GABAB-mediated inhibition of multiple modes of glutamate release in the nucleus of the solitary tract

Author:

Fawley Jessica A.1,Peters James H.1,Andresen Michael C.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon

Abstract

In the caudal portions of the solitary tract (ST) nucleus, primary sensory afferents fall into two broad classes based on the expression of transient receptor potential vanilloid type 1 (TRPV1) receptors. Both afferent classes (TRPV1+/−) have indistinguishable glutamate release mechanisms for ST-evoked excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs). However, TRPV1+ terminals release additional glutamate from a unique, TRPV1-operated vesicle pool that is temperature sensitive and facilitated by ST activity to generate asynchronous EPSCs. This study tested whether presynaptic γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)B receptors inhibit both the evoked and TRPV1-operated release mechanisms on second-order ST nucleus neurons. In horizontal slices, shocks activated single ST axons and evoked the time-invariant (latency jitter <200 μs), glutamatergic EPSCs, which identified second-order neurons. Gabazine eliminated GABAA responses in all recordings. The GABAB agonist baclofen inhibited the amplitude of ST-EPSCs from both TRPV1+ and TRPV1− afferents with a similar EC50 (∼1.2 μM). In TTX, GABAB activation decreased miniature EPSC (mEPSC) rates but not amplitudes, suggesting presynaptic actions downstream from terminal excitability. With calcium entry through voltage-activated calcium channels blocked by cadmium, baclofen reduced mEPSC frequency, indicating that GABAB reduced vesicle release by TRPV1-dependent calcium entry. GABAB activation also reduced temperature-evoked increases in mEPSC frequency, which relies on TRPV1. Our studies indicate that GABAB G protein-coupled receptors are uniformly distributed across all ST primary afferent terminals and act at multiple stages of the excitation-release cascades to suppress both action potential-triggered and TRPV1-coupled glutamate transmission pathways. Moreover, the segregated release cascades within TRPV1+ ST primary afferents represent independent, potential targets for differential modulation.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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