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    Maria Kukley

    Progenitor cells expressing proteoglycan NG2 (also known as oligodendrocyte precursor cells or polydendrocytes) are widespread in the grey and white matter of the CNS; they comprise 8-9% of the total cell population in adult white matter,... more
    Progenitor cells expressing proteoglycan NG2 (also known as oligodendrocyte precursor cells or polydendrocytes) are widespread in the grey and white matter of the CNS; they comprise 8-9% of the total cell population in adult white matter, and 2-3% of total cells in adult grey matter. NG2 cells have a complex stellate morphology, with highly branched processes that may extend more than 100 μm around the cell body. NG2 cells express a complex set of voltage-gated channels, AMPA/kainate and/or γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)(A) receptors, and receive glutamatergic and/or GABAergic synaptic input from neurons. In every region of the brain NG2 cells are found as proliferative cells, and the fraction of actively cycling NG2 cells is quite high in young as well as in adult animals. During development NG2 cells either differentiate into myelinating oligodendrocytes (and possibly also few astrocytes and neurons) or persist in the brain parenchyma as NG2 cells. This review highlights new findings related to the morphological and electrophysiological changes of NG2 cells, and the fate of synaptic input between neurons and NG2 cells during proliferation and differentiation of these cells in the neonatal and adult nervous system of rodents.
    In postnatal rodent brain, certain NG2-expressing oligodendroglial precursor cells (OPCs) are contacted by synaptic terminals from local neurons. However, it has remained elusive whether and when NG2(+) cells are integrated into neuronal... more
    In postnatal rodent brain, certain NG2-expressing oligodendroglial precursor cells (OPCs) are contacted by synaptic terminals from local neurons. However, it has remained elusive whether and when NG2(+) cells are integrated into neuronal circuits. Here we use patch-clamp recordings from mitotic cells in murine brain slices to show that, unlike any other cell in the central nervous system (CNS), cortical NG2(+) cells divide and relocate while being linked to synaptic junctions. Together with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling, our recordings imply that cellular processes that bear synaptic junctions are surprisingly kept during cytokinesis and are inherited by the daughter cells. Cell cycle time (78 h) and relocation speed (5 microm/day) are slowed, and NG2(+) cells largely divide symmetrically. Inheritance of synapses enables newborn glial cells to establish synaptic connections much faster than newborn neurons and ensures that the entire population of NG2(+) cells is exposed to syna...
    1. The biological effects of carnosine, a natural hydrophilic neuropeptide, on the reactive oxygen species (ROS) pathological generation are reviewed. 2. We describe direct antioxidant action observed in the in vitro experiments. 3.... more
    1. The biological effects of carnosine, a natural hydrophilic neuropeptide, on the reactive oxygen species (ROS) pathological generation are reviewed. 2. We describe direct antioxidant action observed in the in vitro experiments. 3. Carnosine was found to effect metabolism indirectly. These effects are reflected in ROS turnover regulation and lipid peroxidation (LPO) processes. 4. During brain ischemia carnosine acts as a neuroprotector, contributing to better cerebral blood flow restoration, electroencephalography (EEG) normalization, decreased lactate accumulation, and enzymatic protection against ROS. 5. The data presented demonstrate that carnosine is a specific regulator of essential metabolic pathways in neurons supporting brain homeostasis under unfavorable conditions.
    Progenitor cells expressing the proteoglycan NG2 represent approximately 5% of the total cells in the adult brain, and are found both in grey and white matter regions where they give rise to oligodendrocytes. The finding that these cells... more
    Progenitor cells expressing the proteoglycan NG2 represent approximately 5% of the total cells in the adult brain, and are found both in grey and white matter regions where they give rise to oligodendrocytes. The finding that these cells receive synaptic contacts from excitatory and inhibitory neurons has not only raised major interest in the possible roles of these synapses, but also stimulated further research on the developmental and cellular functions of NG2-expressing (NG2(+)) progenitors themselves in the context of neural circuit physiology. Here we review recent findings on the functional properties of the synapses on NG2(+) cells in grey and white matter regions of the brain. In this review article we make an attempt to integrate current knowledge on the cellular and developmental properties of NG2(+) progenitors with the functional attributes of their synapses, in order to understand the physiological relevance of neuron-NG2(+) progenitor signal transmission. We propose that, although NG2(+) progenitors receive synaptic contact in all brain regions where they are found, their synapses might have different developmental and functional roles, probably reflecting the distinct functions of NG2(+) progenitors in the brain.
