We use the patch-clamp technique to measure GABA-activated single-channel currents (GABAA channels, GABAA receptors) and the synaptic and tonic currents they generate in neurons. Activation of the channels decreases neuronal excitability in health and disease 1,2,3,4.
The GABAA channels are present in all neurons and are located both at synapses and outside of synapses where they generate phasic and tonic currents, respectively 4,5,6,7 The GABAA channel is a pentameric GABA-gated chloride channel. The channel subunits are grouped into 8 families (α1-6, β1-3, γ1-3, δ, ε, θ, π and ρ). Two alphas, two betas and one 3rd subunit form the functional channel 8. By combining studies of sub-type specific GABA-activated single-channel molecules with studies including all populations of GABAA channels in the neuron it becomes possible to understand the basic mechanism of neuronal inhibition and how it is modulated by pharmacological agents.
We use the patch-clamp technique 9,10 to study the functional properties of the GABAA channels in alive neurons in hippocampal brain slices and record the single-channel and whole-cell currents. We further examine how the channels are affected by different GABA concentrations, other drugs and intra and extracellular factors. For detailed theoretical and practical description of the patch-clamp method please see The Single-Channel Recordings edited by B Sakman and E Neher 10.
1. Preparation of brain slices:
Experiments are done on hippocampal brain slices from postnatal 16 – 22 days old Wistar rats.
2. Preparation of pipettes for patching:
3. Solutions used in the experiments:
Specific solutions are used for the single-channel and whole-cell recordings.
4. Forming a Giga Ohm (GΩ) seal for patch-clamp experiments:
The hippocampal brain slices (Fig. 1A) are held at the bottom of the recording chamber by nylon threads on a U-shaped platinum wire. In order to visualize the tissue organization e.g. the CA1 and 3 and the dentate gyrus region in the hippocampal slices or the specific cells, you need a microscope. Most laboratories use an upright microscope with objectives ranging from 10X to 60X thus allowing one to identify regions or specific cells in the tissue. However, for patching slices even a dissection microscope can be used and then you visually identify a region to patch but not a specific cell. This type of patching is termed “blind patching”. In both cases one in the end is patching a single cell in a specific area. The success rate is similar for the two methods. Although the cell bodies of the principal cells in the hippocampus are organized into highly structured lamina (e.g. CA3/CA1 stratum pyramidale and identified as bright bands in the hippocampal brain slice) scattered among all subfields and strata of the hippocampus are the cell bodies of inhibitory interneurons that make up about 10% of the total neuronal population 12. The occasional interneuron or glia that may be patched in the granule cell or pyramidal neuronal lamina can be differentiated from the principal cells by the different electrical properties of these cells (see The Hippocampus Book 13).
It can sometimes be advantageous to patch within the hippocampal slice. In some instances the cells can be healthier when not on the surface as they are more protected. Also, in case one is studying the effects of the extracellular environment on cellular functions, such as effect of extracellular GABA concentrations on tonic current generation in neurons, patching within the tissue can be an advantage. The patching procedure is the same as described above apart from that one does not release the positive pressure in the pipette until the pipette tip is within the slice.
5. Establishing the whole-cell configuration and recording whole-cell currents:
In the whole-cell configuration in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons we set the holding potential at – 60 mV and wait for 5 – 10 minutes allowing the pipette solution to equilibrate with the cell interior. During this time the recording becomes stable. During the experiment we keep track of the value of the series resistance.
Experiments are done in voltage-clamp and you measure the current through a population of channels in the whole-cell membrane. One can differentiate between GABA-activated synaptic and extrasynaptic currents by the phasic and tonic nature of the currents. The antagonist SR95531 inhibits all GABAA currents. The decrease in the holding current indicates the level of the GABA-activated tonic current in the neuron.
As we are interested in the tonic GABA-activated current that is dependent on the extracellular, ambient GABA in the slice we normally do not patch the cells on the surface but rather, the cells within the slice. Agonists and antagonists that we use to modulate the GABAA channels are applied in the bath solution and do reach the cells within the slice. The rate of the solution flow in the experimental chamber is 2 – 3 ml / min.
6. Recording single-channel currents:
Experiments are done in the cell-attached, the inside-out or the outside-out patch-clamp configuration (please see here below) and we record currents through single-channel molecules, the single-channel currents. Settings on Axoclamp 200B, V-clamp, gain 500, filter 2 or 5 kHz. With the PClamp software we control the pipette potential, set the data sampling rate at no less than 100 μs and record the currents. In order to minimize noise in single-channel recordings the volume of the bath solution is kept low so that it just covers the slice.
