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A limited role of NKCC1 in telencephalic glutamatergic neurons for developing hippocampal network dynamics and behavior
Authors:Jürgen Graf  Chuanqiang Zhang  Stephan Lawrence Marguet  Tanja Herrmann  Tom Flossmann  Robin Hinsch  Vahid Rahmati  Madlen Guenther  Christiane Frahm  Anja Urbach  Ricardo Melo Neves  Otto W Witte  Stefan J Kiebel  Dirk Isbrandt  Christian A Hübner  Knut Holthoff  Knut Kirmse
Abstract:NKCC1 is the primary transporter mediating chloride uptake in immature principal neurons, but its role in the development of in vivo network dynamics and cognitive abilities remains unknown. Here, we address the function of NKCC1 in developing mice using electrophysiological, optical, and behavioral approaches. We report that NKCC1 deletion from telencephalic glutamatergic neurons decreases in vitro excitatory actions of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and impairs neuronal synchrony in neonatal hippocampal brain slices. In vivo, it has a minor impact on correlated spontaneous activity in the hippocampus and does not affect network activity in the intact visual cortex. Moreover, long-term effects of the developmental NKCC1 deletion on synaptic maturation, network dynamics, and behavioral performance are subtle. Our data reveal a neural network function of NKCC1 in hippocampal glutamatergic neurons in vivo, but challenge the hypothesis that NKCC1 is essential for major aspects of hippocampal development.

Intracellular chloride concentration (Cl]i) is a major determinant of neuronal excitability, as synaptic inhibition is primarily mediated by chloride-permeable receptors (1). In the mature brain, Cl]i is maintained at low levels by chloride extrusion, which renders γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) hyperpolarizing (2) and counteracts activity-dependent chloride loads (3). GABAergic inhibition in the adult is crucial not only for preventing runaway excitation of glutamatergic cells (4) but also for entraining neuronal assemblies into oscillations underlying cognitive processing (5). However, the capacity of chloride extrusion is low during early brain development (6, 7). Additionally, immature neurons are equipped with chloride uptake mechanisms, particularly with the Na+/K+/2Cl cotransporter NKCC1 (812). NKCC1 contributes to the maintenance of high Cl]i in the developing brain (13), favoring depolarization through GABAA receptor (GABAAR) activation in vivo (14, 15).When GABA acts as a depolarizing neurotransmitter, neural circuits generate burst-like spontaneous activity (1620), which is crucial for their developmental refinement (2124). In vitro evidence indicates that GABAergic interneurons promote neuronal synchrony in an NKCC1-dependent manner (10, 12, 2528). However, the in vivo developmental functions of NKCC1 are far from understood (29, 30). One fundamental question is to what extent NKCC1 and GABAergic depolarization supports correlated spontaneous activity in the neonatal brain. In the neocortex, GABA imposes spatiotemporal inhibition on network activity already in the neonatal period (14, 25, 31, 32). Whether a similar situation applies to other brain regions is unknown, as two recent chemo- and optogenetic studies in the hippocampus yielded opposing results (25, 33). Manipulations of the chloride driving force are potentially suited to resolve these divergent findings, but pharmacological (3436) or conventional knockout (10, 11, 37) strategies suffer from unspecific effects that complicate interpretations.Here, we overcome this limitation by selectively deleting Slc12a2 (encoding NKCC1) from telencephalic glutamatergic neurons. We show that chloride uptake via NKCC1 promotes synchronized activity in acute hippocampal slices, but has weak and event type-dependent effects in CA1 in vivo. Long-term loss of NKCC1 leads to subtle changes of network dynamics in the adult, leaving synaptic development unperturbed and behavioral performance intact. Our data suggest that NKCC1-dependent chloride uptake is largely dispensable for several key aspects of hippocampal development in vivo.
Keywords:GABA  NKCC1  hippocampus  development  in vivo
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