiden, The Netherlands) and donkey anti-guinea-pig Cy-3® (diluted 1:400; Jackson ImmunoResearch). After several washes in buffer the sections were mounted on slides, covered with Vectashield (Vector Labs, Burlingame, CA) under a coverslip. Immunofluorescence was studied using a Leica dichromatic mirror system and the A4 filter block [excitation filter, BP 360/40 nm, reflection short pass filter (RKP) 400 nm, suppression filter BP 470/40 nm] for visualizing AMCA, the L5 block (excitation filter, BP 480/40 nm, RKP 505 nm, suppression filter BP 527/30 nm) for recording Alexa®-488 fluorescence and the Y3 block (excitation filter, BP 545/30 nm, RKP 565 nm, suppression filter BP 610/75 nm) for recording Cy3 fluorescence. Cells were recorded on a CCD camera, analysed and displayed using the Openlab software (Improvision, Coventry, UK). Brightness and contrast were adjusted for the whole frame; no part of a frame was enhanced or modified in any way.
Immunocytochemistry for Electron Microscopy
Floating sections were first incubated for 1 h in 20% NGS diluted in 0.9% NaCl buffered with 50 mM Tris (pH 7.4, TBS). Sections were then incubated in a solution of a primary antibody or in a mixture of up to three antibodies diluted in TBS containing 1% NGS, at least overnight or for several days. When a single primary antibody was used, it was visualized either by an immunoperoxidase method or by silver-intensified immunogold reaction. When more than one primary antibody was used, one of them was visualized by immunoperoxidase reaction and the second, and in one combination also the third, by silver-intensified immunogold reaction. The two different epitopes visualized by silver-intensified immunogold reaction were on different types of cells; therefore, the signals could be clearly identified. After primary antibody incubation, the sections were incubated overnight at 4°C in one, or in a mixture, of the following antibodies: goat anti-rabbit and/or anti-guinea pig IgG (Fab fragment, diluted 1:100) coupled to 1.4 nm gold (Nanoprobes Inc., Stony Brook, NY) and made up in TBS containing 1% NGS, and biotinylated goat anti-mouse, or goat anti-rabbit, or goat anti-human secondary antibodies (diluted 1:50, Vector Labs). After several washes in TBS, when required, the sections were washed in double-distilled water, followed by silver enhancement of the gold particles with an HQ Silver kit (Nanoprobes) for 812 min. Subsequently, the sections were incubated in avidinbiotinylated horseradish peroxidase complex (ABC, diluted 1:100, Vector Labs) in TBS overnight at 4°C and washed in Tris buffer (TB, pH 7.4). Peroxidase was visualized with DAB (0.5 mg/ml) using 0.01% H2O2 as substrate for 510 min. After washes in TB and PB, the sections were treated with 2% OsO4 in PB for 3050 min, washed in PB and double-distilled water and contrasted in freshly prepared 1% uranyl-acetate for 4050 min. They were then dehydrated in a series of ethanol and propylene oxide and embedded flat in epoxy resin (Durcupan ACM, Fluka, Sigma-Aldrich, Gillingham, UK) on slides. After the polymerization of the resin, selected small pieces of the sections from the somatosensory cortex were re-embedded in Durcupan blocks for sectioning. Serial 7080 nm thick sections were collected on pioloform-coated copper grids. Electron microscopic sections from immunoperoxidase material were not lead contrasted; those containing only silver-intensified immunogold labelling were contrasted with lead citrate. Unless otherwise stated, electron microscopic samples were obtained from two different rat brains and two blocks of each animal were cut for electron microscopy.
Controls
To test method specificity in the procedures for light or electron microscopy, the primary antibody was omitted or replaced with 1% (v/v) normal serum of the species of the primary antibody. No selective labelling was observed. When double or triple labelling was used, some sections were always incubated with only one primary antibody and the full complement of secondary antibodies to test for any cross-reactivity of secondary antibodies. Other sections were incubated with two or three primary antibodies and one secondary antibody, followed by the full sequence of signal detection. No cross-labelling was detected that would influence the results. Specifically, using two or three primary antibodies, and both gold-labelled or biotinylated second antibodies, followed by the ABC complex and peroxidase reaction but no silver intensification, resulted only in amorphous horseradish peroxidase (HRP) end product and no metal particles were detected. Using the same sequence, but only silver intensification, without HRP reaction, produced silver granules, but no amorphous HRP end product. In other control experiments, silver-intensified gold reaction was used to detect a single primary antibody, but the full ABC sequence was also applied using a biotinylated second antibody that was raised to IgG from a species different from that of the applied primary antibody, followed by DAB reaction. Under these conditions, only infrequent small patches of HRP end product were detected, and the patches were not associated selectively with any particular cellular profile. In addition, the selective location of the signals in structures labelled only with one or the other of the signalling products within the same section, as well as having side by side double-labelled structures, showed that our procedures did not produce false-positive double-labelling results.