7. Analyzing the results:
The single-channel and whole-cell currents are analyzed with the PClamp software. For analyzes of synaptic events we use Synaptosoft (GA, USA) or AXOGraph (Sydney, Australia).
8. Representative results:
Fig. 2A shows single-channel currents activated by 20 nM GABA concentration in a cell-attached patch in dentate gyrus granule neuron. The latency of activation of the channel’s maximal conductance was 2 minutes and 38 seconds and the maximal conductance was 44 pS 15. The patch was depolarized by 40 mV. Fig. 2B shows examples of whole-cell voltage-clamp current records from rat hippocampal neurons identifiying tonic and phasic currents. The GABAA antagonist SR95531 inhibits both the extrasynaptic- (tonic) and the synaptic- generated (phasic) GABA-activated currents. We applied the GABAA antagonist SR95531 (100 μM) to (Ba) dentate gyrus neuron and (Bb) insulin treated CA1 pyramidal neuron revealing the tonic current by the shift in the baseline current induced by SR95531 blocking the extrasynaptic channels (Ba,b) and the disappearance of synaptic currents when SR95531 blocks the synaptic channels (Bb). Under basal condition CA1 pyramidal neurons do not have tonic GABA-activated currents 6 but when the neurons are exposed to physiological concentrations of insulin 4 GABA-activated tonic currents develop.
Figure 1A. Rat hippocampal brain slice, regions identified are CA1 and CA3 pyramidal cell layers and the dentate gyrus (DG) granule cell layer. B. Schematic patch-clamp configurations.
Figure 2A. Single-channel currents activated by 20 nM GABA in a cell-attached patch on dentate gyrus granule cell in a rat hippocampal brain slice. Holding potential was depolarized 40 mV (pipette potential = -40 mV). The star (*, 1st current trace) identifies from where the currents shown on the faster time-scale (2nd current trace) was taken from. B. Whole-cell currents recorded in rat hippocampal brain slice in a. dentate gyrus granule cell and b. CA1 pyramidal neuron in voltage-clamp mode at the holding potential of -60 mV. For the CA1 experiments, slices were incubated in 1 nM insulin for 2 h at room temperature before currents were recorded.
The whole-cell current represents the ensemble of currents generated by active channels in the cell. The specific pharmacology and chloride permeability of the GABAA channels makes it possible to identify currents associated with these channels. The transient nature of activation of synaptic channels and the tonic activation of the extrasynaptic channels allows easy differentiation between these two populations of GABAA channels expressed in a neuron. However, only with single-channel recordings can one study the kinetic properties of the channel molecules that generate the tonic currents. Unlike synaptic channels that activate within 100 μs, the tonic GABAA channels are activated with a latency in the range of minutes from the time GABA is applied 4,7,15,16,17,18. This delayed activation of the channels results in that many channel properties cannot be studied using whole-cell recordings. At the single-channel level the different sub-populations of GABAA channels can be identified based on varying functional and pharmacological properties. Thus, by taking an advantage of what the different patch-clamp configurations have to offer, it is possible to study in detail the molecular function and pharmacology of the GABA-activated channels that generate the tonic and synaptic currents in neurons.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was funded by the Swedish Research Council, Uppsala University and the Fredrik and Ingrid Thurings Foundation. ZJ held a postdoctoral fellowship from EXODIAB and Svenska Sällskapet för Medicinsk Forskning. We thank Frank Lee for technique assistance.
Several patch-clamp hardware and software systems are available and they all operate using the same basic principles. In our laboratory we use the Axoclamp amplifiers and the PClamp software (Molecular Devices, USA) to record and analyze our experiments. Another popular brand is HEKA amplifiers and software (HEKA Elektronik , Germany)
Microforge: Narishige MF-830 (Japan); Vibrotome: e.g. Leica VT1200S (Germany) or Campden Instruments vibrotome (UK); Microscope: Nikon Eclipse E600FN; Water bath; Micromanipulators: custom made and Narishige micromanipulators (Japan); Puller: DMZ-universal (Germany) or Narishige PC-10 (Japan). Electrode glass: GC150F-15 (Harvard Apparatus, UK).