Abstract
The bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) and its adrenergic input are key components in stress-induced reinstatement and maintenance of drug use. Intra-BNST injections of either β-adrenergic receptor (β-AR) antagonists or α2-adrenergic receptor (α2-AR) agonists can inhibit footshock-induced reinstatement and maintenance of cocaine- and morphine-seeking. Using electrophysiological recording methods in an in vitro slice preparation from C57/Bl6j adult male mouse BNST, we have examined the effects of adrenergic receptor activation on excitatory synaptic transmission in the lateral dorsal supracommissural BNST (dBNST) and subcommissural BNST (vBNST). α2-AR activation via UK-14,304 (10 μM) results in a decrease in excitatory transmission in both dBNST and vBNST, an effect predominantly dependent upon the α2A-AR subtype. β-AR activation via isoproterenol (1 μM) results in an increase in excitatory transmission in dBNST, but not in vBNST. Consistent with the work with receptor subtype specific agonists, application of the endogenous ligand norepinephrine (NE, 100 μM) elicits two distinct effects on glutamatergic transmission. In dBNST, NE elicits an increase in transmission (62% of dBNST NE experiments) or a decrease in transmission (38% of dBNST NE experiments). In vBNST, NE elicits a decrease in transmission in 100% of the experiments. In dBNST, the NE-induced increase in synaptic transmission is blocked by β1/β2- and β2-, but not β1-specific antagonists. In addition, this increase is also reduced by the α2-AR antagonist yohimbine and is absent in the α2A-AR knockout mouse. In vBNST, the NE-induced decrease in synaptic transmission is markedly reduced in the α2A-AR knockout mouse. Further experiments demonstrate that the actions of NE on glutamatergic transmission can be correlated with β-AR function.
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INTRODUCTION
Clinical studies indicate that stress is a key driving force in addiction, providing a strong stimulus for relapse to drug- and alcohol-seeking (Brown et al, 1995; Le et al, 2000; Sinha et al, 1999). Reinstatement of drug- and alcohol-seeking can be modeled in rodents using behavioral paradigms such as stress-induced reinstatement of both conditioned place preference (Wang et al, 2001) and self-administration (Shaham et al, 2000). The noradrenergic system in the brain is a key mediator of the stress response and plays a critical role in stress-induced reinstatement. Peripheral administration of blood–brain-barrier permeant, but not impermeant, α2-adrenergic receptor (α2-AR) agonists blocks footshock-induced reinstatement of heroin-seeking in rats (Erb et al, 2000). Further, lesioning the ventral noradrenergic bundle (VNAB), one of the two primary sources of NE in the brain, results in the inhibition of footshock-induced reactivation of morphine-seeking (Wang et al, 2001), as well as blockade of opiate withdrawal-induced conditioned place aversion (Delfs et al, 2000).
The anterolateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) is one of the major targets of the VNAB, receiving one of the densest noradrenergic inputs in the brain. Intra-BNST injection of β-AR antagonists or α2-AR agonists prevents morphine withdrawal-induced conditioned place aversion (Delfs et al, 2000) and also blocks stress-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking (Leri et al, 2002), as well as stress-induced reinstatement of morphine-conditioned place preference (Wang et al, 2001).
Comparatively few studies have examined the excitable properties of neurons within the BNST (Rainnie, 1999; Egli and Winder, 2003; Weitlauf et al, 2004), and even less is known of the mechanisms of noradrenergic regulation of the function of these neurons. Here we examine the noradrenergic innervation of adult mouse BNST as well as the effect of noradrenergic receptor activation on glutamatergic transmission recorded from an in vitro slice preparation of adult mouse BNST. We find that, consistent with the rat and primate literature (Freedman and Shi, 2001; Georges and Aston-Jones, 2001; Woulfe et al, 1990), the adrenergic innervation of the mouse anterolateral BNST is predominantly to the subcommissural, or ventral BNST (vBNST). Interestingly, we find two opposing actions of β2- and α2A-ARs on glutamatergic transmission: NE can enhance glutamatergic transmission, acting predominantly through the β2- and α2-ARs, as well as depress glutamatergic transmission via activation of the α2A-AR. In total, our data suggest a potential mechanism underlying the effects of administration of adrenergic ligands into the BNST on reinstatement of drug-seeking behavior.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animal Care
All animals were housed in the Vanderbilt Animal Care Facilities in groups of 2–5. Food and water were available ad libitum.