Statistical Analysis
Statistical differences between the frequencies of synaptic terminals labelled with a specific antibody were evaluated using the 2 test or Fishers exact test when appropriate (Zar, 1999
).
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Results |
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Our main interest was in the innervation of GABAergic neurons; therefore we focused the electron microscopic analysis on layers 24, where they have been extensively recorded and characterized (Kubota et al., 1994; Cauli et al., 1997
; Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1997
; Reyes et al., 1998
; Gupta et al., 2000
; Kaiser et al., 2001
; Rozov et al., 2001
; Sansig et al., 2001
; Szabadics et al., 2001
; Tamas et al., 2002
). Based on our light microscopic results, the pattern of receptor expression is not expected to be very different in the infragranular layers. In the isocortex, the dendrites of most GABAergic interneurons have few spines and receive the vast majority of their synaptic input on dendritic shafts. Therefore the dendritic shafts of interneurons are usually densely innervated by synaptic boutons making either type I or type II synapses (Szentagothai, 1975
; Ribak, 1978
; Somogyi et al., 1983
; Kharazia et al., 1996
). In contrast, the dendrites of pyramidal and spiny stellate cells emit numerous spines, which are the sites of termination for most of their synaptic inputs. The dendritic shafts of pyramidal cells receive mostly type II synaptic input (Feldman, 1984
), but type I synapses also occur at low density (White and Hersch, 1981
; Freund et al., 1985
). It is, therefore, likely that dendritic shafts densely innervated mostly by type I synapses belong to GABAergic interneurons. Dendritic shafts receiving few synapses and examined only in a short segment could belong to pyramidal, spiny stellate or GABAergic cells.
In this study, at least 3 and up to 32 serial electron microscopic sections of each dendritic or axonal profile were assessed in order to evaluate the immunoreactivity for a given antibody. A profile was considered immunopositive if two independent experienced researchers agreed on this by inspecting images of serial sections. Weakly labelled profiles for receptors, e.g. labelled by one or two gold particles on the plasma membrane in one section, were considered immunopositive if this amount of labelling persisted in at least half, and not less than two, of the serial sections. Variability of labelling can arise as a result of variation in protein expression, the differential access of proteins to the antibodies depending on subcellular location, or on the location of the profile in the thick immunoreacted section. In an attempt to obtain biological information, we compared nearby profiles of different origin assuming that most of the difference would arise from differential protein expression. Nevertheless, variability arising from the differences in access to the antibody cannot be completely eliminated in the pre-embedding method. The post-embedding method, introduced earlier for receptor localization (Baude et al., 1993), could not be employed in the present study, because only a very weak signal has been obtained with the antibody to mGluR7a in our attempts so far.
We noticed that mGluR7a immunopositive terminals made either type I or type II synapses, as reported earlier in the hippocampus (Shigemoto et al., 1997). Most type II synapses in the isocortex are GABAergic. To test whether glutamatergic (type I) and GABAergic terminals express mGluR7a in the isocortex, we searched serial electron microscopic sections from the somatosensory cortex, which were double labelled for mGluR7a and GAD. One molecule was localized by silver-intensified immunogold and the other by immunoperoxidase reaction in the same section, and both molecules were visualized by both methods. Immunoreactivity for mGluR7a was present in many presynaptic terminals innervating dendritic spines presumably originating from pyramidal cells (Fig. 1A,B
). The degree of presynaptic labelling was highly variable from spine to spine (Fig. 1A
) as seen in the immunogold reaction; many synapses were immunonegative. The gold/silver particles showing mGluR7a immunoreactivity were mostly confined to the pre-synaptic active zone in the terminal (Fig. 1A
). Occasionally, single particles were present in the presynaptic terminals over the synaptic vesicles. These may represent non-specific background labelling or receptors in intraterminal membranes; due to the scarcity of particles we were unable to distinguish between these possibilities. Some postsynaptic profiles, mostly dendrites and somata, also contained a low density of particles within the profile, which may represent receptors in internal membrane, but this could not be differentiated from background labelling. Particles were very rarely associated with dendritic and somatic plasma membranes or glial membranes. These particles may represent receptor labelling, but due to the inconsistency of the signal we could not clarify this. The immunoperoxidase reaction product for mGluR7a was mainly found in the presynaptic active zone, from where it diffused into the terminal, labelling the synaptic vesicles to a variable degree (Fig. 1BD
).
