ARTICLE
Received 25 Mar 2015 | Accepted 17 Apr 2015 | Published 1 June 2015
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8222 OPEN
A negative feedback loop controls NMDA receptor function in cortical interneurons via neuregulin 2/ErbB4 signalling
Detlef Vullhorst1,*, Robert M. Mitchell1,*,w, Carolyn Keating1,w, Swagata Roychowdhury1, Irina Karavanova1, Jung-Hwa Tao-Cheng2 & Andres Buonanno1
The neuregulin receptor ErbB4 is an important modulator of GABAergic interneurons and neural network synchronization. However, little is known about the endogenous ligands that engage ErbB4, the neural processes that activate them or their direct downstream targets. Here we demonstrate, in cultured neurons and in acute slices, that the NMDA receptor is both effector and target of neuregulin 2 (NRG2)/ErbB4 signalling in cortical interneurons. Interneurons co-express ErbB4 and NRG2, and pro-NRG2 accumulates on cell bodies atop subsurface cisternae. NMDA receptor activation rapidly triggers shedding of the signalling-competent NRG2 extracellular domain. In turn, NRG2 promotes ErbB4 association with GluN2B-containing NMDA receptors, followed by rapid internalization of surface receptors and potent downregulation of NMDA but not AMPA receptor currents. These effects occur selectively in ErbB4-positive interneurons and not in ErbB4-negative pyramidal neurons. Our ndings reveal an intimate reciprocal relationship between ErbB4 and NMDA receptors with possible implications for the modulation of cortical microcircuits associated with cognitive decits in psychiatric disorders.
1 Section on Molecular Neurobiology, Eunice Shriver Kennedy National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
2 EM Facility, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA. * These authors contributed equally to this work.
w Present address: Laboratory of Cellular and Synaptic Neurophysiology, Eunice Shriver Kennedy National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA (R.M.M.); Department of Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA (C.K.). Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to A.B. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ).
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8222
Local GABA(gamma aminobutyric acid)-ergic inhibitory interneurons are essential coordinators of cortical micro-circuits and are implicated in epilepsy, schizophrenia and
other pathologies in which the balance of excitatory and inhibitory transmission is perturbed. Because of their critical role in modulating neuronal network activity by transiently entraining groups of principal neurons into synchronously ring ensembles, it is important to understand how this extremely diverse class of neurons is itself regulated by interactions between fast-acting synaptic transmission and slow-acting neuro-modulators. Two such regulators that have received much attention are N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) and the receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB4. NMDARs expressed on interneurons gure prominently in the glutamate hypofunction theory of schizophrenia13, and were shown by interneuron-restricted gene ablation in mice to be essential for normal local network synchrony and behaviour46.
The ErbB4 receptor is widely expressed in GABAergic interneurons but is undetectable in pyramidal neurons7,8. Stimulation of ErbB4 in acute slice preparations by recombinant neuregulin 1 (NRG1) encompassing the minimal epidermal-like growth factor(EGF)-like domain affects GABAergic transmission onto pyramidal neurons, gamma oscillations and pyramidal neuron synaptic plasticity913. Studies on the effects of NRGs directly on ErbB4-positive (ErbB4 ) interneurons indicate that acute stimulation of ErbB4 promotes the internalization of ion channels from the cell surface1416. Although prior studies identied interactions between ErbB4 and PSD95 at glutamatergic postsynaptic densities9,17, an involvement of acute NRG/ErbB4 signalling in the regulation of glutamatergic transmission onto inhibitory interneurons has not been reported.
While signicant progress has been made in delineating the effects of ErbB4 signalling on cortical circuits18,19, far less is known about the functionally relevant endogenous NRG ligands that engage ErbB4 during neural processes in the adolescent and adult central nervous system (CNS). For historical reasons, NRG1-derived recombinant protein fragments have most commonly been used to study ErbB4 functions, although postnatal NRG1 mRNA expression in the CNS is generally lower than the closely related NRG2 isoform20, consistent with the notion that NRG2 is a major functional ErbB4 ligand in the postnatal brain. Using the EGF-like domain of NRG is convenient but bypasses important aspects of its biology. Most NRGs are synthesized as single-pass transmembrane pro-forms that must be converted to signalling-competent receptor ligands by extracellular sheddases. The presence of an immunoglobulin (Ig)-like domain in most NRG1 isoforms and in NRG2 allows the ectodomain to accumulate near the site of cleavage through interactions with extracellular matrix heparan proteoglycans21. By contrast, cysteine-rich-domain(CRD)-NRG1 has a second transmembrane domain upstream of the EGF-like domain and is thought to signal as a transmembrane ligand22. While critical for our understanding of NRG/ErbB4 signalling, it is unclear whether and how NRG ectodomain shedding is regulated in the CNS.