Immunofluorescence Detection of the NE Transporter in Brain Sections
The NE transporter (NET) 43 408 rabbit polyclonal antibody that has been previously described (Savchenko et al, 2003) detects a peptide sequence located in the second extracellular loop of mouse NET and was used for establishing noradrenergic fiber distribution in the dorsal and ventral BNST. The secondary antibody used was a donkey anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with CY3 (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, Inc., West Grove, PA, 1 : 1000); cells were counterstained with NeuroTrace 640/660 deep red-fluorescent Nissl (Molecular Probes Inc., Eugene, OR, 1 : 1000).
Adult C57B1/6 mice (Harlan, Indianapolis, IN) were used. Knockout mice, bearing a targeted deletion of the first coding exon of the NET gene, were provided by Dr Marc Caron (HHMI, Duke University School of Medicine). Mice were deeply anesthetized with Nembutal (80 mg/kg), heparinized (1000 U/kg), and transcardially perfused with saline containing heparin, followed by Prefer fixative (Anatech, Ltd, Battle Creek, MI). After perfusion for 30 min, brains were removed and immersed in fixative 4 h at room temperature and then cryoprotected in 30% sucrose overnight at 4°C. Floating frozen sections (20 μM) were cut into TRIS-buffered saline (TBS) using a sledge microtome (Leica Microsystems, Bannockburn, IL) and then incubated sequentially with primary antibody overnight and secondary antibodies 1 h at room temperature. Nonspecific binding was blocked by incubation in TBS containing 4% normal donkey serum (NDS; Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, Inc., West Grove, PA) and 0.2% Triton X-100 for 1 h prior to incubations with rabbit polyclonal NET 43408 antibody containing 2% NDS and 0.2% Triton X-100. Immunofluorescence was visualized using a Zeiss Axiovert S100 outfitted for fluorescence optics or a Zeiss Axioplan 2 confocal imaging system equipped with internal He/Ne and external Ar/Kr lasers (VUMC Cell Imaging Core Resource) with output at 568 (CY3) and 640 (CY5) nm. Z-Series images were collected by optical sectioning at intervals of 1 μm followed in some cases by 3D reconstruction. Image processing and montage assembly were performed using Adobe Photoshop.
Field Recording
Male C57Bl/6 mice (5–10 weeks old, The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME) were taken from the animal facilities and individually housed for 1 h prior to being anesthetized with isoflurane and killed via decapitation. The brains were quickly removed and placed in ice-cold artificial cerebro-spinal fluid (ACSF) (in mM: 124 NaCl, 4.4 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 1.2 MgSO4, 1 NaH2PO4, 10 glucose, and 26 NaHCO3). Slices containing the BNST (Bregma 0.26–0.14 mm (Franklin and Paxinos, 1997, Figure 1a) 350 μm in thickness were prepared using a vibratome (Ted Pella, Redding, CA). Slices were then transferred to a recording chamber where they were perfused with heated (∼28°C) oxygenated (95% O2/5% CO2) ACSF at a rate of 2 ml/min. Slices were allowed to equilibrate in normal ACSF for 1 h before experiments began. In all experiments, including the whole-cell patch and sharp intracellular recordings described below, after the 1 h recovery time the GABAAR antagonist picrotoxin (25 μM) was included in the bath to block inhibitory transmission. Recording electrodes were pulled on a Flaming-Brown Micropipette Puller (Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA) using thin-walled borosilicate glass capillaries. Electrodes were filled with ACSF and had resistances of approximately 1–3 MΩ. The recording electrode and a bipolar nichrome wire stimulating electrode were placed locally within the BNST ∼500 μm away from one another to elicit a local field response. A suitable response with distinguishable N1 and N2 components was found. The response was analyzed by measuring the amplitude of N2, the synaptic component of the response (Figure 2a, b). An input/output curve was obtained by administering a range of stimulation intensities, beginning with 3 V and increasing in increments of 2 V until the maximum amplitude response was obtained. The maximum stimulus intensity that was administered was 25 V. A stable baseline was obtained by delivering a stimulus at an intensity that evoked a response that was approximately half maximal once every 20 s for at least 20 min. Once a baseline was obtained, drug application experiments were performed as described. All drugs (except for picrotoxin, which was present in the bath ACSF at all times) were applied at a 10 × concentration at a 1/10 flow rate using a syringe pump (Harvard Apparatus, Holliston, MA). In pilot vehicle applications, we found that the slight increase in flow rate induced by this manner of drug application had no effect on basal responses (data not shown). Using dye, we estimate that drug solutions infuse the recording chamber ∼3–5 min after turning drug pump on.
