The amperometric technique measures dopamine release from a single cell by detecting the oxidative current produced by spontaneous dopamine oxidization. Simultaneous voltage clamp and amperometry methodology reveal the mechanistic relationship between the overall “activity” of dopamine transporter and the regulatory role of this activity on the reverse transport of dopamine.
After its release into the synaptic cleft, dopamine exerts its biological properties via its pre- and post-synaptic targets1. The dopamine signal is terminated by diffusion2-3, extracellular enzymes4, and membrane transporters5. The dopamine transporter, located in the peri-synaptic cleft of dopamine neurons clears the released amines through an inward dopamine flux (uptake). The dopamine transporter can also work in reverse direction to release amines from inside to outside in a process called outward transport or efflux of dopamine5. More than 20 years ago Sulzer et al. reported the dopamine transporter can operate in two modes of activity: forward (uptake) and reverse (efflux)5. The neurotransmitter released via efflux through the transporter can move a large amount of dopamine to the extracellular space, and has been shown to play a major regulatory role in extracellular dopamine homeostasis6. Here we describe how simultaneous patch clamp and amperometry recording can be used to measure released dopamine via the efflux mechanism with millisecond time resolution when the membrane potential is controlled. For this, whole-cell current and oxidative (amperometric) signals are measured simultaneously using an Axopatch 200B amplifier (Molecular Devices, with a low-pass Bessel filter set at 1,000 Hz for whole-cell current recording). For amperometry recording a carbon fiber electrode is connected to a second amplifier (Axopatch 200B) and is placed adjacent to the plasma membrane and held at +700 mV. The whole-cell and oxidative (amperometric) currents can be recorded and the current-voltage relationship can be generated using a voltage step protocol. Unlike the usual amperometric calibration, which requires conversion to concentration, the current is reported directly without considering the effective volume7. Thus, the resulting data represent a lower limit to dopamine efflux because some transmitter is lost to the bulk solution.
1. Equipment and Supplies
2. Prepare Electrodes for Recording
3. Prepare the Primary Neuronal Culture of Dopamine Neurons or Cells Engineered to Express Dopamine Transporter in Glass Bottom Petri Dishes
4. Visualize Cell and Perform Experiment
Combined patch clamp with amperometry can measure voltage-dependent DAT-mediated DA efflux. Figure 2A shows a representative experimental configuration and recording of DAT-mediated DA efflux when the intracellular milieu and the membrane potential are clamped by a whole-cell patch pipette. Using this technique, cells expressing YFP-DAT proteins are voltage-clamped with a whole cell patch pipette while an amperometric electrode is placed onto the plasma membrane (Figure 2A). The whole cell electrode is filled with a pipette solution containing 2 mM DA. The amperometric electrode touching the plasma membrane is held at +700 mV, a potential greater than the redox potential of DA. DAT-mediated currents (whole-cell-Figure 2C and amperometric-Figure 2D) are recorded by stepping the whole-cell pipette to a membrane voltage between -60 and +100 mV from a holding potential of -40 mV (Figure 2B). To determine the specific DAT-mediated DA efflux, amperometric currents can be recorded in the absence and presence of a DAT antagonist. The DAT-mediated amperometric current is then determined by subtracting the traces recorded in the presence of DAT antagonist from amperometric traces recorded without antagonist. An upward deflection (positive deflection, Figure 2D) in the amperometric currents corresponds to an outward flux of DA. Moving the carbon fiber away from the patch causes the oxidative response to become smaller and slower. As expected for DA oxidation, the oxidative response decreases when the carbon fiber voltage is reduced to +300 mV and will disappear completely on further reduction. Figure 2E-2F are representative of acceptable and unacceptable recordings. Figure 2E is an example of a tight GΩ whole-cell seal and the corresponding amperometric signal. Figure 2F represents a leaky whole-cell patch. The corresponding amperometric recording measures leaked DA.
Figure 1. Preparation and assembly of amperometric electrode. Gently remove a ProCFE low noise carbon fiber amperometric electrode from the storage box, fill with mercury. Prepare the adaptor by threading the silver wire into the patch clamp holder, then thread the adaptor onto the patch clamp holder and gently mount the amperometric electrode. The tip of the carbon fiber should not touch anything.
