Effects of a naturally occurring neurosteroid on GABAA IPSCs during development in rat hippocampal or cerebellar slices
Open Access
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 521 (2) , 437-449
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7793.1999.00437.x
Abstract
1 The effects of the naturally occurring neurosteroid tetrahydrodeoxycorticosterone (THDOC) on GABAA receptor-mediated miniature, spontaneous and evoked IPSCs was tested using patch-clamp techniques in slices of hippocampus and cerebellum from rats at two developmental stages (≈10 and ≈20 days postnatal). The cells studied were hippocampal granule cells and cerebellar Purkinje and granule cells. 2 Most miniature GABAergic currents (mIPSCs) decayed with two exponentials and neurosteroids caused a ≈4-fold increase in the decay time constant of the second exponential at the highest concentration used (2 μm). Similar effects were seen at high concentrations of THDOC (1-2 μm) in all cell groups tested. No effects were seen on amplitude or rise time of mIPSCs. 3 The effects of THDOC (1 μm) were shown to be stereoselective and rapidly reversible, indicating that the neurosteroid binds to the GABAA receptor, rather than acting genomically. 4 At concentrations of THDOC likely to occur physiologically (50-100 nm), the decay time of IPSCs was also enhanced (25-50 %) in all cerebellar cell groups tested. In contrast, at 100 nm THDOC, seven of 11 hippocampal granule cells were sensitive from the 10 day group but the 20 day hippocampal granule cells showed no significant enhancement in the presence of these lower concentrations of THDOC. 5 The differences in sensitivity of hippocampal and cerebellar cells to THDOC are compared to data reported in the literature on regional development of expression of different receptor subunits in the brain and it is suggested that the progressive relative insensitivity of the 20 day hippocampal cells may depend on increasing expression of the δ subunit of the GABAA receptor and possibly an increase in the α4 subunit.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Receptor system response kinetics reveal functional subtypes of native murine and recombinant human GABAA receptorsThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Influence of gender and brain region on neurosteroid modulation of GABA responses in ratsLife Sciences, 1997
- The impact of receptor desensitization on fast synaptic transmissionTrends in Neurosciences, 1996
- Proton Modulation of Functionally Distinct GABA A Receptors in Acutely Isolated Pyramidal Neurons of Rat HippocampusNeuropharmacology, 1996
- Modulation of Human Recombinant GABA A Receptors by PregnanediolsNeuropharmacology, 1996
- Modulation of recombinant α6β2γ2 GABAA receptors by neuroactive steroidsEuropean Journal of Pharmacology: Molecular Pharmacology, 1995
- Functional diversity of GABA activated Cl− currents in Purkinje versus granule neurons in rat cerebellar slicesNeuron, 1994
- Functional Modulation of GABA A Receptors by cAMP-Dependent Protein PhosphorylationScience, 1992
- Effects of subunit types of the cloned GABAA receptor on the response to a neurosteroidEuropean Journal of Pharmacology: Molecular Pharmacology, 1991
- A steroid recognition site is functionally coupled to an expressed GABAA-benzodiazepine receptorEuropean Journal of Pharmacology: Molecular Pharmacology, 1990