Visualized Whole-Cell Patch Clamp Recording
Animals were prepared as described for field recordings with the following exceptions: after removal from the animal, the brain was placed in ice-cold low Na+/high sucrose ACSF (in mM: 194 sucrose, 30 NaCl, 4.5 KCl, 1.0 MgCl2, 1.2 NaH2PO4, 10 glucose, and 26 NaHCO3). Slices 300 μm in thickness were prepared using a vibratome (Leica Microsystems, Bannockburn, IL). Slices were then transferred to a submerged recording chamber where they were perfused with heated (∼28°C) oxygenated (95% O2/5% CO2) normal (non-sucrose) picrotoxin (25 μM) ACSF at a rate of 2 ml/min. Electrodes of ∼3.5–5.0 MΩ were pulled on a Flaming-Brown Micropipette Puller (Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA) and were filled with (in mM): 110.0 CsMeSO4, 20.0 CsCl, 10.0 HEPES, 0.6 EGTA, 2.5 MgCl2, 4.0 Na2ATP, 0.4 NaGTP and neurobiotin (0.2% w/v). Junction potential, as calculated using Clampex 9.2, was ∼12.7 mV, and is uncorrected in the data presented. All cells recorded from were held at −70 mV. Input resistance values ranged from 173–1114 MΩ (average±SEM: 408.5±89.1 MΩ). Series resistance values ranged from 3.0 to 21.6 MΩ. Excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) of 100–200 pA were recorded and input resistance, holding current, series resistance were all monitored continuously throughout the duration of the experiments. All drugs were bath-applied at their final concentrations. Based on dye experiments, we estimate that drug infuses the recording chamber within 2 min of switching to drug solution.
Intracellular Recording
Brain slices were prepared as described for field recordings, except that the ACSF flow rate in the interface chamber was 1.0–1.3 ml/min. Recording electrodes were pulled on a Flaming-Brown Micropipette Puller (Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA) using thick-walled filament-containing borosilicate glass capillaries. Electrodes were filled with 2 M potassium acetate and were of approximately 120–170 MΩ resistance. A current/voltage relationship from each cell was obtained by injecting a range of current via the recording electrode. A bipolar nichrome wire stimulating electrode was placed locally within the BNST ∼500 μm from the recording electrode. An input/output curve of synaptic responses was generated by stimulating with a range of input voltages with stimulus durations from 50 to 100 μs, starting at 3 V and increasing the stimulus in 2 V increments until the cell fired an action potential (AP). If the cell did not fire, the maximum stimulus intensity administered was 35 V. IR was monitored throughout the duration of the experiment by injecting a current pulse at the end of each stimulus test pulse. Drug delivery was performed as during field recording experiments.
Pharmacology
Propranolol, clonidine, picrotoxin, norepinephrine, UK-14,304, timolol, baclofen and isoproterenol were purchased from Sigma (St Louis, MO). Betaxolol and ICI-118,551 were purchased from Tocris (Ellisville, MO). DMSO was the carrier for picrotoxin (0.02% v/v), UK-14,304 and ICI-118,551 (0.1% v/v).
