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Gaba Release

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GABA release

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with GABA release across World Wide.
4 curated items3 Seminars1 ePoster
Updated almost 3 years ago
4 items · GABA release
4 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Cortical seizure mechanisms: insights from calcium, glutamate and GABA imaging

Dimitri Kullmann
University College London
Jan 17, 2023

Focal neocortical epilepsy is associated with intermittent brief population discharges (interictal spikes), which resemble sentinel spikes that often occur at the onset of seizures. Why interictal spikes self-terminate whilst seizures persist and propagate is incompletely understood, but is likely to relate to the intermittent collapse of feed-forward GABAergic inhibition. Inhibition could fail through multiple mechanisms, including (i) an attenuation or even reversal of the driving force for chloride in postsynaptic neurons because of intense activation of GABAA receptors, (ii) an elevation of potassium secondary to chloride influx leading to depolarization of neurons, or (iii) insufficient GABA release from interneurons. I shall describe the results of experiments using fluorescence imaging of calcium, glutamate or GABA in awake rodent models of neocortical epileptiform activity. Interictal spikes were accompanied by brief glutamate transients which were maximal at the initiation site and rapidly propagatedcentrifugally. GABA transients lasted longer than glutamate transients and were maximal ~1.5 mm from the focus. Prior to seizure initiation GABA transients were attenuated, whilst glutamate transients increased, consistent with a progressive failure of local inhibitory restraint. As seizures increased in frequency, there was a gradual increase in the spatial extent of spike-associated glutamate transients associated with interictal spikes. Neurotransmitter imaging thus reveals a progressive collapse of an annulus of feed-forward GABA release, allowing runaway recruitment of excitatory neurons as a fundamental mechanism underlying the escape of seizures from local inhibitory restraint.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Disinhibitory and neuromodulatory regulation of hippocampal synaptic plasticity

Inês Guerreiro
Gutkin lab, Ecole Normale Superieure
Jul 27, 2021

The CA1 pyramidal neurons are embedded in an intricate local circuitry that contains a variety of interneurons. The roles these interneurons play in the regulation of the excitatory synaptic plasticity remains largely understudied. Recent experiments showed that repeated cholinergic activation of 𝛼7 nACh receptors expressed in oriens-lacunosum-moleculare (OLM𝛼2) interneurons could induce LTP in SC-CA1 synapses. We used a biophysically realistic computational model to examine mechanistically how cholinergic activation of OLMa2 interneurons increases SC to CA1 transmission. Our results suggest that, when properly timed, activation of OLMa2 interneurons cancels the feedforward inhibition onto CA1 pyramidal cells by inhibiting fast-spiking interneurons that synapse on the same dendritic compartment as the SC, i.e., by disinhibiting the pyramidal cell dendritic compartment. Our work further describes the pairing of disinhibition with SC stimulation as a general mechanism for the induction of synaptic plasticity. We found that locally-reduced GABA release (disinhibition) paired with SC stimulation could lead to increased NMDAR activation and intracellular calcium concentration sufficient to upregulate AMPAR permeability and potentiate the excitatory synapse. Our work suggests that inhibitory synapses critically modulate excitatory neurotransmission and induction of plasticity at excitatory synapses. Our work also shows how cholinergic action on OLM interneurons, a mechanism whose disruption is associated with memory impairment, can down-regulate the GABAergic signaling into CA1 pyramidal cells and facilitate potentiation of the SC-CA1 synapse.

SeminarNeuroscience

A novel hypothesis on the role of olfactory bulb granule cells

Veronica Egger
University of Regensburg
Nov 25, 2020

The role of granule cells in olfactory processing is surrounded by several enigmatic observations, such as the existence of reciprocal spines and the mechanisms for GABA release from them, the missing evidence for functional reciprocal connectivity, and the apparently low inhibitory drive of granule cells, both with respect to recurrent and lateral inhibition. Here, I summarize recent results with regard to GABA release, leading to a novel hypothesis on granule cell function that has the potential to resolve most of these enigmas. I predict that granule cells provide dynamically switched lateral inhibition between coactive glomerular columns and thus possibly a means of olfactory combinatorial coding.

ePoster

Genetically encoded iGABASnFR2 variants for imaging GABA release at a single synapse level in vitro and in vivo

Olga Kopach, Thomas P. Jensen, Jonathan S. Marvin, Loren L. Looger, Jeremy P. Hasseman, Ilya Kolb, Dmitri A. Rusakov

FENS Forum 2024