Alkondon_2011_Biochem.Pharmacol_82(8)_842

Reference

Title : Endogenous activation of nAChRs and NMDA receptors contributes to the excitability of CA1 stratum radiatum interneurons in rat hippocampal slices: effects of kynurenic acid - Alkondon_2011_Biochem.Pharmacol_82(8)_842
Author(s) : Alkondon M , Pereira EF , Albuquerque EX
Ref : Biochemical Pharmacology , 82 :842 , 2011
Abstract :

CA1 stratum radiatum interneurons (SRIs) express alpha7 nicotinic receptors (nAChRs) and receive inputs from glutamatergic neurons/axons that express alpha3beta4beta2 nAChRs. To test the hypothesis that endogenously active alpha7 and/or alpha3beta4beta2 nAChRs control the excitability of CA1 SRIs in the rat hippocampus, we examined the effects of selective receptor antagonists on spontaneous fast current transients (CTs) recorded from these interneurons under cell-attached configuration. The frequency of CTs, which represent action potentials, increased in the absence of extracellular Mg(2+) and decreased in the presence of the alpha3beta4beta2 nAChR antagonist mecamylamine (3 muM) or the NMDA receptor antagonist APV (50 muM). However, it was unaffected by the alpha7 nAChR antagonist MLA (10 nM) or the AMPA receptor antagonist CNQX (10 muM). Thus, in addition to synaptically and tonically activated NMDA receptors, alpha3beta4beta2 nAChRs that are present on glutamatergic axons/neurons synapsing onto SRIs and are activated by basal levels of acetylcholine contribute to the maintenance of the excitability of these interneurons. Kynurenic acid (KYNA), an astrocyte-derived kynurenine metabolite whose levels are increased in the brains of patients with schizophrenia, also controls the excitability of SRIs. At high micromolar concentrations, KYNA, acting primarily as an NMDA receptor antagonist, decreased the CT frequency recorded from the interneurons. At 2 muM, KYNA reduced the CA1 SRI excitability via mechanisms independent of NMDA receptor block. KYNA-induced reduction of excitability of SRIs may contribute to sensory gating deficits that have been attributed to deficient hippocampal GABAergic transmission and high levels of KYNA in the brain of patients with schizophrenia.

PubMedSearch : Alkondon_2011_Biochem.Pharmacol_82(8)_842
PubMedID: 21689641

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Citations formats

Alkondon M, Pereira EF, Albuquerque EX (2011)
Endogenous activation of nAChRs and NMDA receptors contributes to the excitability of CA1 stratum radiatum interneurons in rat hippocampal slices: effects of kynurenic acid
Biochemical Pharmacology 82 :842

Alkondon M, Pereira EF, Albuquerque EX (2011)
Biochemical Pharmacology 82 :842