Several studies have linked the NRG/ErbB4 pathway and NMDAR function in pyramidal neurons (see, for example, ref. 23). However, given that ErbB4 receptors are undetectable in hippocampal and neocortical pyramidal neurons7,8, and that interneuron NMDARs play an important role in cortical network synchrony46, and in the glutamate hypothesis of schizophrenia13 a better understanding of the direct effects of NRG/ErbB4 signalling on interneuron NMDARs is warranted. In this work, we describe the existence of a cell-autonomous pathway that intimately and bidirectionally links NMDAR activity with NRG signalling in GABAergic interneurons.
We demonstrate that NMDARs are required to release the biologically active ectodomain of NRG2 from clustered aggregates on the surface of interneuron cell bodies. In turn, stimulation of ErbB4 by the NRG2 ectodomain promotes the association of ErbB4 with GluN2B-containing NMDARs, and rapidly and potently downregulates NMDARs on inhibitory interneurons but not pyramidal neurons. Taken together, our ndings provide the foundation for a new understanding of the functional relationship between these important receptor systems and their roles in the modulation of interneurons and local circuit functions.
ResultsNRG2 is expressed in ErbB4 interneurons. Regional NRG2 expression patterns in the rodent CNS have largely been investigated at the mRNA level20,24, with highest transcript levels in granule cells of the cerebellum, hippocampus and olfactory bulb. To better understand the cellular expression pattern of NRG2 mRNA in relationship to its cognate receptor ErbB4, we used double-label uorescence in situ hybridization (ISH) of the mouse hippocampus with probes for NRG2 and ErbB4. While weak NRG2 signals were detected in many cells, much higher levels were consistently detected in ErbB4 cells (Fig. 1a), indicating that ErbB4 interneurons co-express NRG2. These ndings were corroborated using a probe for Gad1 (Supplementary Fig. 1).
Intrigued by the possibility of an autocrine NRG2/ErbB4 signalling loop in GABAergic interneurons, we developed mono- and polyclonal antibodies against the extra (ECD)- and intracellular (ICD) domains of NRG2 (Fig. 1b and Supplementary Fig. 2). Both mouse and rabbit monoclonal antibodies raised against the NRG2-ECD and ICD, respectively, are specic for NRG2 and do not crossreact with NRG1 (Supplementary Figs 3 and 4). Using mouse monoclonal antibody 8D11 against the ECD, we indeed found prominent NRG2 signals in the soma and proximal dendrites of ErbB4 interneurons in hippocampal areas CA1CA3 (Fig. 1c). A representative count of NRG2 cells (excluding dentate gyrus granule cells) from three rats revealed that of 558 NRG2 neurons, 454 versus 104 (81.4%) co-expressed ErbB4. Neurons positive for ErbB4 and negative for
NRG2 were virtually absent.
Pro-NRG2 protein accumulates atop subsurface cisternae. We also observed somatodendritic NRG2 puncta on cultured ErbB4 interneurons using antibody 8D11 under nonpermeabilizing conditions, indicating that these puncta reside at the cell surface (Fig. 1d). We further investigated this subcellular distribution by rst testing for potential co-localization of NRG2 puncta with the presynaptic marker bassoon, the postsynaptic excitatory synapse marker PSD95 and the postsynaptic inhibitory synapse marker gephyrin, but found no overlap (Supplementary Fig. 5). Exploring other possibilities, we noticed that NRG2 puncta were reminiscent of the distribution of subsurface cisternae (SSC), attened extensions of the endoplasmic reticulum located immediately adjacent to the plasma membrane25. Based on data indicating that NRG2 puncta number and size increase with culture age (Supplementary Fig. 6), we used silver-enhanced immunogold electron microscopy in aged (35 days in vitro; DIV 35) hippocampal neurons. This approach revealed highly concentrated patches of NRG2 at the outer surface of neuronal soma plasma membrane atop intracellular SSCs, which are typically apposed by astrocytic processes (Fig. 1e), or sometimes by axon terminals (Supplementary Fig. 7).
