Ionotropic GABA A receptors are heteromeric structures composed of a combination of five from at least 16 different subunits. Subunit genes are expressed in distinct cell types at specific times during development. The most abundant native GABA A receptors consist of α1-, β2-, and γ2-subunits that are co-expressed in numerous brain areas. α3-, θ-, And ε-subunits are clustered on the X chromosome and show striking overlapping expression patterns throughout the adult rat brain. To establish whether these subunits are temporally and spatially co-expressed, we used in situ hybridization to analyze their expression throughout rat development from embryonic stage E14 to postnatal stage P12. Each transcript exhibited a unique or a shared regional and temporal developmental expression profile. The thalamic expression pattern evolved from a restricted expression of ε and θ transcripts before birth, to a θ and α3 expression at birth, and finally to a grouped ε, θ and α3 expression post-partum. However, strong similarities occurred, such as a grouped expression of the three subunits within the hypothalamus, tegmentum and pontine nuclei throughout the developmental process. At early stages of development (E17), ε and θ appeared to have a greater spatial distribution before the dominance of the α3 subunit transcript around birth. We also revealed expression of α3, θ, and ε in the developing spinal cord and identified neurons that express ε in the post-natal dorsal horn, intermediolateral column and motoneurons. Our findings suggest that various combinations of α3-, θ-and ε-subunits may be assembled at a regional and developmental level in the brain.
Keywordsneuroepithelium; cortex; hindbrain; motoneurons; intermediolateral columnThe physiological actions of GABA, the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the adult CNS, are mediated by the activation of ionotropic and metabotropic receptors (Sieghart, 2000). Ionotropic GABA A receptors are heteropentameric structures generated by coassembly of α1-6, β1-3, γ1-3, ε, θ and π subunits (Sieghart, 1995;Hevers and Luddens, 1998). Many studies have demonstrated that the subunit composition determines both functional