Data Analysis
Electrophysiological data was collected and analyzed using pClamp 9.0 software (Axon Instruments, Union City, CA). Field and whole-cell patch clamp synaptic transmission experiments were analyzed by measuring the peak amplitude of the synaptic response which was normalized and averaged across at least three experiments for each manipulation using Excel. Sharp microelectrode intracellular experiments were analyzed by measuring the slope of the synaptic response, which was normalized and averaged across at least three experiments using Excel. Statistical analyses (paired t-test, unless otherwise noted) were performed using Prizm and InStat software. All values given for drug effects throughout the paper are normalized and presented as average±SEM relative to predrug values. Predrug values for statistical analyses of field experiments were taken from the 5 min immediately preceding application of the drug. Postdrug values for adrenergic agonist experiments were taken at the peak effect of the drug for each individual experiment. For the dBNST NE experiments where the effect was a rise in transmission, this time point was a 5-min block beginning 4 min after NE application began. For experiments where NE caused a decrease in transmission (both dBNST and vBNST), this time point was a 5-min block beginning 9 min after NE application began. For the long-term depression time point in the dBNST NE-decrease experiments, a 5-min block beginning 30 min after NE application was terminated was used. For all dBNST antagonist co-application experiments, the postdrug effect values were taken from a 5-min period beginning 4 min after NE application began (the same time point as NE alone experiments), allowing comparison between effects of NE in the presence and absence of various adrenergic receptor antagonists. For all isoproterenol experiments, postdrug values were taken from a 5-min time period beginning 16 min after isoproterenol application began. Postdrug values for UK-14,304 field experiments were taken from a 5-min time period beginning 10 min after UK-14,304 application terminated. For analysis of patch-clamp experiments, predrug values were taken from the 5 min immediately preceding drug application. Postdrug values for UK-14,304 patch-clamp experiments were taken from a 5-min time period beginning immediately after drug application was terminated.
RESULTS
Distribution of NET-Positive Fibers
Previous studies in the rat and primate demonstrated that noradrenergic innervation of vBNST is significantly greater than dBNST (Freedman and Shi, 2001; Georges and Aston-Jones, 2001; Woulfe et al, 1990). To determine whether this pattern of innervation is conserved in the mouse, we used a previously characterized antibody generated against the norepinephrine transporter (NET) (Savchenko et al, 2003). NET immunoreactive fibers were observed in both the dorsal and ventral BNST in wild type (Figure 1b, c, e, f), but not NET-knockout mice (Figure 1d). Consistent with rat and primate data, the staining for NET was denser in vBNST (Figure 1f) than in dBNST (Figure 1e). Nissl counterstaining revealed dense cellular distribution in both dBNST and vBNST (Figure 1b).
BNST Extracellular Field Potential
To begin to study the effects of NE on glutamatergic synaptic transmission in the BNST, extracellular field potential recordings were obtained from acutely prepared BNST slices in an interface recording chamber. As previously reported (Weitlauf et al, 2004), this field potential has two negative peaks. The second peak, but not the first, is sensitive to the glutamatergic receptor antagonist CNQX (10 μM), indicating that the second peak is due to glutamatergic synaptic transmission (Figure 2a). Both peaks can be blocked using the Na+ channel blocker tetrodotoxin (TTX, 1 μM) (Figure 2b), suggesting that the first peak is due to axonal AP firing. These two peaks have been designated as N1 (the first negative peak) and N2 (the second negative peak) based on terminology from the striatal field potential literature (Cordingley and Weight, 1986; Malenka and Kocsis, 1988; Takagi and Yamamoto, 1978). Given the latency of the response and pharmacology indicating that the N2 peak is driven by glutamatergic receptor activation, the peak amplitude of the N2 was measured as an extracellular estimate of postsynaptic responses driven by excitatory glutamatergic synaptic transmission.
Single-Cell Analysis of Glutamatergic Transmission in Anterolateral BNST
In addition to utilizing extracellular recordings to assess the actions of adrenergic receptors on glutamatergic synaptic transmission, we also employed single-cell recording approaches. We found, as we previously reported (Egli and Winder, 2003), that robust AMPA-receptor mediated excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) could be recorded using sharp microelectrodes (Figure 4b, inset). Further, using whole-cell patch clamp recording techniques in the voltage clamp configuration, we could isolate EPSCs (Weitlauf et al, 2004; Figure 2c, d). The EPSCs were blocked by the AMPA receptor antagonist CNQX (data not shown), and, with correction for junction potential (∼12.7 mV), these EPSCs reversed very near 0 mV (Figure 2c), consistent with their mediation by ionotropic glutamate receptors and suggesting that reasonable voltage control is occurring. Finally, in current clamp recordings in the whole-cell patch clamp configuration, current–voltage relationships suggest that overlapping populations of neurons are sampled with the sharp microelectrode and whole-cell patch approaches, as, similar to the previous data (Egli and Winder, 2003), we find that many neurons sampled using whole-cell configuration in the dBNST express hyperpolarization-activated current activity, while many cells in the vBNST display a low threshold spike (Figure 2e, f).