We corroborated these ndings by double immunouorescence of NRG2 and Kv2.1, a voltage-gated potassium channel that forms large clusters near SSCs on the cell body and proximal dendrites of numerous neuron types including cultured
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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8222 ARTICLE
NRG2 ErbB4
7215, 8D11 1349
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* Astro
Neuronal soma
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TX-100
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P2
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pro-NRG2
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Figure 1 | Pro-NRG2 protein accumulates atop subsurface cisternae in ErbB4-positive interneurons. (a) Double-label uorescence ISH of NRG2 and ErbB4 in the mouse hippocampus, showing overlapping signals in a neuron located in the stratum oriens of area CA1. The pyramidal cell layer is visible in the lower right corner. DAPI was added to label nuclei (blue). Note that ErbB4-negative cells have much lower or no NRG2 signal. Magnied areas on the right outlined by boundary box. (b) Immunogen sites in NRG2 used to raise poly- and monoclonal NRG2 antibodies. Ig-like and EGF-like domains in the ECD, the transmembrane (TM) and ICD are shown. (c) NRG2 immunoreactivity in ErbB4 interneurons in rat CA1 strata pyramidale and radiatum.
(d) Somatodendritic NRG2 surface puncta on a DIV 28 cultured ErbB4 hippocampal neuron. (e) Immunogold electron micrograph of a DIV 35 hippocampal neuron with a patch of concentrated label for NRG2 (black particles depict silver-enhanced signals) at the plasma membrane atop intracellular membrane stacks characteristic of SSCs. Asterisks mark the lumen of the open cisterns that are continuous and surround the attened stacks of the specialized endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes (circle) in the centre of the SSC. Astroglial processes (astro, identied by a gap junction (GJ) between two processes) are often closely associated with SSCs. (f) Super-resolution microscopy image of a 2-month old hippocampal neuron double-labelled for NRG2 and Kv2.1. Magnied areas illustrate how NRG2 frequently resides in the centre of doughnut-shaped Kv2.1 clusters. (g) Immunouorescence signals obtained with ECD antibody 8D11 (surface-labelled) and ICD antibody mAB11 exhibit extensive overlap, suggesting that puncta consist of unprocessed pro-NRG2. (h,i) The B110 kDa pro-NRG2 protein is enriched in SMs and partitions with the Triton X-100 (TX-100) insoluble fraction in the rat cortex (Ctx), hippocampus (Hc) and cerebellum (Cb). NRG2 was detected with polyclonal antibody 1349 against the carboxyl terminus. M, molecular mass standards;
S1, crude extract; P2, crude membranes; SM, synaptosomal membranes; Sol, detergent-soluble; Ins, detergent-insoluble. Scale bars, 10 mm (a,c), 5 mm (d,f,g and inset in a), 1 mm (inset in f), 0.1 mm (e). Image shown in a is representative of two experiments, micrographs in cg are representative of at least three replicates.
SM
Sol
Ins
SM
Sol
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pro-NRG2
GABAergic interneurons26,27. Stimulated emission depletion (STED) and structured illumination (SIM) super-resolution microscopy of hippocampal neurons revealed a close spatial relationship between the micron-size Kv2.1 clusters and the more compact NRG2 puncta, the latter frequently residing in the open centres of Kv2.1 clusters (doughnut holes; Fig. 1f and Supple-
mentary Movie 1 for a three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction). These observations correlate well with the electron microscpoy (EM) ndings that label for Kv2.1 is concentrated at the open cisterns at the periphery of the disc-like SSC26, while label for NRG2 is concentrated at the plasma membrane apposed to the centre of the SSC (Fig. 1e).
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Next, we asked whether NRG2 puncta at SSCs represent the membrane-bound precursor (pro-NRG2) or the proteolytically processed ectodomain. We began by labelling the ECD of NRG2 under non-permeabilizing conditions and the ICD after permeabilization. As shown in Fig. 1g, ECD and ICD patterns overlapped extensively, suggesting that NRG2 protein is indeed unprocessed at these sites. Moreover, sucrose density gradient fractionation of neocortical, hippocampal and cerebellar membranes revealed that the B110120 kDa pro-NRG2 protein accumulated in the synaptosomal plasma membrane (SM) fraction, and that it was entirely resistant to extraction with 1% Triton X-100 (Fig. 1h,i). These data are consistent with the notion that pro-NRG2 accumulates in highly aggregated fashion near SSCs.
