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1.
In the adult mammalian brain, synaptic transmission mediated by gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA) plays a role in inhibition of excitatory synaptic transmission. During brain development, GABA is involved in brain morphogenesis. To clarify how GABA exerts its effect on immature neurons, we examined the expression of the GABAA receptor alpha2 and alpha3 subunits, which are abundantly expressed before alpha1 and alpha6 subunits appear, in the developing mouse cerebellum using in situ hybridization. Proliferating neuronal precursors in the ventricular zone and external granular layer expressed neither alpha2 nor alpha3 subunits. Hybridization signals for the alpha2 and alpha3 subunit mRNAs first appeared in the differentiating zone at embryonic day 13 (E13). The alpha2 subunit was detected in the migrating and differentiating granule cells and cerebellar nucleus neurons until postnatal day 14 (P14). Hybridization signals for the alpha3 subunit mRNA, on the other hand, were localized in the developing Purkinje cells and cerebellar nucleus neurons, and disappeared from Purkinje cells by the end of first postnatal week. Taken together, this indicated that the alpha2 and alpha3 subunits were abundantly expressed in distinct types of cerebellar neurons after completing cell proliferation while forming the neural network. These results suggest that GABA might extrasynaptically activate the GABAA receptors containing alpha2 and/or alpha3 subunits on the differentiating neurons before finishing the formation of synapses and networks, and could be involved in neuronal differentiation and maturation in the cerebellum.  相似文献   

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In the hypoglossal nucleus, GABA and glycine mediate inhibition at separate or mixed synapses containing glycine receptors (GlyRs) and/or GABA(A) receptors (GABA(A)Rs). The functional development of mixed inhibitory synapses depends on the brain area studied, but their relative proportion to total synapses generally decreases with time. We have determined the sequential process of inhibitory synapse maturation in the hypoglossal nucleus in vivo. Immunocytochemistry and confocal microscopy were used for codetection of VIAAT, the common presynaptic vesicular transporter of glycine and GABA, GlyRs, GABA(A)R alpha1 and gamma2 subunits, and gephyrin, the scaffold protein implicated in the synaptic localization of inhibitory receptors. In E17 embryos, GlyRs were already clustered while GABA(A)R alpha1 and gamma2 subunit immunoreactivity (IR) displayed both diffuse and clustered patterns. Quantitative analysis at this stage revealed that the majority of GlyR clusters were apposed to VIAAT-IR accumulation and that 30% of them colocalized with gamma2GABA(A)R clusters. This proportion increased with age to 50% at P30. GlyR clusters that did not colocalize with gamma2GABA(A)R clusters were associated with GABA(A)R gamma2 diffuse IR. Interestingly, the percentage of GlyR clusters surrounded by GABA(A)R gamma2 diffuse IR decreased with age, while GlyR clusters colocalized with gamma2GABA(A)R clusters increased. The developmental coclustered pattern of gephyrin and GABA(A)R alpha1 and gamma2 subunits paralleled the coclustered pattern of GlyRs and GABA(A)R alpha1 and gamma2 subunits. Our results indicate that the proportion of GlyR-GABA(A)R coclusters increases until adulthood. A developmental sequence of the postsynaptic events is proposed in which diffuse extrasynaptic GABA(A)Rs accumulate at inhibitory synapses to form postsynaptic clusters, most of them being colocalized with GlyR clusters in the adult.  相似文献   

4.
Ionotropic GABA(C) receptors are composed of rho1, rho2 and rho3 subunits. Although the distribution of rho subunit mRNAs in the adult brain has been studied, information on the developmental regulation of different rho subunits in the brain is scattered and incomplete. Here, GABA(C) receptor rho subunit expression was studied in the developing rat brain. In situ hybridization on postnatal brain slices showed rho2 mRNA expression from newborn in superficial gray layer (SGL) of superior colliculus (SuC), and from the first postnatal week in the hippocampal CA1 region and pretectal nucleus of the optic tract. rho2 mRNA was also expressed in the adult dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus. Quantitative RT-PCR revealed expression of all three rho subunits in the hippocampus and superior colliculus from the first postnatal day. In the hippocampus, rho2 mRNA expression clearly dominated over rho1 and rho3, whereas in the superior colliculus, rho1 mRNA expression levels were similar to rho2. In both areas, a clear up-modulation of rho2 and rho3 mRNA during the first postnatal week was detected. GABA(C) receptor protein expression was confirmed in adult hippocampus, superior colliculus and dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus by immunohistochemistry. Our results demonstrate for the first time the expression of all three rho subunit mRNAs in several regions of the developing and adult rat brain. Our quantitative data allows assessment of putative subunit combinations in the superior colliculus and hippocampus. From the selective distribution of rho subunits, it may be hypothesized that GABA(C) receptors are specifically involved in aspects of visual image motion processing in the rat brain.  相似文献   