Figure 2. Representative whole-cell and amperometric recording at multiple voltages when the patch pipette is in whole-cell configuration. (A) Cartoon illustrating the experimental configuration. Cells expressing dopamine transporter were voltage clamped with a whole-cell patch pipette while an amperometric electrode was placed near the cell membrane. The oxidation of DA results in a positive amperometric current. (B) Illustration of voltage clamp waveform protocol. (C) DAT-mediated currents recorded by stepping the membrane voltage between -60 and +100 mV from a holding potential of -40 mV with the whole-cell pipette. The pipette solution contained 2 mM dopamine, as described previously7-9. (D) The amperometric current acquired simultaneously with the whole-cell current represented in panel C (above). At the start of the voltage step, for voltages higher than +20 mV, the amperometric electrode records an oxidation current (positive) that increased during the entire duration of the voltage step. (E) and (F) are representative of acceptable and unacceptable whole-cell patch clamp experiments, respectively. Figure 2E is an example of a tight GΩ whole-cell seal and the corresponding amperometric signal. Figure 2F represents a leaky whole-cell patch. The seal resistance reached the MΩ range instead of GΩ prior or after breaking into the cell to achieve whole-cell mode. The corresponding amperomtric recording measures leaked DA. Click here to view larger figure.
Simultaneous voltage-clamp and amperometry has the following benefits. All cell types are accessible and can be used for recording. The identification of the cells or neuron where the recordings are done is simple and straightforward. In particular, if the cell is fluorescently labeled by adding a fluorescent tag to the protein of interest the experimenter can easily select the target cell or neuron. The experimental configuration allows uniform and controlled delivery of pharmacological agents either via the patch pipette, or by addition of these agents to the bath solution10. The simultaneous patch clamp amperometry technique allows investigation of the role of different channels and transporters on the release of oxidizable transmitter with millisecond time resolution while the membrane potential is controlled. The same information cannot be obtained through biochemical methods8. One of the unique aspects of this approach is that it allows manipulation of the intracellular environment by dialysis via the patch pipette7,11. However, this technique has the disadvantage that the amperometric electrode can detect only oxidizable transmitters. In addition, the sensitivity of the amperometric electrode decreases in the presence of substantial basal, spontaneous release of an oxidizable compound; thus, measurement of the release after, for example, preloading of an oxidizable compound that is spontaneously released can produce a decrease in the oxidative current. The main disadvantage of this technique is the requirement of technical expertise and expensive equipment.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank Dr. Sanika Chirwa for critical review of this manuscript. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (DA026947, DA021471, and NS071122).
Equipment | |||
Anti-vibration table w/faraday cage | Technical Manufacturing Corporation | 63-500 series | we use model 63-543 |
Inverted microscope Nikon TE-2000 | Nikon | discontinued | now Eclipse Ti |
Two low noise amplifiers axopatch 200b | Molecular Devices | 800-635-5577 | |
1-CV 203 BU headstage | Molecular Devices | 800-635-5578 | |
1-HL-U pipette holder | Molecular Devices | 800-635-5579 | |
Digidata 1440A A/D converter | Molecular Devices | 800-635-5580 | |
Two manipulators Siskyou, left and right handed | Siskiyou | MX6600R MX6600L | 877-313-6418 |
Laser pipette puller | Sutter Instruments | P-2000 | 888-883-0128 |
Low noise carbon fiber amperometric electrode | ProCFE | www.dagan.com | |
Low noise quartz pipette | Sutter Instruments | QF100-70-7.5 | 888-883-0128 |
12-volt car battery | widely available | ||
Car battery charger | widely available | ||
Reagent | |||
Sodium chloride (NaCl) | Sigma | S7653 | |
HEPES | Sigma | H3375 | |
Dextrose | Sigma | G7528 | |
Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) | Sigma | M2643 | |
Potassium phosphate monobasic (KH2PO4) | Sigma | P5655 | |
Potassium chloride (KCl) | Sigma | P9333 | |
Calcium chloride dihydrate (CaCl2•2H20) | Sigma | 223506 | |
Magnesium chloride hexahydrate (MgCl2•6H20) | Sigma | M2670 | |
EGTA | Sigma | E0396 |