NMDAR activity promotes NRG2 ectodomain shedding. Most NRGs are synthesized as membrane precursors that are converted to signalling-competent soluble ErbB receptor ligands via shedding of their ectodomains by ubiquitous alpha- or beta-secretases. To determine whether NRG2 is a suitable substrate for these extracellular proteases, we analysed PC12 cells that express very high levels of NRG2 mRNA but that accumulate very little pro-NRG2 at steady state (Supplementary Fig. 8). Indeed, inhibition of alpha-secretases by GM6001 (10 mM) triggered a robust increase of pro-NRG2 protein levels, thus unmasking constitutive shedding activity in this cell line.
We hypothesized that clustering of pro-NRG2 in neurons might serve to render proteolytic processing subject to activity-dependent regulation, as previously reported for NRG1 (refs 28,29). We began by investigating the effects of elevating network activity on NRG2 puncta. Cultured hippocampal neurons were treated for 12 h with a combination of the GABAA receptor blocker bicuculline (BiC; 50 mM) and the weak potassium channel blocker 4-aminopyridine (4AP; 250 mM), a treatment we refer to as BiC/4AP that is known to elicit chronic burst ring by disinhibiting network activity and engaging synaptic NMDARs30. As shown in Fig. 2ac, 12 h of BiC/4AP treatment signicantly decreased the mean NRG2 puncta intensity and size in ErbB4 interneurons. The mean NRG2 puncta intensity decreased from 30.91.4 arbitrary units (a.u.) in untreated controls to 17.40.6 a.u. after 12 h of BiC/4AP treatment (Fig. 2b). The mean NRG2 puncta size was also reduced from 0.580.03 mm2 in controls to 0.420.01 mm2 (Fig. 2c). Importantly, BiC/4AP was without effect when the competitive NMDAR antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP5; 50 mM) was present. Interestingly, when BiC/4AP was applied acutely (30 min), we observed a modest but signicant increase in the mean puncta intensity to 37.52.2 a.u. that was further augmented by AP5 to 46.11.9 a.u.. Taken together, these results suggest that NRG2 puncta are in a dynamic equilibrium, with neuronal activity and NMDARs exerting opposing effects (see also Fig. 4a,b).
We then turned to more directly probe the involvement of glutamate, acting via NMDARs, to regulate NRG2. As shown in Fig. 2df, a 10-min treatment with non-cytotoxic concentrations of glutamate (20 mM) rapidly downregulated NRG2 puncta in an
NMDAR-dependent manner. The mean puncta intensity decreased from 29.10.5 a.u. in untreated control cells to21.90.4 a.u. with glutamate, an effect that was attenuated by AP5 (26.70.4 a.u.; Fig. 2e). The mean puncta size also decreased across all treatment groups (control: 0.660.02 mm2; glutamate:0.360.01 mm2; glutamate AP5: 0.590.01 mm2; Fig. 2f).
Moreover, downregulation of NRG2 puncta by glutamate also manifested as a reduction of the mean number of puncta per cell (control: 17.32.5 versus glutamate: 5.80.9; Supplementary Fig. 9a) and the percentage of ErbB4 interneurons with NRG2
puncta (control: 93.4%0.1 versus glutamate: 56.61.9 versus glutamate AP5: 89.65.7; Supplementary Fig. 9b). Interest
ingly, inclusion of AP5 signicantly increased the mean number of puncta per cell (25.43.1), consistent with the idea of a dynamic equilibrium between NMDAR-independent processes that promote puncta formation, and NMDAR-dependent processes that promote puncta turnover.
We next investigated whether glutamate promotes proteolytic processing of pro-NRG2 and the generation of a biologically
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Figure 2 | Activity and glutamate dynamically regulate NRG2 puncta. (ac) Effect of chronic and acute burst ring on NRG2 puncta.(a) Representative confocal images of NRG2 puncta on cultured ErbB4 interneurons in untreated controls, and after 12 h of Bic/4AP without or with the NMDAR inhibitor AP5. (b,c) Mean NRG2 puncta intensity (AU) and size (mm2) in ErbB4 neurons. (df) Glutamate downregulates NRG2 puncta in an NMDAR-dependent manner. (d) Representative confocal images of NRG2 puncta on ErbB4 interneurons, either untreated or after 10 min of 20 mM glutamate without or with 50 mM AP5. (e,f) Mean NRG2 puncta intensity (AU) and size (mm2) in ErbB4 neurons. In both experiments, n 30 neurons from three independent experiments were
analysed for each data point. Data represent the means.e.m. *Po0.05; **Po0.01; ****Po0.0001 (one-way analysis of variance). Scale bars, 5 mm.
Ctrl, control; Glu, glutamate.
