Human neutrophils or HL60 cells express P2U receptors and respond to micromolar concentrations of ATP, adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (ATPgammaS), or UTP with immediate increases in intracellular Ca2+ through activation of phosphoinositide phospholipase C (Cowen, D. S., Lazarus, H. M., Shurin, S. B., Stoll, S. E., and Dubyak, G. R. (1989) J. Clin. Invest. 83, 1651-1660). P2U agonists reportedly induce limited enzyme secretion and enhance the respiratory burst in response to chemotactic factors. We demonstrate here that P2U agonists are chemotactic for neutrophils or differentiated HL60 cells. Rhodamine phalloidin staining indicates that ATPgammaS treatment induces actin polymerization and shape changes similar to those seen when these cells are treated with chemotactic peptide fMet-Leu-Phe. Although undifferentiated HL60 cells fail to mount a rise in Ca2+ when challenged with fMet-Leu-Phe, they increase Ca2+ in response to P2U agonists. However, functional expression of phospholipase C-coupled receptors is not sufficient for chemotaxis since HL60 cell migration in response to these agonists or to fMet-Leu-Phe occurs only after exposure to differentiating agents such as BT2cAMP. In addition to the well known G protein-linked receptors for lipid or peptide chemotactic factors, neutrophils apparently also can utilize G protein-linked purino/pyrimidino receptors to recognize nucleotides as chemoattractants. High concentrations of ATP and UTP generated at sites of platelet aggregation and tissue injury could thus be important mediators of inflammation.
1. Excitatory inputs from CA3 pyramidal cells to dentate basket cells were examined using the whole-cell recording technique in neonatal (10-16 days) 6. Raising the external potassium concentration from 3-5 to 8-5 mm, which elicited burst firing in CA3 pyramidal cells, resulted in a barrage of EPSCs and action potentials in basket cells. In contrast, granule cells neither fired action potentials nor exhibited increased EPSC frequency in elevated potassium but instead received a higher frequency of bicuculline-sensitive IPSCs, consistent with interneuron firing. The CA3 pyramidal cell to basket cell monosynaptic pathway exhibited paired-pulse facilitation as manifested by an increased probability of release, which supports the idea that basket cells were better activated by short trains of action potentials than by single inputs.
To characterize excitatory inputs to dentate basket cells from dentate granule cells and the perforant path, the whole-cell recording technique was used in neonatal rat hippocampal slices. Spontaneous excitatory input to basket cells was also examined and compared to that of other interneurons in the dentate gyrus. Basket cells were separable from other neurons in the dentate gyrus based on morphology and location, as determined by biocytin staining following recording, and by resting membrane potential, propensity to fire action potentials spontaneously, and miniature excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) characteristics. Minimal electrical stimulation of the granule cell layer evoked in basket cells short latency EPSCs that were composed of both N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionate (AMPA) components as judged by their time course, voltage dependence, and blockade by selective antagonists. Perforant path EPSCs exhibited slower kinetics than EPSCs evoked by granule cell stimulation. Like granule cell evoked EPSCs, however, perforant path EPSCs were composed of both NMDA and AMPA components. Minimal electrical stimulation of the granule cell layer and perforant path evoked monosynaptic EPSCs in only 67% and 62% of the trials, respectively, suggesting that these inputs are as unreliable as previously determined inputs from CA3 pyramidal cells (48%). Tetrodotoxin-insensitive spontaneous miniature EPSCs were frequent in basket cells and non-basket interneurons residing either at the border between the granule cell layer and the hilus or deep within the hilus. Miniature EPSCs recorded from all cells held at -70 mV were blocked completely by 3 microM 6-cyano-7-nitro-quinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX). Though a component of the miniature EPSCs recorded from border and deep hilar interneurons at +40 mV was blocked by the NMDA receptor antagonist D-2-amino-phosphonovaleric acid (D-APV), miniature EPSCs in basket cells were insensitive to D-APV. We conclude that input from granule cells and the perforant path results in activation of basket cells via glutamatergic synapses that employ both NMDA and AMPA receptors. These inputs to basket cells likely contribute to feedback and feedforward inhibition of granule cells. The absence of an NMDA receptor component in spontaneous miniature EPSCs of dentate basket cells implies a difference in organization of excitatory synapses made onto basket cells compared with other hilar interneurons.
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