    The precise shape of action potentials in cortical neurons is a key determinant of action potential-dependent Ca2+ influx, as well as of neuronal signaling, on a millisecond scale. In cortical neurons, Ca2+-sensitive K+ channels, or BK... more
    The precise shape of action potentials in cortical neurons is a key determinant of action potential-dependent Ca2+ influx, as well as of neuronal signaling, on a millisecond scale. In cortical neurons, Ca2+-sensitive K+ channels, or BK channels (BKChs), are crucial for action potential termination, but the precise functional interplay between Ca2+ channels and BKChs has remained unclear. In this study, we investigate the mechanisms allowing for rapid and reliable activation of BKChs by single action potentials in hippocampal granule cells and the impact of endogenous Ca2+ buffers. We find that BKChs are operated by nanodomains of single Ca2+ channels. Using a novel approach based on a linear approximation of buffered Ca2+ diffusion in microdomains, we quantitatively analyze the prolongation of action potentials by the Ca2+ chelator BAPTA. This analysis allowed us to estimate that the mean diffusional distance for Ca2+ ions from a Ca2+ channel to a BKCh is approximately 13 nm. This surprisingly short diffusional distance cannot be explained by a random distribution of Ca2+ channels and renders the activation of BKChs insensitive to the relatively high concentrations of endogenous Ca2+ buffers in hippocampal neurons. These data suggest that tight colocalization of the two types of channels permits hippocampal neurons to regulate global Ca2+ signals by a high cytoplasmic Ca2+ buffer capacity without affecting the fast and brief activation of BKChs required for proper repolarization of action potentials.
    NG2-expressing oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) are ubiquitous and generate oligodendrocytes throughout the young and adult brain. Previous work has shown that virtually every NG2 cell receives synaptic input from many axons, but... more
    NG2-expressing oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) are ubiquitous and generate oligodendrocytes throughout the young and adult brain. Previous work has shown that virtually every NG2 cell receives synaptic input from many axons, but the meaning of this signaling is not understood. In particular, it is unclear whether neurons specifically synapse onto OPCs or whether OPCs merely trace adjacent neurotransmitter release sites and are not recognized by the presynaptic neuron. Here, we show with whole-cell recordings from distinct developmental stages of oligodendroglial cells in brain slices that synaptic input essentially disappears as soon as OPCs differentiate into premyelinating oligodendrocytes (NG2(-), DM20/PLP(+), O1(+)). Uncaging experiments and tracer loading revealed that premyelinating oligodendrocytes still express a substantial number of AMPA/kainate receptors and many processes, but spontaneous and stimulated synaptic currents are mostly absent. Nevertheless, in a minority of premyelinating cells, electrical stimulation evoked small synaptic currents with an unusual behavior: their amplitude compared well with the quantal amplitude in OPCs but they occurred asynchronously and with the remarkable latency of 40-100 ms, indicating that the presynaptic release machinery has become ineffective. Mature myelinating oligodendrocytes completely lack AMPA/kainate receptors and respond to uncaging and synaptic stimulation with glutamate transporter currents. Our data show that neurons selectively synapse onto only one of several coexisting developmental stages of glial cells and thereby indicate that neurons indeed specifically signal to OPCs and are able to modulate transmitter output by regulating the local release machinery in a manner specific to the developmental stage of the postsynaptic glial cell.