α2A-AR Activation Decreases Excitatory Transmission
Using extracellular recordings, we find that 10–15-min bath application of the α2-AR agonist UK-14,304 (1–10 μM) elicited a marked decrease in N2 amplitude in both dBNST (10 μM, 10-min application: 41.7±7.7% of baseline, p<0.05, n=3, Figure 3a, black squares; 10 μM, 15-min application: 31.7±7.1%, p<0.05, n=6 (data not shown); 1 μM, 15-min application: 63.1±11.2%, p<0.05, n=6 (data not shown); and vBNST (10 μM, 10-min application, 42.5±5.7%, p<0.001, n=5, Figure 3b). Similar results were also seen using clonidine (1 μM), another α2-AR agonist (data not shown). To begin to determine the locus of α2-AR mediated effects on glutamatergic transmission, whole-cell patch clamp recordings were performed from dBNST and vBNST cells in slices from adult wild-type mice. Application of 1–10 μM UK-14,304 dramatically decreased the EPSC amplitude in both dBNST and vBNST similarly to that seen in extracellular field recordings (dBNST 21.5±3.7% of baseline, p<0.0001, n=5, Figure 3c, e; vBNST 33.2±7.3, p<0.05, n=4, Figure 3d). The decrease in glutamatergic transmission seen with UK-14,304 was associated with a significant increase in the PPF ratio in dBNST, consistent with a presynaptic effect on glutamatergic synaptic transmission (156.7±14.3%, p<0.05, inset Figure 3c). A modest but significant increase in input resistance accompanied the decrease in EPSC amplitude in dBNST (123.5±4.4% of predrug input resistance, p<0.05, data not shown), but there was no consistent change in holding current (data not shown). Curiously, in the vBNST recordings, no changes were observed in paired-pulse ratio (115±17% of predrug values, inset Figure 3d) or in input resistance (96±5% of predrug value, data not shown) although a trend towards an increased paired-pulse ratio was observed.
To determine the subtype of α2-AR involved in these responses, we assessed the effects of UK-14,304 on glutamatergic synaptic responses in BNST slices prepared from α2A-AR knockout mice. Bath application of 10 μM UK-14,304 resulted in no alteration of N2 amplitude in dBNST in α2A-AR knockout mice (102.2±3.5%, n=7, Figure 3a, white squares), indicating that the α2A-AR subtype is required for the bulk of the α2-AR mediated effects on glutamatergic synaptic responses in dorsal anterolateral BNST. The GABABR agonist baclofen (30 μM) elicited a robust reduction in the N2 (35.2±4.2% of baseline, p<0.05, data not shown), indicating that Gi/o-linked signaling still occurs in these mice. In vBNST, we assessed the actions of UK-14,304 on evoked EPSCs in the knockout mouse. As in the dBNST, the effect of UK-14,304 was dramatically reduced in slices prepared from knockout mouse, suggesting a predominant role for the α2A-AR (Figure 3d, f). Surprisingly, however, a small decrease in transmission was still observed in vBNST (24.6±5.1% depression; n=6, p<0.05, Figure 3d, f), suggesting the involvement of the α2B-AR and/or α2C-AR.
β-AR Activation Enhances Excitatory Transmission
Bath application of the β-AR agonist isoproterenol (1 μM) resulted in an increase in the N2 amplitude in dBNST (131.4.±8.9%, p<0.05, n=7, Figure 4a). To begin to determine the locus of action of isoproterenol in dBNST, we repeated the dBNST isoproterenol experiments using single-cell recording techniques. Using whole-cell patch voltage clamp recordings, activation of β-ARs via isoproterenol (1–10 μM) did not enhance the EPSC amplitude (data not shown). However, using sharp microelectrode recording methods, we observed an isoproterenol-induced increase in the EPSP slope (118.1±4.4%, p<0.05, n=7, Figure 4b). There was no significant concurrent change in paired-pulse facilitation (PPF) (Figure 4b, left inset), input resistance or resting membrane potential (data not shown). The reason for the lack of effect of isoproterenol in the whole-cell patch clamp experiments is unclear, although it is possible that dialysis of the intracellular contents of the postsynaptic cell may be responsible.