5.
Targeted deletion of the alpha1 subunit gene results in a profound loss of gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABA(A)) receptors in adult mouse brain but has only moderate behavioral consequences. Mutant mice exhibit several adaptations in GABA(A) receptor subunit expression, as measured by Western blotting. By using immunohistochemistry, we investigated here whether these adaptations serve to replace the missing alpha1 subunit or represent compensatory changes in neurons that normally express these subunits. We focused on cerebellum and thalamus and distinguished postsynaptic GABA(A) receptor clusters by their colocalization with gephyrin. In the molecular layer of the cerebellum, alpha1 subunit clusters colocalized with gephyrin disappeared from Purkinje cell dendrites of mutant mice, whereas alpha3 subunit/gephyrin clusters, presumably located on dendrites of Golgi interneurons, increased sevenfold, suggesting profound network reorganization in the absence of the alpha1 subunit. In thalamus, a prominent increase in alpha3 and alpha4 subunit immunoreactivity was evident, but without change in regional distribution. In the ventrobasal complex, which contains primarily postsynaptic alpha1- and extrasynaptic alpha4-GABA(A) receptors, the loss of alpha1 subunit was accompanied by disruption of gamma2 subunit and gephyrin clustering, in spite of the increased alpha4 subunit expression. However, in the reticular nucleus, which lacks alpha1-GABA(A) receptors in wild-type mice, postsynaptic alpha3/gamma2/gephyrin clusters were unaffected. These results demonstrate that adaptive responses in the brain of alpha1(0/0) mice involve reorganization of GABAergic circuits and not merely replacement of the missing alpha1 subunit by another receptor subtype. In addition, clustering of gephyrin at synaptic sites in cerebellum and thalamus appears to be dependent on expression of a GABA(A) receptor subtype localized postsynaptically.  相似文献   

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The delta subunit is a novel subunit of the pentameric gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)(A) receptor that conveys special pharmacological and functional properties to recombinant receptors and may be particularly important in mediating tonic inhibition. Mice that lack the delta subunit have been produced by gene-targeting technology, and these mice were studied with immunohistochemical and immunoblot methods to determine whether changes in GABA(A) receptors were limited to deletion of the delta subunit or whether alterations in other GABA(A) receptor subunits were also present in the delta subunit knockout (delta-/-) mice. Immunohistochemical studies of wild-type mice confirmed the restricted distribution of the delta subunit in the forebrain. Regions with moderate to high levels of delta subunit expression included thalamic relay nuclei, caudate-putamen, molecular layer of the dentate gyrus, and outer layers of the cerebral cortex. Virtually no delta subunit labeling was evident in adjacent regions, such as the thalamic reticular nucleus, hypothalamus, and globus pallidus. Comparisons of the expression of other subunits in delta-/- and wild-type mice demonstrated substantial changes in the alpha4 and gamma2 subunits of the GABA(A) receptor in the delta-/- mice. gamma2 Subunit expression was increased, whereas alpha4 subunit expression was decreased in delta-/- mice. Importantly, alterations of both the alpha4 and the gamma2 subunits were confined primarily to brain regions that normally expressed the delta subunit. This suggests that the additional subunit changes are directly linked to loss of the delta subunit and could reflect local changes in subunit composition and function of GABA(A) receptors in delta-/- mice.  相似文献   

8.
The regional and cellular localisation of gamma-aminobutyric acid(A) (GABA(A)) receptors was investigated in the human basal ganglia using receptor autoradiography and immunohistochemical staining for five GABA(A) receptor subunits (alpha(1), alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2, 3), and gamma(2)) and other neurochemical markers. The results demonstrated that GABA(A) receptors in the striatum showed considerable subunit heterogeneity in their regional distribution and cellular localisation. High densities of GABA(A) receptors in the striosome compartment contained the alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2, 3), and gamma(2) subunits, and lower densities of receptors in the matrix compartment contained the alpha(1), alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits. Also, six different types of neurons were identified in the striatum on the basis of GABA(A) receptor subunit configuration, cellular and dendritic morphology, and chemical neuroanatomy. Three types of alpha(1) subunit immunoreactive neurons were identified: type 1, the most numerous (60%), were medium-sized aspiny neurons that were immunoreactive for parvalbumin and alpha(1), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits; type 2 (38%) were medium-sized to large aspiny neurons immunoreactive for calretinin and alpha(1), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits; and type 3 (2%) were large sparsely spiny neurons immunoreactive for alpha(1), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits. Type 4 neurons were calbindin-positive and immunoreactive for alpha(2), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits. The remaining neurons were immunoreactive for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and alpha(3) subunit (type 5) or were neuropeptide Y-positive with no GABA(A) receptor subunit immunoreactivity (type 6). The globus pallidus contained three types of neurons: types 1 and 2 were large neurons and were immunoreactive for alpha(1), alpha(3), beta(2,3), and gamma(2) subunits and for parvalbumin alone (type 1) or for both parvalbumin and calretinin (type 2); type 3 neurons were medium-sized and immunoreactive for calretinin and alpha(1), beta(2, 3), and gamma(2) subunits. These results show that the subunit composition of GABA(A) receptors displays considerable regional and cellular variation in the human striatum but are more homogeneous in the globus pallidus.  相似文献   