    The ionotropic and cytolytic P2X7 receptor is typically found on immune cells, where it is involved in the release of cytokines. Recently, P2X7 receptors were reported to be localized to presynaptic nerve terminals and to modulate... more
    The ionotropic and cytolytic P2X7 receptor is typically found on immune cells, where it is involved in the release of cytokines. Recently, P2X7 receptors were reported to be localized to presynaptic nerve terminals and to modulate transmitter release. In the present study, we reassessed this unexpected role of P2X7 receptors at hippocampal mossy fiber-CA3 synapses. In agreement with previous findings, the widely used P2X7 agonist 2'-3'-O-(4-benzoylbenzoyl)-adenosine-5'-triphosphate (BzATP) clearly depressed field potentials (fEPSPs); however, no evidence for an involvement of P2X7 receptors could be obtained. First, depression of fEPSPs by BzATP was unchanged in P2X7-/- mice. Second, experiments using P2X7-/- mice, immunohistochemistry, and electron microscopy showed that the antigen detected by frequently used P2X7 antibodies is not compatible with a plasmalemmal P2X7 receptor. Third, BzATP did not alter Ca2+ levels in synaptic terminals. In contrast, the depression of fEPSPs by BzATP was fully blocked by adenosine (A1) receptor antagonists. Furthermore, the application of BzATP also activated postsynaptic A1 receptor-coupled K+ channels. This effect of BzATP was mimicked by ATP and adenosine and was completely prevented by enzymes specifically degrading adenosine. Activation of A1-coupled K+ channels by BzATP was dependent on ecto-nucleotidases, extracellular enzymes that convert ATP to adenosine. Moreover, the opening of A1-coupled K+ channels by BzATP was dependent on nucleoside transporters. Taken together, our results indicate that BzATP is extracellularly catabolized to Bz-adenosine and subsequently hetero-exchanged for intracellular adenosine and then depresses mossy fiber fEPSPs through presynaptic A1 receptors rather than through P2X7 receptors. Thus, the present study casts doubts on the neuronal localization of P2X7 receptors in rodent hippocampus.
    Hippocampal mossy fiber synapses show unique molecular features and dynamic range of plasticity. A recent paper proposed that the defining features of mossy fiber synaptic plasticity are caused by a local buildup of extracellular... more
    Hippocampal mossy fiber synapses show unique molecular features and dynamic range of plasticity. A recent paper proposed that the defining features of mossy fiber synaptic plasticity are caused by a local buildup of extracellular adenosine (Moore et al., 2003). In this study, we reassessed the role of ambient adenosine in regulating mossy fiber synaptic plasticity in mouse and rat hippocampal slices. Synaptic transmission was highly sensitive to activation of presynaptic adenosine A1 receptors (A1Rs), which reduced transmitter release by >75%. However, most of A1Rs were not activated by ambient adenosine. Field potentials increased only by 20-30% when A1Rs were fully blocked with the A1R antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine (DPCPX) (1 microM). Moreover, blocking A1Rs hardly altered paired-pulse facilitation, frequency facilitation, or posttetanic potentiation. Frequency facilitation was similar in A1R-/- mice and when measured with NMDA receptor-mediated EPSCs in CA3 pyramidal cells in the presence of DPCPX. Additional experiments suggested that the results obtained by Moore et al. (2003) can partially be explained by their usage of a submerged recording chamber and elevated divalent cation concentrations. In conclusion, a reduction of the basal release probability by ambient adenosine does not underlie presynaptic forms of plasticity at mossy fiber synapses.