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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8222 ARTICLE
AAV8_pro-Venus-NRG2
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Figure 3 | Analysis of glutamate-mediated NRG2 downregulation by live-cell imaging. (a) Schematic of the AAV construct to express Venus-NRG2 from the neuron-selective human Synapsin I promoter. (b,d) Representative images of live neurons expressing Venus-NRG2, 3 min before (left) and 6 min after the onset of 20 mM glutamate treatment in the absence (b) or presence of 50 mM AP5 (d). (c,e) Line graphs illustrating the time course of uorescence intensities for neurons shown on the left. (f) Summary analysis of the effects of glutamate acting via NMDARs on Venus-NRG2 uorescence.
Fluorescence intensities are normalized to baseline ( 3 min). N 17 (Ctrl), 18, (Glu) and 17 (Glu AP5) neurons from three independent experiments.
Data represent the means.e.m. ****Po0.0001 (one-way analysis of variance). Scale bar, 5 mm. Ctrl, control; Glu, glutamate.
active ectodomain. We were unable to detect endogenous NRG2 by western blotting in cultured neurons, likely owing to the relatively small number of NRG2-expressing cells and the sparse subcellular distribution of NRG2 puncta. We therefore generated an adeno-associated virus (AAV) construct with NRG2 amino-terminally fused to Venus uorescent protein driven by the neuron-selective Synapsin I promoter (Fig. 3a). Clusters of Venus-NRG2 accumulated on cell bodies and proximal dendrites of infected neurons, but were typically larger in size than the puncta formed by endogenous NRG2. To verify that these clusters responded to glutamate, we monitored Venus uorescence by live imaging before and after the addition of 20 mM glutamate. As shown in Fig. 3b,c,f, as well as the time-lapse movies available as Supplementary Movies 2 and 3, uorescence intensities decreased rapidly following glutamate, fading to background levels within 25 min. As was the case for endogenous NRG2 puncta, this effect was dependent on NMDAR activity (Fig. 3d,e,f).
Expression of pro-Venus-NRG2 was readily detected in cell lysates by western blotting using both anti-ECD and anti-ICD antibodies (Supplementary Fig. 10). In addition, two smaller bands representing the NRG2 ectodomain were observed with the ECD antibody in cell lysates and after capture of conditioned
supernatant with heparin-agarose beads. This ectodomain had NRG activity, as demonstrated by the ability of puried conditioned medium to stimulate Erk2 phosphorylation in an ErbB receptor-dependent fashion in HEK293 cells (Supplementary Fig. 10). We then analysed Venus-NRG2 protein in hippocampal neurons treated for 20 min with glutamate. As shown in Fig. 4a and b, this treatment resulted in a B10-fold reduction of the pro-form (9.25.4% of control) and a concomitant increase in Venus-NRG2 ectodomain levels in the heparin-puried conditioned supernatants (Fig. 4c). Inclusion of AP5 not only prevented glutamate-augmented ectodomain shedding but also increased levels of the pro-form to 1579.2% of control (Fig. 4b), consistent with the effects of AP5 on endogenous NRG2 puncta in cultures treated acutely with BiC/4AP (see also Fig. 2ac). Moreover, pretreatment with GM6001 (10 mM), but not with the beta-secretase inhibitor
BACE-IV (1 mM), signicantly inhibited ectodomain shedding (glutamate GM6001: 564% of glutamate; glutamate BACE
IV: 10610%), thus revealing the involvement of alpha- but not beta-secretases in NRG2 release downstream of NMDAR activation (Fig. 4c,d). In summary, we identied a novel NMDAR-dependent pathway that links glutamatergic signalling to the activation of NRG2 on ErbB4 interneurons.
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175 ****
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Figure 4 | NMDAR activation triggers NRG2 ectodomain shedding. (a) Pro-Venus-NRG2 in whole-cell lysates of DIV 21 hippocampal neurons, stimulated for 20 min with 20 mM glutamate in the absence or presence of 50 mM AP5. Kv2.1 protein is shown to illustrate the characteristic downward shiftin electrophoretic mobility in response to glutamate37. Clathrin heavy chain (CHC) is included as a loading control. (b) Quantitative analysis of pro-Venus-NRG2 downregulation by glutamate. Data are normalized to untreated controls. N 13 (Ctrl), 12 (Glu) and 8 (Glu AP5) from six independent
experiments. (c,d) Glutamate triggers NMDAR- and alpha-secretase-dependent NRG2 ectodomain shedding. Western blot in (c) shows Venus-NRG2 ectodomain protein in conditioned medium (CM), after replacement of CM with CM from uninfected cells, and after 20 min of 20 mM glutamate.