9.
Detailed knowledge of the anatomical distribution of different GABA(A) receptor subunits is crucial for understanding the physiological actions of GABA in individual brain areas and for developing drugs acting through the individual GABA receptor subtypes. Since the amygdala is a key brain structure in the processing of emotional information with distinct functions in each nucleus, GABA(A) receptors in the amygdala are an important target of treatment for emotional disorders. In this study, we analyzed by quantitative RT-PCR the expression levels of all GABA(A) receptor subunits in distinct nuclei of the amygdala, the central (Ce) and the lateral/basolateral (LA/BLA) amygdala. We found the strongest expression of the gamma(2) subunit mRNA in both the Ce and LA/BLA, modest expressions of alpha(1), alpha(2) and alpha(3) mRNAs in the LA/BLA and alpha(2) and gamma(1) mRNAs in the Ce, and weak expressions of alpha(6), rho(2) and rho(3) mRNAs in both regions. We further revealed the significantly different expressions of alpha(1), alpha(3), alpha(5), gamma(1), gamma(2), delta, epsilon and theta subunit mRNAs in the Ce and LA/BLA. Differences in the expression levels of GABA(A) receptor subunits suggest different sensitivity to a variety of drugs including benzodiazepines and anesthetics in amygdala nuclei with distinct functions.  相似文献   

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11.
The present study used Western blots and Northern slot blots to determine changes in the level of expression of GABA(A) receptor subunits alpha(1), alpha(2), and alpha(3), in relation to the "critical period" in cat visual cortex. Levels of the GABA(A) alpha(1) subunit were lowest at 1 week, increased four-fold to a maximum at 10 weeks, and declined slightly (35%) into adulthood. Levels of the GABA(A) alpha(2) and alpha(3) subunits were highest at 1 week of age, decreased two-fold by 10 weeks of age and were constant thereafter. Comparison between visual cortex from normal and dark-reared cats at 5 weeks and 20 weeks showed that alpha(1) and alpha(3) subunit expression was elevated in dark-reared animals by approximately 50% at both ages. alpha(2) expression was not affected. These results implicate the importance of a shift from putative immature to mature GABA(A) receptor subunits during the critical period of visual cortex and in conjunction with parallel analysis of NMDA receptor subunit maturation, further support the notion that a changing excitatory/inhibitory balance is critical for neuronal plasticity.  相似文献   

12.
Within the basal ganglia, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) exerts a fundamental role as neurotransmitter of local circuit and projection neurons. Its fast hyperpolarizing action is mediated through GABA(A) receptors. These ligand-gated chloride channels are assembled from five subunits, which derive from multiple genes. Using immunocytochemistry, we investigated the distribution of 12 major GABA(A) receptor subunits (alpha1-5, beta1-3, gamma1-3, and delta) in the basal ganglia and associated limbic brain areas of the rat. Immunoreactivity for an additional subunit (subunit alpha6) was not observed. The striatum, the nucleus accumbens, and the olfactory tubercle displayed strong, diffuse staining for the subunits alpha2, alpha4, beta3, and delta presumably located on dendrites of the principal medium spiny neurons. Subunit alpha1-, beta2-, and gamma2-immunoreactivities were apparently mostly restricted to interneurons of these areas. In contrast, the globus pallidus, the entopeduncular nucleus, the ventral pallidum, the subthalamic nucleus, and the substantia nigra pars reticulata revealed dense networks of presumable dendrites of resident projection neurons, which were darkly labeled for subunit alpha1-, beta2-, and gamma2-immunoreactivities. The globus pallidus, ventral pallidum, entopeduncular nucleus, and substantia nigra pars reticulata, all areas receiving innervations from the striatum, displayed strong subunit gamma1-immunoreactivity compared to other brain areas. In the substantia nigra pars compacta and in the ventral tegmental area, numerous presumptive dopaminergic neurons were labeled for subunits alpha3, gamma3, and/or delta. This highly heterogeneous distribution of individual GABA(A) receptor subunits suggests the existence of differently assembled, and presumably also functionally different, GABA(A) receptors within individual nuclei of the basal ganglia and associated limbic brain areas.  相似文献   