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A total of 58 dendritic profiles were analysed. Twenty-eight dendritic profiles (48%) were found to receive at least one double-labelled GABAergic axon terminal making a type II synapse as well as type I synapses from terminals labelled only for mGluR7a. Another 23 dendritic profiles (40%) received at least one type II synapse from a double-labelled terminal and unlabelled type I synapses. Only seven (12%) of the dendritic profiles which received type I synapses from terminals positive for mGluR7a received GABAergic synapses that were not labelled for mGluR7a. Thus, 88% of mGluR7a-decorated dendritic profiles, selected according to the criteria described above, received GABAergic synapses, which expressed mGluR7a. These data suggest that the synaptic release sites of one or more subpopulations of GABAergic interneuron innervating other interneurons are enriched in mGluR7a. Among the most probable candidates for the presynaptic cells are the VIP/ calretinin-expressing neurons (Acsady et al., 1996; Meskenaite, 1997
; Cauli et al., 2000
). Therefore, we used double-labelling immunocytochemistry for VIP and mGluR7a to characterize the GABAergic neurons expressing mGluR7a at their presynaptic active zone.
VIP Immunopositive Axon Terminals Express mGluR7a
Dendritic profiles receiving synapses from at least one axon terminal showing VIP (immunoperoxidase) and one terminal showing mGluR7a (gold/silver precipitate) immunoreactivity were recorded (n = 47, Fig. 3). The targeted selection criterion was necessary to sample sufficient number of terminals; it also resulted in a lack of information about VIP positive terminals targeting other cells. Axon terminals (peroxidase product) immunopositive for VIP made type II synapses on mGluR7a-decorated dendrites, and were often immunopositive for mGluR7a in their presynaptic active zone. The number and density of gold/silver particles in the VIP positive synaptic terminals did not appear to differ from those of the type I synapses on the same dendrites, indicating that the amount of mGluR7a is similar in glutamatergic and VIP positive (GABAergic) synapses innervating these dendrites. Forty (85%) of the dendrites received at least one double-labelled terminal as well as type I synapses immunopositive for mGluR7a. Six dendritic profiles (12.8%) received one or two double-labelled terminals, but no other terminals positive for mGluR7a. Only one dendritic profile (2.2%) received a VIP positive terminal that was not labelled for mGluR7a, although the same dendrite was the synaptic target of another mGluR7a positive bouton. Thus, virtually all the VIP positive axon terminals, which give synapses to interneuron dendrites decorated by mGluR7a-expressing terminals, also express mGluR7a. In this sample, we did not encounter VIP positive axon terminals targeting VIP positive dendrites. Next, we explored the identity of interneurons innervated by mGluR7a-enriched terminals.
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In hippocampus, axon terminals expressing mGluR7a surround the dendrites of mGluR1-expressing GABAergic neurons (Shigemoto et al., 1996
), many of which also express somatostatin (Baude et al., 1993
; Hampson et al., 1994
). The majority of isocortical mGluR1
-expressing GABAergic neurons also express somatostatin (Baude et al., 1993
; Stinehelfer et al., 2000
). However, it has not been reported whether these neurons are the targets of synaptic terminals enriched in mGluR7a. Triple immunofluorescence experiments were carried out with antibodies specific for somatostatin, mGluR1
and mGluR7a. As expected, somatostatin positive neurons both in young and in adult rats were densely labelled for mGluR1
and received terminals strongly enriched in mGluR7a in cortical layers 26 (Fig. 4
). As reported in the hippocampus (Shigemoto et al., 1996
), the vast majority of mGluR1
immunopositive cells and dendrites were decorated by mGluR7a labelling, and the majority of strongly mGluR1
positive dendrites could be traced to somatostatin-expressing cells. Therefore, it is very likely that many of the mGluR7a/GAD positive terminals that we found to innervate interneuron dendrites, innervated somatostatin/mGluR1
-expressing GABAergic neurons. We have shown above that many isocortical VIP positive terminals express mGluR7a and innervate interneuron dendrites. Therefore, we tested whether VIP positive terminals target mGluR1
-expressing dendrites.
