Kiyatkin E A, Rebec G V
Program in Neural Science, Department of Psychology, Psychology Building, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA.
Brain Res. 1999 Mar 20;822(1-2):88-106. doi: 10.1016/s0006-8993(99)01093-8.
To examine the effects of glutamate (GLU) and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and their interactions in the striatum under behaviorally relevant conditions, single-unit recording was combined with microiontophoresis in awake, unrestrained rats. Iontophoretically applied GLU (0-40 nA, 20 s) excited all spontaneously active neurons in dorsal (caudate-putamen) and ventral (accumbens, core) striatum; phasic GLU-induced excitations (mean threshold 19.7 nA) were dose-dependent, inversely correlated with rate of basal activity (excitation limit approximately 65 imp/s), and highly stable during repeated GLU applications. GLU also excited silent and sporadically active units, which greatly outnumbered spontaneously active cells, and enhanced neuronal excitations associated with movement. Both spontaneously active and GLU-stimulated striatal neurons were highly sensitive to GABA (0-40 nA, 20 s); most showed short-latency inhibitions during GABA diffusion from the pipette (0 nA) and the response quickly progressed to complete silence with a small increase in current. The GABA-induced inhibition was current-dependent, equally strong on spontaneously active and GLU-stimulated units, and independent of neuronal discharge rate, but less stable than the GLU-induced excitation during repeated drug applications. Prolonged GABA application (0-20 nA, 2-4 min) reduced basal impulse activity, but was less effective in attenuating the neuronal excitations induced by GLU or associated with movement. Our data support the role of GLU afferents in the phasic activation of striatal neurons and suggest that the effects of GLU strongly depend on the level of ongoing neuronal activity. The ability of GABA to modulate both basal and GLU-evoked activity suggests that GABA, released from efferent collaterals and interneurons, plays a critical role in regulating neuronal activity and responsiveness to phasic changes in excitatory input.
为了研究在行为相关条件下谷氨酸(GLU)和γ-氨基丁酸(GABA)及其相互作用对纹状体的影响,在清醒、不受约束的大鼠中,将单细胞记录与微量离子电泳相结合。离子电泳施加的GLU(0 - 40 nA,20秒)激发了背侧(尾状核 - 壳核)和腹侧(伏隔核,核心)纹状体中所有自发活动的神经元;阶段性GLU诱导的兴奋(平均阈值19.7 nA)呈剂量依赖性,与基础活动速率呈负相关(兴奋极限约为65次/秒),并且在重复施加GLU期间高度稳定。GLU还激发了沉默和偶尔活动的单位,其数量大大超过自发活动的细胞,并增强了与运动相关的神经元兴奋。自发活动和GLU刺激的纹状体神经元对GABA(0 - 40 nA,20秒)都高度敏感;大多数在GABA从移液管扩散(0 nA)期间表现出短潜伏期抑制,并且随着电流的小幅增加,反应迅速发展为完全沉默。GABA诱导的抑制是电流依赖性的,对自发活动和GLU刺激的单位同样强烈,并且与神经元放电速率无关,但在重复给药期间比GLU诱导的兴奋稳定性差。长时间施加GABA(0 - 20 nA,2 - 4分钟)降低了基础冲动活动,但在减弱由GLU诱导或与运动相关的神经元兴奋方面效果较差。我们的数据支持GLU传入在纹状体神经元阶段性激活中的作用,并表明GLU的作用强烈依赖于正在进行的神经元活动水平。GABA调节基础和GLU诱发活动的能力表明,从传出侧支和中间神经元释放的GABA在调节神经元活动和对兴奋性输入阶段性变化的反应性方面起着关键作用。