13.
Expression of GABA(A) receptor (GABA(A)R) alpha(1), alpha(2), beta(2), gamma(1), gamma(2L) and gamma(2S) subunit mRNA was examined in three cell classes in the central nucleus of the rat inferior colliculus (CNIC). GABA(A)R alpha(1) and gamma(2L) subunit mRNA expression was greatest in large cells (over 25 microm long diameter), intermediate in medium sized cells (15 to 25 microm long diameter) and lowest in small cells (10 to 15 microm long diameter). GABA(A)R gamma(2S) and alpha(2) subunits had the opposite pattern, highest in the small cells, intermediate in medium cells and lowest in large cells. GABA(A)R beta(2) was significantly lower in small cells than the two other classes, while differences between large and medium cells were not significant. GABA(A)R gamma(1) subunit mRNAs expression was not above background in any of the three cell types assessed. The expression of GABA(A)R subunits suggests that cell classes in the rat CNIC may differ in their response to GABA and GABAergic drugs.  相似文献   

14.
The cDNA library screening strategy was used to identify the genes encoding for GABA(A) receptor subunits in the rat hippocampus during development. With this technique, genes encoding eleven GABA(A) receptor subunits were identified. The alpha5 subunit was by far the most highly expressed, followed by the gamma2, alpha2 and alpha4 subunits respectively. The expression of the beta2, alpha1, gamma1, beta1 and beta3 subunits was moderate, although that of the alpha3 and delta subunits was weak. In situ hybridization experiments, using digoxigenin-labeled cRNA probes, confirmed that the delta subunit was expressed in the neonatal as well as in the adult hippocampus, and is likely to form functional receptors in association with other subunits of the GABA(A) receptor. When the more sensitive RT-PCR approach was used, the gamma3 subunit was also detected, suggesting that this subunit is present in the hippocampus during development but at low levels of expression. The insertion of the delta subunit into functional GABA(A) receptors may enhance the efficacy of GABA in the immediate postnatal period when this amino acid is still exerting a depolarizing and excitatory action.  相似文献   

15.
GABA(A) receptors are chloride channels in the brain activated by binding of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Several important classes of drugs, including alcohol and certain antiepileptic drugs, modulate the actions of GABA. We report the sequence and expression of alpha4 subunits of GABA(A) receptors in two inbred strains of mice, DBA/2J and C57BL/6J, which differ in susceptibility to seizures and to behavioral effects of alcohol. We find no differences between the two strains in cDNA sequence, or in levels of alpha4 mRNA in whole brains of the two strains at 21 days of age, when DBA/2J are most susceptible to audiogenic seizures. We also describe the pattern of developmental expression and brain regional distribution of this subunit in mice, finding the highest developmental expression at about 14 days of age in whole brains, and the highest regional levels in hippocampus and basal forebrain (including thalamus) in adults.  相似文献   

16.
An in situ hybridisation technique was used to analyse the spatial and temporal pattern of expression of the mRNA encoding the four gamma-aminobutyric acid A (GABA(A)) receptor subunits (alpha1, alpha2, beta2, and gamma2) in the developing chick optic tectum. As a rule, layer i, layer h, and transient cell compartment 3 (TCC3) show the highest levels of expression, especially of alpha1, alpha2 and beta2, which undergo striking changes as a function of time. Apart from these common features, the global pattern is highly complex and dynamic. Such complexity derives from the fact that each subunit exhibits a characteristically distinct pattern of expression and the temporal evolution of each differs in the different layers of the tectum. The influence of several developmental cell behaviours such as proliferation, neuronal migration, programmed cell death, and differentiation must be taken into account to understand pattern complexity and dynamics. Our results suggest that differences in the rate of subunit expression, particularly of alpha1, alpha2, and beta2, could have significant consequences on GABA(A) receptor complex subunit composition along development and on the functional properties of the GABA neurotransmitter system.  相似文献   

