4.7 Article

NMDA receptor contribution to the climbing fiber response in the adult mouse Purkinje cell

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 27, Issue 40, Pages 10797-10809

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2422-07.2007

Keywords

Purkinje cell; cerebellum; development; climbing fiber; complex spike; NMDA

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Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [NS34309, R01 NS034309] Funding Source: Medline

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Among integrative neurons displaying long-term synaptic plasticity, adult Purkinje cells seemed to be an exception by lacking functional NMDA receptors ( NMDA-Rs). Although numerous anatomical studies have shown both NR1 and NR2 NMDA-R subunits in adult Purkinje cells, patch-clamp studies failed to detect any NMDA currents. Using more recent pharmacological and immunodetection tools, we demonstrate here that Purkinje cells from adult mice respond to exogenous NMDA application and that postsynaptic NMDA-Rs carry part of the climbing fiber-mediated EPSC ( CF-EPSC), with undetectable contribution from presynaptic or polysynaptic NMDA currents. We also detect NR2-A/B subunits in adult Purkinje cells by immunohistochemistry. The NMDA-mediated CF-EPSC is barely detectable before 3 weeks postnatal. From the end of the third week, the number of cells displaying the NMDA-mediated CF-EPSC rapidly increases. Soon, this EPSC becomes detectable in all the Purkinje cells but is still very small. Its amplitude continues to increase until 12 weeks after birth. In mature Purkinje cells, we show that the NMDA-Rs contribute to the depolarizing plateau of complex spikes and increase their number of spikelets. Together, these observations demonstrate that mature Purkinje cells express functional NMDA receptors that become detectable in CF-EPSCs at similar to 21 d after birth and control the complex spike waveform.

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