Interestingly, isoproterenol had no detectable effect on the N2 in vBNST (103.2±3.9%, n=7, Figure 4c). Application of the β-AR antagonist propranolol (10 μM, data not shown) had no effect on the N2 in vBNST, suggesting that the lack of effect of isoproterenol in vBNST was not due to high basal levels of β-AR activation. This lack of β-AR effect in vBNST suggests that functional β-ARs may be lacking in vBNST in the acute slice preparation.
NE Modulation of Excitatory Transmission in dBNST
Application of the endogenous ligand, NE, resulted in two separate and distinct effects on synaptic transmission in dBNST. In the majority of dBNST recordings (62.2%), NE application increased the amplitude of the N2 (154.7±5.2% of baseline, p<0.0001, n=23, Figure 5a). Interestingly, however, in a subset of recordings in dBNST (37.8%), NE elicited a long-lasting decrease in the N2 (initial decrease to 51.1±6.3% of baseline, longer lasting depression of 89.5±5.1% of baseline, p<0.05, n=14, Figure 5b).
To begin to determine the receptor subtypes responsible for these effects of NE on excitatory transmission, we assessed the effects of β-AR antagonists on the response produced. Consistent with the effects of isoproterenol on glutamatergic transmission, we found that the increase in the N2 produced by NE was at least in part mediated by the β2-AR. These experiments were performed using a combination of time-interleaved NE experiments across slices as well as dual NE application experiments within slices. Dual application of NE alone to field responses in dBNST led to comparable increases in the N2 during both applications (1st NE application: 148.5±11.6%, p<0.05, 2nd NE application: 133.2±8.1%, p<0.05, n=4, Figure 6a). Preapplication of timolol (β1- and β2-AR antagonist, 10 μM) resulted in a robust inhibition of the NE-induced increase in the N2 (109.7±4.6% of baseline, n=4, Figure 6b). Pretreatment with betaxolol (10 μM, specific β1-AR antagonist) had essentially no effect on the NE-induced increase in the N2 amplitude (169.8±14.9% of baseline, p<0.05, n=3, Figure 6c). It should be noted that this concentration of betaxolol was sufficient to block isoproterenol-induced phosphorylation of the GluR1 subunit of the AMPAR in hippocampal slices (Vanhoose and Winder, 2003). Pretreatment with ICI-118,551 (10 μM, specific β2-AR antagonist) blunted the increase in the N2 seen with NE to a similar degree as timolol (123.6±4.7% of baseline, p<0.05, n=3, Figure 6d).
In addition, we also assessed the effects of NE on the N2 in dBNST in slices prepared from the α2A-AR knockout mouse. Interestingly, we find that, in these slices, NE at a concentration of 100 μM has no detectable effect on the N2 (n=5), suggesting that this receptor participates both in the NE-induced depression of the N2 response and the enhancement of the N2 response (Figure 7a, b). Consistent with these data, in wild-type mouse dBNST preapplication of the α2-AR antagonist yohimbine (10 μM) also resulted in a marked inhibition of the NE-induced responses (117.0±9.2% of baseline, p=0.17 (compared to baseline), n=6, Figure 7c).
NE Modulation of Excitatory Transmission in vBNST
Surprisingly, in contrast to the multiple effects of NE seen in dBNST, in vBNST, application of NE only evoked a decrease in the N2 amplitude (62.2.±10.4% of baseline, p<0.05, n=5, Figure 8a). In vBNST field recordings from slices prepared from α2A-AR knockout mice, application of NE (100 μM) resulted in a much smaller, although still significant, effect on transmission (93.8±1.7%, p<0.05, n=6, Figure 8b).
