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Development of glutamatergic and GABAergic synapses Marco Sassoè-Pognetto Department of Neuroscience, C.so Massimo d’Azeglio, 52, I-10126 Turin, Italy Correspondence: Prof. Marco Sassoe Dip. di Neuroscienze C.so Massimo d’Azeglio, 52 10126 Torino, Italy Tel: +39-011-6707778 E-mail: [email protected] Introduction The cerebellum has a prolonged course of development, that largely extends into postnatal life (Wang and Zoghby 2001). This feature, together with the availability of several natural mutants and of cell-specific genetic tools (Sotelo 2004, Sajan et al. 2010), makes the cerebellum one of the most accessible brain regions for studying synaptogenesis in situ. In the cerebellar cortex, synaptogenesis is entirely postnatal, although it occurs at rather different rates in different lobules (Altman, 1972a-c). In both mice and rats, synapses start to form in the first postnatal week, and reach adult densities at the end of the third week (Fig. 1; Sassoè-Pognetto and Patrizi, 2013). The entire period of synaptogenesis is characterized by a progressive growth of the granular and molecular layers, and a proliferation of synapses from the bottom upward. Only a few studies have specifically investigated the development of synaptic connectivity in the deep cerebellar nuclei (Eisenman et al. 1991, Garin and Escher, 2001). These investigations have suggested that synaptogenesis may start in the nuclei well before the emergence of the first synapses in the cerebellar cortex, but the precise pattern remains to be determined. Development of glutamate synapses The main types of glutamate synapses in the cerebellum are those established by mossy fibers (MFs), parallel fibers (PFs) and climbing fibers (CFs). In rodents, MFs invade the gray matter at P3-P5 and start establishing the first synapses onto granule cells at the end of the first postnatal week. However it is only during the second postnatal week that synapse number increases considerably, reaching a peak at P15 (Altman 1972c, Hamóri and Somogyi 1983). During development, MF synapses undergo an extensive structural remodeling, that is accompanied by changes of their electrophysiological properties (Larramendi 1969, Cathala et al. 2005). The formation of MF synapses and their developmental maturation depend on synaptogenic factors released by granule cells, such as Wnt7a and fibroblast growth factor 22 (Hall et al. 2000, Umemori et al., 2004). PFs establish the first synapses as soon as their target neurons, the Purkinje cells (PCs), start growing their dendrites in the developing molecular layer at the end of the first postnatal week (Altman, 1972a,b). The formation of PF synapses depends on trans-synaptic interactions between the 2 glutamate receptor (GluD2), that is expressed selectively by PCs, and cerebellin 1 (Cbln1), a C1q family member secreted from granule cell axons (Yuzaki, 2010). Cbln1 binds GluD2 and also interacts with presynaptic neurexins, establishing a trimeric trans-synaptic complex that links pre- and postsynaptic specializations (Matsuda et al. 2010, Uemura et al. 2010). CFs provide the earliest synaptic inputs to PCs in the developing cerebellar cortex (Fig. 1). CF synapses undergo a remarkable structural remodelling throughout development. During the first postnatal week, these afferents establish a dense plexus around the cell body of PCs (Cajal, 1890). Subsequently, activity-dependent competition among CFs results in regression of multiple innervation and dendritic translocation of a single “winner” CF from the soma to the proximal dendrites (Hashimoto et al., 2009). The remodeling of CFs involves also heterosynaptic competition with PFs. Thus, a decrease in PF innervation (e.g. in mutant mice with reduced numbers of granule cells or in mice lacking GluD2) results in retention of multiple CFs and an expansion of the CF innervation territory on PC distal dendrites (Cesa and Strata 2009 and references therein). By contrast, a selective silencing of CFs (e.g. after lesioning the inferior olive) causes the emergence of supernumerary spines in the proximal dendrites of PCs, which become innervated by PFs. Interfering with GABAergic inhibition also impairs CF synapse elimination (Nakayama et al., 2012). Therefore, synapse refinement in PCs requires appropriate levels of electrical activity evoked by CFs, PFs and GABAergic inputs. Development of GABA synapses