    Ca2+-binding proteins are ubiquitously expressed throughout the CNS and serve as valuable immunohistochemical markers for certain types of neurons. However, the functional role of most Ca2+-binding proteins has to date remained obscure... more
    Ca2+-binding proteins are ubiquitously expressed throughout the CNS and serve as valuable immunohistochemical markers for certain types of neurons. However, the functional role of most Ca2+-binding proteins has to date remained obscure because their concentration in central neurons is not known. In this study, we investigate the intracellular concentration of the widely expressed Ca2+-binding protein calbindin-D28k in adult hippocampal slices using patch-clamp recordings and immunohistochemistry. First, we show that calbindin-D28k freely exchanges between patch pipette and cytoplasm during whole cell patch-clamp recordings with a time constant of approximately 10 min. Substituting known concentrations of recombinant calbindin-D28k in patch pipettes enabled us to determine the endogenous calbindin-D28k concentration by postrecording immunohistochemistry. Using this calibration procedure, we find that mature granule cells (doublecortin-) contain approximately 40 microm, and newborn granule cells (doublecortin+) contain 0-20 microm calbindin-D28k. CA3 stratum radiatum interneurons and CA1 pyramidal cells enclose approximately 47 and approximately 45 microm calbindin-D28k, respectively. Numerical simulations showed that 40 microm calbindin-D28k is capable of tuning Ca2+ microdomains associated with action potentials at the mouth of single or clustered Ca2+ channels: calbindin-D28k reduces the increment in free Ca2+ at a distance of 100 and 200 nm by 20 and 35%, respectively, and strongly accelerates the collapse of the Ca2+ gradient after cessation of Ca2+ influx. These data suggest that calbindin-D28k equips hippocampal neurons with approximately 160 microm mobile, high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites (kappa(S) approximately 200) that slow and reduce global Ca2+ signals while they enhance the spatiotemporal fidelity of submicroscopic Ca2+ signals.
    Removal of neurotransmitter from the extracellular space is crucial for normal functioning of the central nervous system. In this study, we have used high-affinity metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) expressed by hippocampal CA1... more
    Removal of neurotransmitter from the extracellular space is crucial for normal functioning of the central nervous system. In this study, we have used high-affinity metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) expressed by hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells to test how far bath-applied glutamate penetrates into slice tissue before being removed by uptake mechanisms. Activation of group I mGluRs by 100 microM DHPG produced an inward current of -48+/-10pA (I(mGluR)), which was blocked by application of group I mGluR antagonists. In contrast, bath application of 100 microM glutamate in the presence of a ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonist and TTX did not activate I(mGluR) in CA1 cells patch-clamped at a depth of approximately 30 microm. Similarly, sole inhibition of glutamate transporters by the broad-spectrum glutamate transporter antagonist TBOA did not induce I(mGluR) under the same conditions. Only if glutamate was co-applied with TBOA an I(mGluR) of -39+/-8pA was recorded which was also blocked by group I antagonists. The data suggest that TBOA-sensitive uptake mechanisms are able to maintain a steep concentration gradient of glutamate to such a degree that a CA1 neuron at a depth of 30 microm is exposed to low extracellular glutamate levels that are not sufficient to induce a detectable activation of group I mGluRs (< 2 microM).
