4.4 Article

Postnatal maturation of GABAergic transmission in the rat basolateral amygdala

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 110, Issue 4, Pages 926-941

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.01105.2012

Keywords

amygdala; GABA(A) receptor; development; chloride transporter; parvalbumin

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [MH-069852, RR-00165, MH-090729]

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Many psychiatric disorders, including anxiety and autism spectrum disorders, have early ages of onset and high incidence in juveniles. To better treat and prevent these disorders, it is important to first understand normal development of brain circuits that process emotion. Healthy and maladaptive emotional processing involve the basolateral amygdala (BLA), dysfunction of which has been implicated in numerous psychiatric disorders. Normal function of the adult BLA relies on a fine balance of glutamatergic excitation and GABAergic inhibition. Elsewhere in the brain GABAergic transmission changes throughout development, but little is known about the maturation of GABAergic transmission in the BLA. Here we used whole cell patch-clamp recording and single-cell RT-PCR to study GABAergic transmission in rat BLA principal neurons at postnatal day (P) 7, P14, P21, P28, and P35. GABA(A) currents exhibited a significant twofold reduction in rise time and nearly 25% reduction in decay time constant between P7 and P28. This corresponded with a shift in expression of GABA(A) receptor subunit mRNA from the alpha 2- to the alpha 1-subunit. The reversal potential for GABA(A) receptors transitioned from depolarizing to hyperpolarizing with age, from around -55 mV at P7 to -70 mV by P21. There was a corresponding shift in expression of opposing chloride pumps that influence the reversal, from NKCC1 to KCC2. Finally, we observed short-term depression of GABA(A) postsynaptic currents in immature neurons that was significantly and gradually abolished by P28. These findings reveal that in the developing BLA GABAergic transmission is highly dynamic, reaching maturity at the end of the first postnatal month.

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