Synaptic inhibition in the supragranular layers is mediated mainly by basket and stellate cells. Basket cells make synapses with the cell body and the proximal dendrites of PCs, and also form a unique plexus around the axon initial segment (AIS), called a pinceau (Cajal, 1911). In contrast, stellate cells establish contacts with the dendrites of PCs and of other cerebellar interneurons (Briatore et al., 2010). Basket cells start innervating the cell body of PCs at the end of the first postnatal week (Sotelo 2008, Viltono 2008). The number of perisomatic synapses then increases, together with a strong decrease in the number of somatic spines innervated by CFs. In the same period, basket cell synapses undergo a process of “waning” (Larramendi 1969), consisting in a fragmentation of long synaptic appositions into multiple shorter active zones. These morphological rearrangements are accompanied by a gradual loss of the scaffolding molecule gephyrin from postsynaptic specializations (Viltono et al. 2008), as well as a decrease in the amplitude of IPSCs recorded from PCs (Pouzat and Hestrin, 1997). Formation of the pinceau involves a displacement of basket cell axons from the cell body of PCs to the AIS (Sotelo, 2008). The targeting of basket axons to the AIS depends a subcellular gradient of neurofascin 186, a cell adhesion molecule of the L1 immunoglobulin family, along the PC soma-AIS axis, and such gradient requires ankyrinG, a membrane adaptor protein that recruits neurofascin (Ango et al. 2004). Interestingly, another member of the same family of adhesion molecules, CHL1, is localized along Bergmann glia fibers and stellate cells during the formation of stellate axon arbors. In the absence of CHL1, stellate axons show aberrant branching and orientation, and synapse formation with PC dendrites is impaired (Ango et al. 2008). Thus different members of the L1 family contribute to axon patterning and subcellular synapse organization in different types of interneurons. The axon collaterals of PCs also establish GABA synapses with different types of cerebellar neurons, including other PCs (Cajal 1911; Palay and Chan-Palay, 1974). According to a recent study, PC-PC synapses are established early during postnatal development (from P4). These synapses are believed to represent a substrate for waves of activity that propagate along chains of connected PCs (Watt et al. 2009). These travelling waves are absent in adult mice, therefore it has been proposed that they may have a developmental role in wiring cerebellar networks. Golgi cells mediate synaptic inhibition in the granular layer. Their axon terminals surround the glomeruli and make synapses with the dendrites of granule cells (Palay and Chan-Palay, 1974). Most Golgi cells contain both GABA and glycine, and can mediate GABAergic or glycinergic inhibition based on differential expression of either GABAA or glycine receptors in the target neurons (Dugué et al. 2005). Immunohistochemical investigations have revealed that Golgi cell synapses matures with a time course similar to that of MF synapses (McLaughlin et al. 1975). Other types of interneurons that mediate synaptic inhibition in the cerebellar cortex include Lugaro, globular and candelabrum cells (Schilling et al., 2008). Like Golgi cells, these neurons are situated in the granule cell layer and have a dual GABAergic/glycinergic phenotype. However, unlike Golgi cells, their axons are not restricted to the granule cell layer, but they distribute throughout the molecular layer. Knowledge of the connectivity and physiology of these cerebellar neurons is fragmentary, and very little is known about their development. References o Altman J (1972a) Postnatal development of the cerebellar cortex in the rat. I. The external germinal layer and the transitional molecular layer. J Comp Neurol 145:353-398 o Altman J (1972b) Postnatal development of the cerebellar cortex in the rat. II. Phases in the maturation of Purkinje cells and of the molecular layer. J Comp Neurol 145:399-464 o Altman J (1972c) Postnatal development of the cerebellar cortex in the rat. III. Maturation of the components of the granular layer. J Comp Neurol 145:465-514 o Ango F, di Cristo G, Higashiyama H et al (2004) Ankyrin-based subcellular gradient of neurofascin, an immunoglobulin family protein, directs GABAergic innervation at Purkinje axon initial segment. 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