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Electron microscopic, triple-labelling immunocytochemistry was applied to characterize the targets of the mGluR7a-enriched VIP positive axon terminals. Immunoperoxidase labelling was used for detecting VIP immunoreactivity and silver-intensified immunogold reaction for visualizing mGluR7a and mGluR1 immunoreactivities. Although the detection signal of silver/gold particles is the same for the two mGluRs, their differential subcellular position, in conjunction with appropriate control experiments using each antibody alone or in combination with labelling for VIP, makes it possible to identify the location of each receptor. Along plasma membranes, immunolabelling for mGluR1
was found only at the cytoplasmic face of dendritic and somatic membranes, and at synapses it was enriched in a perisynaptic position at the edge of the postsynaptic density (Baude et al., 1993
; Lujan et al., 1996
, 1997
). No presynaptic labelling was detected in sections reacted only for mGluR1
. In contrast, immunolabelling for mGluR7a was found in the presynaptic active zone (Fig. 5
). Therefore, using serial sections, the vast majority of immunoparticles could be allocated to pre-(mGluR7a) or postsynaptic (mGluR1
) elements (Fig. 5
). When the plasma membranes are cut tangentially, it is not possible to establish on which of the two apposed membranes the particles are located, but from other segments of the membrane, as well as from images obtained following tilting the sections, the majority of profiles can easily be characterized for the location of labelling.
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Parvalbumin Immunopositive Neurons and mGluR7a Immunoreactivity
Several classes of cortical GABAergic neuron express parvalbumin. The two major populations are the basket cells innervating the soma and proximal dendrites (Hendry et al., 1989; Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1993
) and axo-axonic cells innervating pyramidal axon initial segments (De Felipe et al., 1989
; Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1998
). Because parvalbumin-expressing cortical neurons also innervate other interneurons, we tested whether these terminals express mGluR7a. Very few parvalbumin immunopositive axon terminals were found to give synapses to dendritic shaft profiles innervated by mGluR7a positive terminals. This was not a result of poor immunoreactivity for parvalbumin, because immunopositive terminals were of the expected frequency on various parts of pyramidal cells and other interneurons, which themselves were strongly labelled for parvalbumin. No mGluR7a immunoreactivity was found in parvalbumin positive terminals innervating pyramidal cell somata or other parvalbumin positive cells. In a sample of 15 parvalbumin positive boutons encountered as making synapses on mGluR7a-decorated dendrites, none was labelled for mGluR7a (Fig. 6
).
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Quantitative Distribution of GABAergic and mGluR7a-expressing Boutons on Dendritic Profiles
The relative frequency of boutons giving synapses to dendrites receiving synapses from at least one putative GABAergic and one mGluR7a labelled terminal is shown in Figure 7. These selection criteria increased the relative proportion of GABAergic terminals in the sample; therefore, their frequency is not representative of the proportion of GABAergic input to these postsynaptic neurons. Because of the overall small proportion of GABAergic boutons on interneuron dendrites, it would have been impossible to obtain a representative sample of GABAergic boutons from random samples of mGluR7a-labelled terminals. In our sample, the GABAergic, mGluR7a-expressing terminals constitute a considerable proportion (
38%) of all boutons. The proportion of mGluR7a-labelled terminals, which made type I synapses (mostly glutamatergic), is slightly more than that of the double-labelled terminals (
48%). The ratio of double-labelled GABAergic terminals to putative glutamatergic terminals is 0.93 ± 0.17 (mean ± SEM, range 0.661.25). Accordingly, in our sample of dendritic profiles, the mean probability for an mGluR7a-expressing terminal to be GABAergic is 0.48 (i.e. 0.93/1.93).