NE Effect on the N2 in dBNST Depends on β-AR Activation
To begin to address what underlies the variability of the NE effect on glutamatergic transmission in dBNST, we have performed experiments to correlate the level of specific receptor activity with the NE effect. Based on the distinct responses to NE and isoproterenol between dBNST and vBNST, we hypothesized that variability in the participation of β2-ARs, which appear to be necessary for the NE-induced increase in the N2, may be at least partially responsible for the divergent responses to NE the we have recorded. In order to test this idea, we performed experiments in which NE was applied and then followed 40 min later with the β-AR agonist isoproterenol. In dBNST slices where NE decreased the N2, subsequent application of isoproterenol elicited only a small nonsignificant increase in the N2 amplitude (109.7±3.9%, n=5, Figure 9b). Conversely, when NE increased the N2, subsequent application of isoproterenol led to a robust increase in transmission (143.4±12.7%, p<0.05, n=4, Figure 9a). The NE effect and the magnitude of the isoproterenol effect are significantly correlated with one another (Pearson correlation analysis, r2=0.56, p<0.02, Figure 9c).
DISCUSSION
It is clear from the behavioral literature that intra-BNST actions of noradrenergic receptors are critical in mediating stress-induced reinstatement behavior; however, the mechanisms underlying these effects are unknown. We have shown that activation of ARs by either NE or specific noradrenergic receptor agonists can robustly modulate excitatory synaptic transmission in the BNST. We find that specific activation of the β-AR via isoproterenol results in an increase in transmission, while specific activation of the α2-AR via UK-14,304 results in a decrease in transmission. In addition, we find that NE can induce a β2- and α2-AR-mediated increase in glutamatergic synaptic transmission, an effect seen frequently in dBNST but never in vBNST. An NE-induced decrease in glutamatergic responses is seen less frequently in dBNST but is the only effect of NE observed on glutamatergic responses in vBNST. Additionally, we find that in slices where NE elicits an increase in glutamatergic responses, subsequent activation of the β-AR also elicits a robust increase in glutamatergic responses. However, in slices where NE elicits a decrease in glutamatergic responses, subsequent activation of the β-AR has very little effect, suggesting that the activity of the β-AR correlates with the effect of NE on excitatory transmission in BNST.
α2A- and β-AR Agonists Produce Opposing Regulation of Excitatory Synaptic Transmission
Intra-BNST injections of α2-AR agonists block stress-induced reinstatement to drug-seeking (Delfs et al, 2000; Wang et al, 2001). We have shown that activation of α2-ARs by specific α2-AR agonists results in a decrease in excitatory transmission in both dBNST and vBNST. Further, in slices prepared from α2A-AR knockout mice, UK-14,304 had no effect on transmission in dBNST suggesting a subtype specificity of this effect for the α2A-AR. In vBNST, a modest response remained, suggesting the additional potential involvement of α2B and/or α2C receptors. Further experiments will be required to examine this hypothesis, but these data suggest that inhibition of glutamatergic transmission in BNST by α2A-AR activation may be one potential mechanism by which α2-AR agonists may mediate effects on behavior.
Similar to injections of α2-AR agonists, intra-BNST injections of β-AR antagonists also prevent stress-induced reinstatement to drug-seeking (Delfs et al, 2000; Leri et al, 2002). We have demonstrated that application of both the β-AR agonist isoproterenol as well as NE can elicit an increase in glutamatergic responses in dBNST, but not vBNST. The increase in glutamatergic transmission we see in response to NE is mediated primarily by the β2-AR. This is surprising since in other brain regions noradrenergic enhancement of transmission is mediated by the β1-AR (Pisani et al, 2003; Winder et al, 1999). As the β2-AR undergoes ligand binding-induced desensitization more readily than both the β1- and the α2-ARs (Atkinson and Minneman, 1992; Suzuki et al, 1992), the specificity of increasing transmission with the β2-AR in BNST may provide a protective mechanism against overstimulation of adrenergic signaling by reducing availability of the β2-AR while maintaining the α2-AR, which will further decrease glutamatergic input to the BNST. At present, it is unclear by what mechanism β2-AR activation regulates excitatory transmission. Since the enhancement of excitatory transmission was not observed under the whole-cell patch clamp recording configuration, one possibility is that this represents a postsynaptic action of isoproterenol. Dialysis of critical postsynaptic contents or the replacement of potassium with cesium in the electrode filling solution are potential explanations consistent with this idea.
NE Both Enhances and Depresses Excitatory Transmission in BNST
Similar to the effects of specific agonists of noradrenergic receptors, we find that application of the endogenous agonist NE can both enhance and depress glutamatergic transmission. In vBNST, only depression was observed. This depression was markedly reduced in the α2A-AR knockout mouse and was mimicked by α2A-AR specific agonists, suggesting that it is mediated primarily via the α2A-AR, and to some degree the α2B and/or α2C-ARs.