Dependence of ectodomain shedding on NMDAR- and alpha-secretase activity revealed by pretreatment of cells with 50 mM AP5 and 10 mM GM6001, respectively. By contrast, ectodomain shedding was not affected by the inclusion of the beta-secretase inhibitor BACE-IV (1 mM). (d) Quantitative analysis of Venus-NRG2 ectodomain. Data are normalized to glutamate. N 3 independent experiments. Data represent the means.e.m. **Po0.01;
****Po0.0001 (one-way analysis of variance). Ctrl, control; Glut (or Glu), glutamate.
NRG2 promotes the association of ErbB4 with GluN2B. We next used unbiased proteomics to identify possible direct targets of NRG2/ErbB4 signalling downstream of NMDAR activation. Metabolizing rat brain synaptosomes were treated for 10 min with 10 nM recombinant NRG2-ECD (hereafter referred to as NRG2), and ErbB4-interacting proteins were co-immunoprecipitated following TX-100 solubilization using the ErbB4 antibody mAB10 as described previously16. Coomassie-stained protein bands designated for mass spectrometry (MS) were selected based on western blots run in parallel to reveal NRG2-augmented phosphotyrosine signals (Fig. 5a). Using this approach, we unexpectedly identied three separate peptides (HSQLSDLYGK, DSVSGGGPCTNR and HGVVGGVPAPWEK) from the intracellular carboxyterminal tail region of the GluN2B subunit of the NMDAR, suggesting that the NMDAR itself is in a complex with ErbB4 (see Supplementary Table 1 for a complete list of all identied proteins). Subsequent direct western blot analysis of GluN2B protein in ErbB4 immunoprecipitates from metabolizing SMs (Fig. 5b), as well as from cultured neurons (Fig. 5c), conrmed a robust augmentation of ErbB4/GluN2B association following treatment with NRG2. In cultured neurons, NRG2 increased ErbB4-GluN2B co-immunoprecipitation to 198.19.3% of controls (Fig. 5d). ErbB4-GluN2A interactions were also modestly increased, although this effect did not reach statistical signicance. Importantly, co-immunoprecipitation of ErbB4 with the a-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor (AMPAR) subunit GluA1, abundantly expressed in GABAergic interneurons, was not altered by NRG2.
NRG2 internalizes GluN2B-containing surface NMDARs. In cultured interneurons, acute treatment with recombinant NRG
ligands has been linked to the reduction of currents and/or cell surface expression of voltage- and ligand-gated ion channels1416. We therefore hypothesized that the physical interaction between activated ErbB4 and GluN2B might serve to downregulate surface GluN2B-containing NMDARs. To test this hypothesis, we transfected hippocampal neurons with plasmids expressing green uorescent protein (GFP)-GluN2A and GFP-GluN2B. Cells were xed and surface NMDARs were labelled under non-permeabilizing conditions using a GFP antibody. We then derived arbitrary ratios of GFP antibody-mediated uorescence (surface) over native GFP uorescence (total), and compared these ratios between untreated controls and cultures treated for 10 min with 10 nM NRG2. As shown in Fig. 6ad, surface signals of ErbB4 interneurons expressing GFP-GluN2B were signicantly reduced after NRG2 (control: 0.3200.007 a.u.
versus NRG2: 0.2430.005 a.u.). By contrast, relative surface levels of GFP-GluN2A were unaffected by NRG2 (control:1.2930.017 a.u. versus NRG2: 1.3160.022 a.u.).
