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Publication : Etomidate Impairs Long-Term Potentiation In Vitro by Targeting α5-Subunit Containing GABAA Receptors on Nonpyramidal Cells.

First Author  Rodgers FC Year  2015
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  35
Issue  26 Pages  9707-16
PubMed ID  26134653 Mgi Jnum  J:224380
Mgi Id  MGI:5662147 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0315-15.2015
Citation  Rodgers FC, et al. (2015) Etomidate Impairs Long-Term Potentiation In Vitro by Targeting alpha5-Subunit Containing GABAA Receptors on Nonpyramidal Cells. J Neurosci 35(26):9707-16
abstractText  Previous experiments using genetic and pharmacological manipulations have provided strong evidence that etomidate impairs synaptic plasticity and memory by modulating alpha5-subunit containing GABAA receptors (alpha5-GABAARs). Because alpha5-GABAARs mediate tonic inhibition (TI) in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells and etomidate enhances TI, etomidate enhancement of TI in pyramidal cells has been proposed as the underlying mechanism (Martin et al., 2009). Here we tested this hypothesis by selectively removing alpha5-GABAARs from pyramidal neurons (CA1-pyr-alpha5-KO) and comparing the ability of etomidate to enhance TI and block LTP in fl-alpha5 (WT), global-alpha5-KO (gl-alpha5-KO), and CA1-pyr-alpha5-KO mice. Etomidate suppressed LTP in slices from WT and CA1-pyr-alpha5-KO but not gl-alpha5-KO mice. There was a trend toward reduced TI in both gl-alpha5-KO and CA1-pyr-alpha5-KO mice, but etomidate enhanced TI to similar levels in all genotypes. The dissociation between effects of etomidate on TI and LTP in gl-alpha5-KO mice indicates that increased TI in pyramidal neurons is not the mechanism by which etomidate impairs LTP and memory. Rather, the ability of etomidate to block LTP in WT and CA1-pyr-alpha5-KO mice, but not in gl-alpha5-KO mice, points toward alpha5-GABAARs on nonpyramidal cells as the essential effectors controlling plasticity in this in vitro model of learning and memory.
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