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Publication : Contrasting actions of group I metabotropic glutamate receptors in distinct mouse striatal neurones.

First Author  Partridge JG Year  2014
Journal  J Physiol Volume  592
Issue  13 Pages  2721-33
PubMed ID  24710062 Mgi Jnum  J:222759
Mgi Id  MGI:5645464 Doi  10.1113/jphysiol.2014.272773
Citation  Partridge JG, et al. (2014) Contrasting actions of group I metabotropic glutamate receptors in distinct mouse striatal neurones. J Physiol 592(Pt 13):2721-33
abstractText  In mouse striatum, metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) activation leads to several modulatory effects in synaptic transmission. These effects range from dampening of glutamate release from excitatory terminals to depolarization of divergent classes of interneurones. We compared the action of group I mGluR activation on several populations of striatal neurones using a combination of genetic identification, electrophysiology, and Ca(2+) imaging techniques. Patch-clamp recordings from spiny projection neurones (SPNs) and various interneurone populations demonstrated that the group I mGluR agonist (RS)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine (DHPG) robustly depolarizes several interneurone classes that form GABAergic synapses onto SPNs. We further utilized the genetic reporter mouse strain Ai38, which expresses the calcium indicator protein GCaMP3 in a Cre-dependent manner. Breeding Ai38 mice with various neurone selective, promoter-driven Cre recombinase mice resulted in GCaMP3 expression in defined cell populations in striatum. Consistent with our electrophysiological findings, group I agonist applications increased intracellular levels of calcium ([Ca(2+)]i) in all interneurone populations tested. We also found that acute DHPG application evoked a transient, rapid increase in [Ca(2+)]i from only a small percentage of identifiable SPNs. Surprisingly, this fast [Ca(2+)]i response exhibited a robust enhancement or sensitization, in a calcium-dependent fashion. Following several procedures to increase [Ca(2+)]i, the vast majority of SPNs responded with rapid changes in [Ca(2+)]i to mGluR agonists in a time-dependent fashion. These findings extend our understanding on group I mGluR influence of striatal output via powerful, local GABAergic connections in addition to [Ca(2+)]i dynamics that impact on activity or spike-timing-dependent forms of synaptic plasticity.
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