We then asked whether internalization of heterologously
expressed GluN2B by NRG2 correlates with the downregulation of endogenous NMDAR function. We measured pharmacologically isolated whole-cell (synaptic extrasynaptic) NMDAR
currents in untransfected hippocampal neurons DIV 28 or older to ensure robust responses to NMDA. Recorded neurons were identied post hoc by ErbB4 immunouorescence. We rst measured baseline outward currents at 40 mV holding
potential in response to 100 mM NMDA, and then again following 10 min of 10 nM NRG2 (both delivered via a Y-tube). As shown in Fig. 6eh, whole-cell NMDA-evoked currents were signicantly decreased in ErbB4 interneurons after NRG2 treatment (434.5% of baseline). By contrast, NMDA-evoked currents in
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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8222 ARTICLE
SDSPAGE (Coomassie)
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Figure 5 | NRG2 promotes the association of ErbB4 with GluN2B-containing NMDARs. Proteins interacting with ErbB4 were isolated from metabolizing rat brain SMs following stimulation with 10 nM NRG2, and analysed by tandem MS (see Methods section for details). (a) Left, Coomassie-stained SDSPAGE showing proteins obtained after ErbB4 immunoprecipitation from unstimulated control (C) and NRG2-stimulated membranes (N). Right, western blot of the same samples showing tyrosinephosphorylated proteins. M, marker lane. Areas excised for MS are marked by arrows (see Supplementary Table 1 for a complete list of identied proteins). (b) ErbB4 stimulation by NRG2 (10 nM for 10 min) markedly increases association with GluN2B in metabolizing SMs from the rat cortex. IgG, antibody heavy chain signal. (c) NRG2 also promotes the association of ErbB4 with GluN2B, and to a lesser extent with GluN2A, in cultured hippocampal neurons (4DIV 28). Note that ErbB4 interactions with the
AMPAR subunit GluA1 are not affected by NRG2. Western blot of NRG2 included to ascertain binding of ErbB4 in stimulated membranes.(d) Summary analysis of results shown in c. Data represent the means.e.m. of densitometric signal ratios of glutamate receptor subunits over ErbB4, normalized to unstimulated controls (set as 100%). N 4 from
three independent experiments *Po0.05 (Students paired t-test).
ErbB4-negative neurons were not affected by NRG2 (11824.3% of baseline). Taken together, these ndings demonstrate that NRG2-ErbB4 signalling downregulates NMDARs selectively in GABAergic interneurons.
NRG2 selectively reduces evoked NMDAR EPSCs in interneurons. We next analysed NRG2 effects on synaptic NMDARs. To this end, we recorded synaptically evoked NMDAR currents by whole-cell voltage-clamp in aspiny ErbB4-positive interneurons and spiny ErbB4-negative pyramidal neurons from acute mouse prefrontal
cortical (PFC) slices before and after treatment with 10 nM NRG2 (Fig. 7a,b). ErbB4-positive interneurons were identied using Erbb4_2A_CreERT2 x Ai14 mice31. Perfusion with NRG2 triggered a marked rundown of evoked NMDAR-mediated outward currents measured at 40 mV (Fig. 7c). After the onset of NRG2 treatment,
normalized mean NMDAR EPSC amplitudes decreased to44.45.2% of baseline (Fig. 7g). By contrast, synaptically evoked AMPAR inward currents measured at 70 mV were not
signicantly reduced (84.27.1%; Fig. 7e). Moreover, neither NMDAR nor AMPAR decay kinetics were altered, thus arguing against changes in receptor subunit composition. We also measured NMDAR- and AMPAR-mediated current responses to NRG2 in mPFC pyramidal neurons. Consistent with the notion that pyramidal neurons lack ErbB4, we failed to observe any effect of NRG2 on either glutamate receptor subtype (n 4; NMDA: 96.94.7%,
P 0.37; AMPA: 102.04.5%, P 0.61; Fig. 7d,f,h).
DiscussionIn this study, we identify NRG2 as an important endogenous ErbB ligand that bidirectionally links NMDA and ErbB4 receptors in cortical GABAergic interneurons. We also introduce a number of novel concepts regarding activity-dependent regulation of NRG/ErbB4 signalling, and the nature of ErbB4-NMDA receptor interactions in the CNS. Namely, that ErbB4 and NRG2 form an autocrine signalling loop in inhibitory interneurons in which NMDAR activity is required to convert pro-NRG2 from a (presumably inactive) transmembrane precursor clustered at SSCs to a bioactive ErbB receptor ligand. In turn, NRG2 promotes the physical association of ErbB4 with GluN2B-containing NMDARs, which is followed by NMDAR removal from the cell surface and the downregulation of whole-cell and synaptic NMDAR currents selectively in inter-neurons. Taken together, these ndings reveal an exquisitely close relationship between these two receptor systems that could serve as a new paradigm of how fast-acting neurotransmitter receptors and slow-acting neuromodulators interact in the regulation of GABAergic interneurons and cortical networks. Moreover, they are consistent with, and possibly provide the mechanistic underpinnings of, some of the apparent phenotypic similarities of engineered mice with interneuron-selective mutations of ErbB4 and NMDARs as they pertain to altered network synchronyin particular increased gamma- and decreased theta-frequency oscillationsand the resulting effects on hippocampal and PFC local neuronal network activity46,18.