    It is well established that NG2 cells throughout the young and adult brain consistently detect the release of single vesicles filled with glutamate from nearby axons. The released neurotransmitter glutamate electrically excites NG2 cells... more
    It is well established that NG2 cells throughout the young and adult brain consistently detect the release of single vesicles filled with glutamate from nearby axons. The released neurotransmitter glutamate electrically excites NG2 cells via non-NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartic acid) glutamate receptors but the individual contribution of AMPA and kainate receptors to neuron-NG2 cell signalling, is not well understood. Here we pharmacologically block AMPA-type glutamate receptors and investigate whether hippocampal NG2 cells also express the kainate subtype of glutamate receptors and what may be their contribution to synaptic connectivity. It has been shown previously that vesicular glutamate release does not lead to a detectable activation of kainate receptors on NG2 cells. Here we report that while bath application of 250 nM-1 muM kainate does not have a major effect on NG2 cells it consistently induces a small and persistent depolarising current. This current was not mimicked by ATPA, suggesting that this current is carried by non-GluR5 containing kainate receptors. In addition to this inward current, nanomolar concentrations of kainate also produced a dramatic increase in the frequency of spontaneous GABA-A receptor-mediated synaptic currents (IPSCs) in NG2 cells. This increase in spontaneous IPSC frequency was even more pronounced on application of the GluR5-specific agonist ATPA (approximately 15-fold increase in frequency). In contrast, mono-synaptic stimulated IPSCs recorded in NG2 cells were unaffected by kainate receptor activation. Those and further experiments show that the occurrence of the high frequency of IPSCs is due to action potential firing of hippocampal interneurons caused by activation of GluR5 receptors on the somatodendritic membrane of the interneurons. Our data suggest that hippocampal kainate receptors are not only important for communication between neurons but may also play a dual and subtype-specific role for neuron-glia signalling: Firstly, extra-synaptic non-GluR5 kainate receptors in the membrane of NG2 cells are ideally suited to instruct NG2 cells on the population activity of local excitatory neurons via ambient glutamate. Secondly, based on the known importance of GluR5 receptors on hippocampal interneurons for the generation of network rhythms and based on our finding that these interneurons heavily project onto NG2 cells, it appears that synaptic activation of interneuronal GluR5 receptors triggers signalling to NG2 cells which transmits the phase and frequency of ongoing network oscillations in the developing hippocampus.
    Rat brain subjected to 45-min global ischemia is characterized by decreased activity of K-p-nitrophenyl phosphatase and monoamine oxidase B and a disordering of the membrane bilayer by reactive oxygen species attack, the latter being... more
    Rat brain subjected to 45-min global ischemia is characterized by decreased activity of K-p-nitrophenyl phosphatase and monoamine oxidase B and a disordering of the membrane bilayer by reactive oxygen species attack, the latter being monitored by the fluorescence of the membrane fluorescent probe, 1-anilino, 8-naphtalene sulphonate (ANS). Ischemic injury resulted in 67% mortality of the animals. In the group of animals pre-treated with the neuropeptide carnosine the mortality was only 30%. At the same time, carnosine protected both the activity of the above-mentioned enzymes and the brain membrane disordering, which was also tested by ANS fluorescence. The conclusion was made that carnosine protects the brain against oxidative injury and thereby increases the survival of the animals.
    In the hippocampus of chronic temporal lobe epilepsy, many abnormalities in structure and function have been described but their pathophysiological relevance often is poorly understood. In this study, we asked whether there may be a link... more
    In the hippocampus of chronic temporal lobe epilepsy, many abnormalities in structure and function have been described but their pathophysiological relevance often is poorly understood. In this study, we asked whether there may be a link between changes in the firing pattern and the loss of the calcium binding protein calbindin-D28k in epileptic hippocampal granule cells. Using the perforated patch-clamp technique, we investigated granule cells in slices prepared from human hippocampi removed for the treatment of pharmacoresistant temporal lobe epilepsy. Granule cells in hippocampi without significant signs of structural damage (lesion group) displayed a firing pattern indistinguishable from that of rodent granule cells and were strongly labeled with anti-calbindin-D28k antibodies. In contrast, half of granule cells in sclerotic hippocampi (HS group) showed an altered firing pattern and a severe loss of calbindin-D28k. While these cells show passive membrane properties comparable to cells of the rodent and lesion group, they lack the medium afterhyperpolarization and display only a weak spike frequency adaptation. On the other hand, granule cells in the HS group have an increased action potential threshold and an enlarged fast afterhyperpolarization. Applying post-recording immunohistochemistry to individual electrophysiologically characterized granule cells, we show that the loss of calbindin-D28k is not causally related to any of the changes in firing pattern. Both alterations seem to occur during the course of temporal lobe epilepsy, with the firing pattern being affected earlier than the calbindin-D28k content. In conclusion, we propose that it is the combination of the altered intrinsic excitability of granule cells with the amplified and prolonged synaptic input from perforant path fibers previously described in the epileptic dentate area which promotes tonic, non-adapting, high frequency firing of granule cells and thereby strongly augments the excitability of the hippocampus.