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Discussion |
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Target Cells of Terminals Enriched in mGluR7a
Variability of immunolabelling between nerve terminals in pre-embedding experiments can be the result of differential receptor expression or the variable access of the antibodies to the protein in the incubated sections. The high level of mGluR7a expression around some interneuron dendrites, together with the high probability of a bouton being labelled on these dendrites, in comparison to boutons on other targets in the surrounding neuropil in both light and electron microscopic preparations, show that comparisons can be made between populations of neighbouring synaptic junctions, particularly with the help of serial sections. The use of serial sections reduced the stochastic noise arising from differences in antigen exposure. Therefore, differences in the frequency of immuno-labelling of terminals targeting different postsynaptic elements, e.g. dendritic shafts or spines, most likely reflect a true variability in receptor expression.
The level of presynaptic mGluR7a appeared to be highly variable in the presynaptic active zones. Those terminals innervating dendritic spines, most of which originate from pyramidal cells, were either immunonegative or expressed differing levels of immunoreactivity, up to a level as high as some terminals innervating mGluR7a-decorated interneuron dendritic shafts. This variability of presynaptic receptor in spine synapses predicts functional heterogeneity. A subpopulation of terminals innervating dendritic shafts contained a very high level of presynaptic receptor. As shown by our immunofluorescence results, the target cells were the somatostatin-expressing GABAergic neurons, as in the hippocampus. On these cells, the majority of terminals were enriched in mGluR7a; therefore, it is likely that the postsynaptic cell influences presynaptic receptor levels. It is known from immunocytochemical (Baude et al., 1993; Stinehelfer et al., 2000
) and in situ hybridization experiments (Kerner et al., 1997
) that the majority (7080%) of isocortical interneurons strongly expressing mGluR1
contain somatostatin, and most of the somatostatin positive neurons express mGluR1
. Isocortical VIP positive interneurons also express mGluR1
mRNA (Cauli et al., 2000
) and immuno-fluorescence studies from our laboratory show that hippocampal VIP neurons are weakly positive for mGluR1
(Ferraguti et al., 2001
). In this study, we could not find mGluR7a-expressing terminals targeting VIP/mGluR1
positive dendritic profiles, but this is not surprising in view of the weak dendritic labelling for VIP in our material. Other types of interneurons rarely express mGluR1
(Cauli et al., 2000
). Taking into account these results, it appears that the dendrites innervated by highly mGluR7a-enriched terminals mainly originate from somatostatin positive interneurons.
Somatostatin-expressing neurons are probably heterogeneous in the isocortex; therefore, further studies are required to test whether they all receive mGluR7a-enriched input. Somatostatin-expressing neurons have been classified mainly as regular spiking, and only rarely as burst firing cells (Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1996; Cauli et al., 1997
, 2000
). Previous reports show that somatostatin neurons target mostly thin and medium size dendrites of pyramidal cells (Hendry et al., 1989
; Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1997
).
Sources of Terminals Expressing mGluR7a
The vast majority of terminals immunopositive for mGluR7a made type I synapses and probably originated from cortical pyramidal cells. Indeed, local pyramidal cells are a main source of glutamatergic input to somatostatin-expressing cells (Reyes et al., 1998; Rozov et al., 2001
). One source of type II synapses is from VIP positive terminals, probably of local origin. All of the cortical VIP neurons are GABAergic (Kubota et al., 1994
; Bayraktar et al., 1997
; Cauli et al., 1997
). In the present study, we show that most of the terminals originating from these neurons express mGluR7a when they give synapses to mGluR7a-decorated dendrites, which most likely originate from somatostatin/mGluR1
-expressing interneurons. Interneurons expressing VIP also innervate each other and pyramidal cells, but it remains to be established if the same presynaptic cell innervates several classes of cell, or if individual VIP cells are specialized to target distinct postsynaptic cell types as in the hippocampus (see below). With our experimental design it was not possible to distinguish whether the mGluR7a positive VIP terminals belong to one or more of the various electro-physiologically or neurochemically defined subpopulations of VIP-expressing neurons. Isocortical VIP neurons have been described as burst/regular or irregular spiking nonpyramidal cells (Cauli et al., 1997
; Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1997
). If a VIP/mGluR7a-expressing cell innervates several postsynaptic cell types, it will be interesting to test if the level of presynaptic mGluR7a is expressed in a target cell specific manner, as in the case of pyramidal cell axons (Shigemoto et al., 1996
). In addition to presynaptic mGluR7a, the synaptic input to somatostatin-expressing cells is also under the control of presynaptic GABAB receptors, which may be activated by the dendritic release of GABA (Zilberter et al., 1999
; Zilberter, 2000
).