17.
Liu Q  Wong-Riley MT 《Brain research》2006,1098(1):129-138
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)(A) receptor subunit switching is a suggested postnatal mechanism for changes in GABA transmission from depolarization to hyperpolarization. Previously, we found an apparent switch between GABA(A) alpha3 and alpha1 subunit expression in the rat pre-B?tzinger complex (PBC) on postnatal day (P) 12, a presumed peak critical period of respiratory nuclei development. The present study aimed at determining if GABA(A) subunit switching occurred in another respiratory nucleus, the ventrolateral subnucleus of the solitary tract nucleus (NTS(VL)), and in a non-respiratory cuneate nucleus (CN) of P0 to P21 rats. In both nuclei: (1) the expression of GABA(A) alpha1 subunit was relatively low at birth but increased with development; (2) that of GABA(A) alpha3 was relatively high at birth but declined with age; and (3) GABA(A) alpha2 remained relatively low and constant throughout development. However, the specific patterns differed between the two nuclei, but were similar between the NTS(VL) and the PBC. In the NTS(VL), GABA(A) alpha1 expression gradually increased from birth and peaked at P12, whereas that in the CN sharply rose from P7 and peaked at P10. GABA(A) alpha3 expression had a prominent decrease from P11 to P12 in the NTS(VL), whereas that in the CN only gradually declined from P10 to P12. The developmental trends of alpha1 and alpha3 in the NTS(VL) intersected close to P12, whereas those in the CN intersected at P10. Despite differences in timing, GABA(A) alpha subunit switching may be a common theme in the brain stem that may mediate different functional properties of GABA transmission.  相似文献   

18.
We compared the expression and co-expression of alpha1, alpha2, alpha3, and alpha5-subunit protein clusters of the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)(A) receptor in the neocortex and hippocampus of rat at postnatal days (PND) 5-10 and 30-40 in order to understand how inhibitory receptors reorganize during brain maturation. The size, intensity, density and pattern of co-localization of fluorescently tagged subunit clusters were determined in deconvolved digital images using a novel 2D cross-correlational analysis. The cross-correlation analysis allowed an unbiased identification of GABA(A) receptor subunit clusters based on staining intensity. Cluster size increased through development; only the alpha2 clusters in dentate gyrus (DG) decreased in size. alpha5-subunit cluster density either increased or decreased with maturation depending on the brain region. For the other subunits, the cluster density remained rather constant, with noted exceptions (increase in alpha2 clusters in cortical layer 5 but a decrease of alpha3 clusters in hilus). The co-localization of alpha1-subunit with the others was unique and not correlated to overall changes in subunit abundance between developmental époques. So, although alpha2-subunit expression went up in the DG, the clusters became less co-localized with alpha1. In contrast, alpha5-subunit clusters became more co-localized with alpha1 as the alpha5-subunit expression declined in cortex and CA1. The co-localization of alpha3 with alpha1 also became greater in layer 6. In the adult brain not all clustering was associated with synapses, as many alpha-subunit clusters did not co-localize with synaptophysin. Overall, these data indicate that the regulation of GABA(A) receptor clustering is both synaptic and extrasynaptic, presumably reflecting complex cellular trafficking mechanisms.  相似文献   

19.
Houser CR  Esclapez M 《Hippocampus》2003,13(5):633-645
Specific subunits of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)A receptors may be regulated differentially in animal models of temporal lobe epilepsy during the chronic stage. Although several subunits may be upregulated, other subunits may be downregulated in the hippocampal formation. The alpha5 subunit is of particular interest because of its relatively selective localization in the hippocampus and its potential role in tonic inhibition. In normal rats, immunolabeling of the alpha5 subunit was high in the dendritic layers of CA1 and CA2 and moderate in these regions of CA3. In chronic pilocarpine-treated rats displaying recurrent seizures, alpha5 subunit-labeling was substantially decreased in CA1 and nearly absent in CA2. Only slight decreases in immunolabeling were evident in CA3. In situ hybridization studies demonstrated that the alpha5 subunit mRNA was also strongly decreased in stratum pyramidale of CA1 and CA2. Thus, the alterations in localization of the alpha5 subunit peptide and its mRNA were highly correlated. The large decreases in labeling of the alpha5 subunit did not appear to be related to loss of pyramidal neurons in CA1 or CA2 since these neurons were generally preserved in pilocarpine-treated animals. No comparable decreases in labeling of the alpha2 subunit of the GABA(A) receptor were detected. These findings indicate that the alpha5 subunit of the GABA(A) receptor is capable of substantial and prolonged downregulation in remaining pyramidal neurons in a model of temporal lobe epilepsy. The results raise the possibility that presumptive extrasynaptic GABA(A) receptor subunits, such as the alpha5 subunit, may be regulated differently than synaptically located subunits, such as the alpha2 subunit, within the same brain regions in some pathological conditions.  相似文献   

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