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A novel method using ambient glutamate for the electrophysiological quantification of extrasynaptic NMDA receptor function in acute brain slices.

Alexander MoldavskiJoachim BehrHilmar BadingC Peter Bengtson
Published in: The Journal of physiology (2020)
Synaptic NMDA receptors (NMDARs) play a central role in pro-survival signalling and synaptic plasticity in the majority of excitatory synapses in the central nervous system whereas extrasynaptic NMDARs (ES-NMDARs) activate pro-death pathways and have been implicated in many neurodegenerative diseases. ES-NMDARs have been characterized in acute brain slice preparations using the largely irreversible, activity-dependent NMDAR antagonist MK-801 to block synaptic NMDARs. This approach is limited by the concomitant MK-801 blockade of ES-NMDARs activated by ambient extracellular glutamate, which is largely absent from the synaptic cleft due to the high density of nearby glutamate transporters. In acute hippocampal slices from rats aged 35-42 postnatal days, we estimated ambient glutamate to be 72-83 nM resulting in a block of more than 82% of ES-NMDARs during a 5 min MK-801 application. This paper describes a novel electrophysiological and mathematical method to quantify the proportion of NMDARs located at extrasynaptic locations in a confined region of an acute brain slice preparation using MK-801 to preferentially block ES-NMDARs. The protocol uses whole cell patch clamp measurement of NMDAR responses to synaptic stimulation and brief local pressure application of NMDA before and after MK-801 application. After mathematically correcting for the relative block of both synaptic and extrasynaptic receptors, ES-NMDARs were estimated to comprise 29-39% of the total NMDAR pool in the apical dendrites of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons. This new method may prove useful for accurate quantification of NMDAR distributions in neurodegenerative diseases that are associated with increased toxic ES-NMDAR signalling.
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