I. Medina et al., CALCIUM-INDUCED INACTIVATION OF NMDA RECEPTOR-CHANNELS EVOLVES INDEPENDENTLY OF RUN-DOWN IN CULTURED RAT-BRAIN NEURONS, Journal of physiology, 495(2), 1996, pp. 411-427
1. Calcium-induced transient inactivation of NMDA receptor (NMDAR) cha
nnels was studied in cultured rat hippocampal and cerebellar granule n
eurones using patch-clamp techniques and confocal scanning microscopy.
2. During whole-cell recordings, in the presence of 2 mM external Ca2
+, conditioning (2-20 s) pulses of NMDA (20-100 mu M) caused a transie
nt decrease in NMDA responses. Recovery developed in two phases with t
ime constants of 0 . 6 and 40 s. The slow phase of the recovery could
be prevented either by strong intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+](i)) buffering
with 30 mM BAPTA or by using Ca2+-free extracellular solution. 3. Sim
ultaneous measurement of currents and Ca2+-dependent fluorescence reve
aled a close correlation between the time constants of [Ca2+](i) decay
and the slow component-of NMDA-activated test current recovery. 4. Du
ring prolonged recordings, the transient inactivation was not related
to irreversible NMDA-activated current run-down. After 25 min of recor
ding with ATP-free intracellular solution, NMDA-activated currents in
hippocampal neurones irreversibly decreased by 49 +/- 5% while inactiv
ation decreased by 8% (n = 9). Calyculin A and FK-506 (phosphatase inh
ibitors) significantly delayed run-down but-did not modulate the trans
ient inactivation. 5. In cerebellar granule cells that did not show ru
n-down (4 mM MgATP in the pipette) the percentage of transient inactiv
ation strongly decreased during 25 min of recording (from 28 +/- 6 to
7 +/- 5%, n = 15). 6. In cell-attached recordings (5 mu M NMDA in the
pipette), elevation of [Ca2+](i) (application of 100 mu M NMDA to the
soma) caused a reversible reduction of single NMDAR channel open proba
bility (NPo) due to a decrease in the frequency of channel opening. 7.
In inside-out patches, application of Ca2+ to the cytoplasmic side of
the membrane caused a rapid and reversible decrease in NPo (13 out of
29 patches). In the absence of run-down, the ability of Ca2+ to trans
iently inhibit NMDAR channel activity disappeared after 3-5 min of rec
ording. 8. These results indicate that Ca2+-induced transient inactiva
tion of NMDAR currents develops independently from the run-down and su
ggest that a diffusible Ca2+-dependent factor mediates NMDAR channel i
nactivation.