The Control of GABA Release by mGluRs
Recent studies have shown that the release of GABA is under the inhibitory control of group II mGluRs in cell cultures (Schaffhauser et al., 1998; Zhao et al., 2001
), the cerebellum (Mitchell and Silver, 2000
) and the hippocampus (Poncer et al., 2000
). Group III mGluRs also depress GABA release in the thalamus (Salt and Eaton, 1995
), the cerebellum (Mitchell and Silver, 2000
), the substantia nigra pars reticulata (Wittmann et al., 2001
), the hypothalamus (van den Pol et al., 1998
), the entorhinal cortex (Woodhall et al., 2001
) and the hippocampus (Kogo et al., 1999
; Semyanov and Kullmann, 2000
). Previous studies have shown that mGluR7a is expressed by GABAergic presynaptic terminals in the islands of Calleja (Kinoshita et al., 1998
); presynaptic terminals making type II synapses were also immunopositive in the hippocampus (Shigemoto et al., 1997
) and globus pallidus (Kosinski et al., 1999
). Recent studies indicate that glutamate, originating either from neighbouring glutamatergic synapses (Rusakov et al., 1999
; Mitchell and Silver, 2000
; Semyanov and Kullmann, 2000
), or released by the postsynaptic dendrite (Morishita et al., 1998
; Morishita and Alger, 1999
; Zilberter, 2000
), can reach mGluRs on GABAergic axons and terminals and cause depression of neurotransmission. However, glutamate has a very low efficacy on mGluR7a in heterologous expression systems (Okamoto et al., 1994
; Wu et al., 1998
); if this also applies in situ, it would restrict receptor activation to exceptional circumstances when glutamate concentration reaches several hundred µM in the GABAergic synaptic cleft. Alternatively, as glutamate is unlikely to be released by the GABAergic terminal, mGluR7a may be activated by high concentration of glutamate released by the dendrite, or by nearby glial processes (Pasti et al., 2001
). Endogenous substances other than glutamate, e.g. l-serine-O-phosphate, a potent group III receptor agonist, may be also released from various neuronal or glial elements. The location of mGluR7a in the presynaptic active zone is unlikely to be related to the low efficacy of glutamate as agonist, because all group III mGluRs are preferentially located in the active zone (Shigemoto et al., 1997
), and another receptor, mGluR8a, on which glutamate has a much higher efficacy, is co-localized with mGluR7a in the piriform cortex (Wada et al., 1998
) and is also concentrated in isocortical GABAergic synapses (Dalezios et al., 2001
).
Comparison of Receptor-defined Circuits in the Isocortex and the Hippocampus
The vast majority of isocortical GAD-labelled terminals, which make synapses with dendritic profiles decorated by mGluR7a-expressing boutons, also express mGluR7a in their presynaptic active zone, as they do in the hippocampus (Somogyi et al., 1999; Dalezios et al., 2001
). As in the isocortex, GABAergic terminals expressing mGluR7a originate mainly from VIP positive neurons also in the hippocampus (Somogyi et al., 1999
; Dalezios et al., 2001
). Taken together, these comparisons show that isocortical GABAergic synaptic terminals targeting mGluR7a-decorated interneurons are homologous in their synaptic and molecular organization, and probably also in their function, to their counterparts in the CA1 area of the hippocampus.
In contrast to the isocortex, in the hippocampus we found that parvalbumin terminals, targeting dendritic profiles receiving mGluR7a-rich glutamatergic boutons, weakly express mGluR7a (Dalezios et al., 2001). In the isocortex, we rarely found parvalbumin terminals targeting interneuron dendrites and the few parvalbumin positive terminals identified were immunonegative for mGluR7a. This is in agreement with a recent study showing that fast spiking parvalbumin isocortical interneurons rarely express mRNA for group III mGluRs (Cauli et al., 2000
). Isocortical parvalbumin terminals target somata, proximal dendrites and axon initial segments of pyramidal cells (Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1998
) or they target, in a basket-like manner, VIP neurons (Staiger et al., 1997
). Moreover, a recent report on the somatosensory cortex of the rat (Gupta et al., 2000
) implies that large basket cells, possibly the parvalbumin-expressing variety, give synapses to Martinotti cells, known to express somatostatin (Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1996
). The distribution of isocortical GABAergic terminals expressing mGluR7a is partially consistent with these reports. The lower proportion of double-labelled terminals in the GAD positive population in comparison with the VIP positive one, is explained if some parvalbumin positive terminals, which do not express mGluR7a, account for the GAD positive/mGluR7a negative terminals. As in the hippocampus (Poncer et al., 2000
), presynaptic group II mGluRs are probably also involved in controlling GABA release, as IPSPs are depressed by firing in fast spiking non-accommodating neurons, possibly representing parvalbumin positive cells (Kawaguchi and Kubota, 1997
), through the activation of group II mGluRs (Zilberter, 2000
).