In the dBNST, both augmentation and depression of glutamatergic transmission by NE was observed. As mentioned above, the augmentation was markedly reduced by β2-AR antagonists. In addition, we also found that a correlation may be drawn between the effect of NE and the effect of isoproterenol, suggesting that the functional state of the β-AR may mediate the NE modulation of excitatory transmission in BNST. In slices where NE elicited an increase in transmission in dBNST, subsequent application of isoproterenol resulted in a substantial and long-lasting increase in transmission, whereas in slices where NE resulted in a decrease in transmission, subsequent application of isoproterenol had very little to no effect. These data suggest that these different responses to NE in dBNST are tied to the functional state of the β-AR. Multiple mechanisms could regulate the functional state of this receptor, and future studies will need to focus on this issue.
Surprisingly, we also found that α2-ARs contribute to the augmentation of glutamatergic transmission in dBNST. First, we found that the α2-AR antagonist yohimbine reduced the enhancing action of NE in dBNST. Second, we found that this augmentation was not observed in α2A-AR knockout mice. Several pieces of data suggest that the α2-AR enhances glutamatergic transmission by an interaction with β-ARs. First, enhancement of glutamatergic transmission was not observed to a significant degree with α2-AR agonists alone, either in extracellular or intracellular recordings. Second, NE does not enhance glutamatergic transmission in slices in which β-AR agonists fail to enhance transmission. These findings are reminiscent of other examples in the literature where Gi/o-linked receptors have been shown to facilitate the actions of Gs-linked receptors, such as was recently shown for D1 and D2 dopamine receptors in the nucleus accumbens (Hopf et al, 2003), and the α2-AR and β-AR in hippocampus (Andrade, 1993).
CONCLUSIONS
Our data suggest that NE in the BNST can have variable effects on BNST function, which is consistent with the current field of literature. As measured by in vivo microdialysis, NE elicits a decrease in extracellular glutamate levels in the BNST (Forray et al, 1999). In in vivo single-unit extracellular recordings from anesthetized rats, NE application results in a variety of effects on BNST neuron firing rates, with the majority of cells recorded from undergoing a decrease in firing rate and a smaller subset undergoing an increase in firing rate (Casada and Dafny, 1993). Additionally, early extracellular recordings from BNST slices showed that NE leads to an α2-AR mediated decrease in a field potential (Matsui and Yamamoto, 1984). We have extended these findings and have shown that NE can elicit qualitatively distinct actions on evoked excitatory synaptic transmission in BNST. In future studies, it will be important to determine whether variability of the β2-adrenergic receptor responses reported reflects cellular variability within the BNST, which is a heterogeneous cell population.
Behavioral data indicate that α2- and β-ARs within the anterolateral BNST play opposing roles in regulating stress–drug abuse interactions (Delfs et al, 2000; Leri et al, 2002; Wang et al, 2001). Here we show at the cellular level in the BNST that a similar antagonistic relationship between these two receptors exists in modulating glutamatergic input to BNST neurons. β-AR activation increases the effects of glutamatergic drive onto BNST neurons, likely increasing BNST output, while α2-AR activation decreases this drive and likely decreases BNST output. The BNST projects both to stress and reward centers of the brain (Cullinan et al, 1993; Dong and Swanson, 2004; Georges and Aston-Jones, 2002), and the data presented here suggest that norepinephrine can modulate excitatory transmission within the BNST and therefore its output, which may provide a potential mechanism by which noradrenergic receptor ligands can regulate behavioral stress–drug interactions.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by an NIAAA INIA pilot grant (U01-AA13541) and Whitehall Foundation (DGW), DA16456 (REE), MH58921 (RDB, VS). We would also like to thank Dr's Lee Limbird and Brian Kobilka for generous donation of the α2A-AR knockout mice, Dr Marc Caron for the NET knockout mice, and Amanda Vanhoose for reading previous versions of this manuscript.
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Egli, R., Kash, T., Choo, K. et al. Norepinephrine Modulates Glutamatergic Transmission in the Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis. Neuropsychopharmacol 30, 657–668 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.npp.1300639
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.npp.1300639
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