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Publication : NKCC1 does not accumulate chloride in developing retinal neurons.

First Author  Zhang LL Year  2007
Journal  J Neurophysiol Volume  98
Issue  1 Pages  266-77
PubMed ID  17493914 Mgi Jnum  J:149052
Mgi Id  MGI:3847421 Doi  10.1152/jn.00288.2007
Citation  Zhang LL, et al. (2007) NKCC1 does not accumulate chloride in developing retinal neurons. J Neurophysiol 98(1):266-77
abstractText  GABA excites immature neurons due to their relatively high intracellular chloride concentration. This initial high concentration is commonly attributed to the ubiquitous chloride cotransporter NKCC1, which uses a sodium gradient to accumulate chloride. Here we tested this hypothesis in immature retinal amacrine and ganglion cells. Western blotting detected NKCC1 at birth and its expression first increased, then decreased to the adult level. Immunocytochemistry confirmed this early expression of NKCC1 and localized it to all nuclear layers. In the ganglion cell layer, staining peaked at P4 and then decreased with age, becoming undetectable in adult. In comparison, KCC2, the chloride extruder, steadily increased with age localizing primarily to the synaptic layers. For functional tests, we used calcium imaging with fura-2 and chloride imaging with 6-methoxy-N-ethylquinolinium iodide. If NKCC1 accumulates chloride in ganglion and amacrine cells, deleting or blocking it should abolish the GABA-evoked calcium rise. However, at P0-5 GABA consistently evoked a calcium rise that was not abolished in the NKCC1-null retinas, nor by applying high concentrations of bumetanide (NKCC blocker) for long periods. Furthermore, intracellular chloride concentration in amacrine and ganglion cells of the NKCC1-null retinas was approximately 30 mM, same as in wild type at this age. This concentration was not lowered by applying bumetanide or by decreasing extracellular sodium concentration. Costaining for NKCC1 and cellular markers suggested that at P3, NKCC1 is restricted to Muller cells. We conclude that NKCC1 does not serve to accumulate chloride in immature retinal neurons, but it may enable Muller cells to buffer extracellular chloride.
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