Possible Consequences of Presynaptic mGluR7a Enrichment
The role of presynaptic mGluR7a is not known. The activation of group III mGluRs by exogenously applied agonists depresses synaptic transmission through presynaptic mechanisms in the isocortex (Jin and Daw, 1998). Mice that develop in the absence of mGluR7 are susceptible to sensory stimulus evoked epileptic activity, and a slightly increased excitability in hippocampal slices (Sansig et al., 2001
). These observations suggest a role for mGluR7 in the frequency-dependent regulation of glutamate release. Furthermore, recordings from isocortical bitufted cells, which we show in this study to be innervated by mGluR7a-enriched synaptic input, revealed that the recovery from facilitation was much slower in the mGluR7 deficient mice (Sansig et al., 2001
).
Some somatostatin-expressing neurons are very sensitive to AMPA-induced excitotoxicity and this property may be connected to the abundance of GluR1 and GluR2 subunit-containing AMPA receptors and mGluR1 in their membrane (Stinehelfer et al., 2000
). The expression of a high level of mGluR7a may be a protection mechanism limiting glutamate release when its extracellular concentration is high. However, the presence of mGluR7a also on their GABAergic input terminals, presumably depressing GABA release when activated, would lead to disinhibition and might contribute to the excitotoxic effects of excessive AMPA receptor activation. Disinhibition produced by group III mGluR activation was demonstrated in the somatosensory cortex using an experimental protocol involving the stimulation of vibrissae (Wan and Cahusac, 1995
). Depending on the type of cell recorded, disinhibition may be caused directly by depressing GABA release from the terminals innervating the recorded cell, or by depressing the excitatory drive to GABAergic neurons innervating the recorded cell. In a few cells, the iontophoretically delivered group III agonists produced an increase in inhibition. Without the identification of the recorded cells, it is difficult to compare these interesting in vivo findings with the present results, but the variability in the responses points to the need of clarifying the underlying circuits.
In vitro experiments in the hippocampus indicate that in some interneurons an mGluR7-like receptor may contribute to long-term depression in synaptic efficacy evoked by high frequency stimulation (Laezza et al., 1999). In the isocortex, glutamatergic terminals on the somatostatin-expressing cells have a low resting transmitter release probability as compared to terminals along the same pyramidal axon innervating other cells (Reyes et al., 1998
). However, the inputs show a pronounced frequency facilitation, because upon repeated activation the release probability increases (Markram et al., 1998
; Reyes et al., 1998
; Rozov et al., 2001
). Whether this is connected to the high level of presynaptic mGluR7a demonstrated here is not clear, but the results on mGluR7-deficient mice discussed above indicate that this might be the case. The presynaptic frequency-dependent regulation of transmitter release might produce changes in excitatory and inhibitory drive leading to activation of intrinsic membrane mechanisms that govern the action potential output pattern of the postsynaptic neurons.
The enrichment of presynaptic receptors in the input of somatostatin/mGluR1-expressing GABAergic cells probably governs the efficacy of transmitter release at different levels of extracellular glutamate concentration, which depends on the level of network activity. The activation of these cells leads to GABA release mostly to distal dendrites of pyramidal cells. In the hippocampus, the release of GABA to distal dendrites of pyramidal cells from a population of somatostatin/mGluR1
-expressing interneuron, the stratum oriens, lacunosum-moleculare cells, activates GABAA receptors (Maccaferri et al., 2000
). Dendritic GABAA receptor activation, in interaction with voltage-gated cationic channels, could either decrease or increase the efficacy of excitatory inputs and their propagation to the soma. The key information needed to determine which of the many plausible scenarios are physiologically relevant to the action and activation of somatostatin/mGluR1
-expressing GABAergic cells is the pattern of their activity in vivo under physiological conditions.
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4 Present address: Centro Regional de Investigaciones Biomedicas, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, 02071 Albacete, Spain
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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