H. Gotani et al., POTENTIATION OF EXCITATORY POSTSYNAPTIC POTENTIALS BY A METABOTROPIC GLUTAMATE-RECEPTOR AGONIST (1S,3R-ACPD) IN FROG SPINAL MOTONEURONS, Brain research, 689(2), 1995, pp. 281-288
We conducted intracellular recordings of lumbar motoneurons in the art
erially-perfused frog spinal cord and investigated the effects of a me
tabotropic glutamate receptor agonist, (1S,3R)-1-aminocyclopentane-1,3
-dicarboxylic acid (ACPD), on excitatory postsynaptic potentials evoke
d by stimulation of the descending lateral column fibers (LC-EPSPs). i
n the absence of Mg2+, ACPD reversibly potentiated the amplitude of mo
nosynaptic LC-EPSPs by more than 15% in 15 of 19 cells with 5 mu M ACP
D and in 7 of 12 cells with 0.5 mu M ACPD. The EPSP amplitudes with 5
and 0.5 mu M ACPD were 142 +/- 10% (mean +/- S.E.M., n = 19) and 130 /- 13% (n = 12) of the controls. The potentiation was seen without a d
ecrease in the input conductance. Glutamate-induced depolarizations in
the absence and the presence of 0.5 mu M ACPD were not significantly
different in cells perfused with the low Ca2+-high Mg2+ solution which
eliminated chemical transmission. Paired pulse facilitation of LC-EPS
Ps was reversibly decreased in association with the potentiation. ACPD
-induced potentiation of monosynaptic LC-EPSPs was seen in 5 of 6 cell
s in the presence of D-(-)-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (D-AP5),
an NMDA receptor antagonist. ACPD occasionally activated polysynaptic
components of LC-EPSPs which were mediated mainly via NMDA receptors.
On the other hand, ACPD-induced potentiation of EPSPs was inhibited by
extracellular Mg2+. Five mu M ACPD potentiated monosynaptic EPSPs in
4 of 6 cells with 1 mM Mg2+ in the solution and in 2 of 17 cells with
4 mM Mg2+, and the EPSP amplitude was 123 +/- 9% (n = 6) and 98 +/- 3%
(n = 17) of those before application of ACPD, respectively. These res
ults suggest that activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors poten
tiates LC-EPSPs via mechanisms sensitive to Mg2+ and may work as a pos
itive feedback mechanism at the excitatory amino acid-mediated synapse
s between the descending fibers and lumbar spinal motoneurons.