- Physiological and pharmacological properties of inhibitory postsynaptic currents mediated by α5β1γ2, α5β2γ2 and α5β3γ2 GABAA receptors.
Physiological and pharmacological properties of inhibitory postsynaptic currents mediated by α5β1γ2, α5β2γ2 and α5β3γ2 GABAA receptors.
α5-containing GABAARs are potential therapeutic targets for clinical conditions including age-related dementia, stroke, schizophrenia, Down syndrome, anaesthetic-induced amnesia, anxiety and pain. α5-containing GABAARs are expressed in layer 5 cortical neurons and hippocampal pyramidal neurons where they mediate both tonic currents and slow inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs). A range of drugs has been developed to specifically modulate these receptors. The main α5-containing GABAARs that are likely to exist in vivo are the α5β1γ2, α5β2γ2 and α5β3γ2 isoforms. We currently have few clues as to how these isoforms are distributed between synaptic and extrasynaptic compartments or their relative roles in controlling neuronal excitability. Accordingly, the aim of this study was to define the basic biophysical and pharmacological properties of IPSCs mediated by the three isoforms in a hippocampal neuron-HEK293 cell co-culture assay. The IPSC decay time constants were slow (α5β1γ2L: 45 ms; α5β1γ2L: 80 ms; α5β3γ2L: 184 ms) and were largely dominated by the intrinsic channel deactivation rates. By comparing IPSC rise times, we inferred that α5β1γ2L GABAARs are located postsynaptically whereas the other two are predominantly perisynaptic. α5β3γ2L GABAARs alone mediated tonic currents. We quantified the effects of four α5-specific inverse agonists (TB-21007, MRK-016, α5IA and L-655708) on IPSCs mediated by the three isoforms. All compounds selectively inhibited IPSC amplitudes and accelerated IPSC decay rates, albeit with distinct isoform specificities. MRK-016 also significantly accelerated IPSC rise times. These results provide a reference for future studies seeking to identify and characterize the properties of IPSCs mediated by α5-containing GABAAR isoforms in neurons.