Earlier studies, using ISH probes targeting different NRG1 isoforms, reported that NRG1 is mostly expressed in cholinergic and glutamatergic neurons in the developing and adult brain32,33. To our knowledge, this is the rst report of a neuregulin that is expressed in ErbB4 cortical interneurons, and that accumulates as an unprocessed pro-form on the soma and proximal dendrites.
This is in stark contrast to the distribution of CRD-NRG1, the major NRG1 isoform in the adult CNS and peripheral nervous system. In the hippocampus, CRD-NRG1 transcripts have been identied primarily in CA3 and the subiculum consistent with the expression in pyramidal neurons34, and multiple lines of evidence suggest that the CRD-NRG1 accumulates as a processed protein in axons and axon terminals33,35. We therefore propose that CRD-NRG1 and NRG2 engage in complementary signalling modes and thus subserve non-overlapping functions in the developed nervous system. However, it should be noted that unlike ErbB4, cortical NRG2 expression is not restricted to interneurons. Both autocrine and paracrine signalling are therefore likely to contribute to ErbB4 activation.
While the process that underlies the accumulation of pro-NRG2 at somatodendritic sites is not known, it is reasonable
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Total GluN2B
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Figure 6 | NRG2 promotes the internalization of GluN2B-containing NMDARs and the downregulation of whole-cell NMDAR currents in cultured ErbB4 interneurons. (ad) The effect of NRG2 on surface NMDAR expression was investigated in hippocampal neurons transfected with GFP-tagged
GluN2A and GluN2B, and stimulated with NRG2 as described in Fig. 5. Surface NMDARs were labelled under non-permeabilizing conditions with anti-GFP (red), and surface internal NMDARs were assessed using native GFP uorescence (green). Cells were additionally labelled for ErbB4 (not shown)
and nuclei were visualized with DAPI. (a,b) Representative images of total and surface GluN2B and GluN2A expression in vehicle and NRG2-stimulated ErbB4 interneurons. Scale bars, 25 mm. (c,d) Quantitative analysis of relative surface expression of GFP-GluN2B (c) and GFP-GluN2A (d), expressed as arbitrary ratios of surface over total GFP uorescence intensities. Data are means.e.m. ****Po0.0001, N 612 neurons (Students t-test). (eh) Effect
of NRG2 (10 nM) on whole-cell NMDAR currents in 4DIV 28 ErbB4 and ErbB4 hippocampal neurons. Currents were isolated by tetrodotoxin, 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) and picrotoxin at 40 mV in the presence of 100 mM NMDA delivered via a Y-tube. (e) Representative
image of a recorded ErbB4 interneuron identied by post hoc labelling. Scale bar, 25 mm. (f,g) Representative traces of whole-cell NMDA currents before (black), and after (red), 10 min perfusion with 10 nM NRG2 in ErbB4 (f) and ErbB4- neurons (g). Duration of NMDA treatments denoted by corresponding black and red horizontal bars. Note that the left and right tails of the NMDA-elicited currents mark the beginning and end of agonist delivery via the
Y-tube; the jitter at the end of each trace reects a perfusion artifact. Scale bars, 5 s and 500 pA. (h) Summary analysis of NRG2 effects on NMDA currents. Data are relative to baseline (set as 100%) and represent the means.e.m. N 5 ErbB4 and 4 ErbB4 neurons; ***Po0.001% (Students t-test).
to speculate that the close spatial relationship to SSCs is a relevant factor. SSCs were originally described over 50 years ago25. Based on their ultrastructure and the presence of both ryanodine and InsP3 receptors, they have been likened to sarcolemmal triads and are believed to engage in calcium-dependent calcium release36.
The accumulation of both NRG2 and Kv2.1 at SSCs, and their release from these sites in response to NMDAR activation (this work, ref. 37), suggests that the SSC and the associated plasma membrane form a signalling microdomain that dynamically
regulates the subcellular distribution of these and possibly other proteins. Of note, electron-dense protein accumulations between SSCs and the adjacent plasma membrane were originally identied in cerebellar Purkinje cells36 that also prominently express somatodendritic NRG2 puncta. Interestingly, a report that appeared during review of the present work identied NRG1 clusters associated with SSCs in local cholinergic interneurons in the spinal chord38; however, we were unable to detect such clusters in cultured hippocampal neurons
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Figure 7 | NRG2 acutely downregulates evoked NMDAR currents in cortical ErbB4 interneurons but not pyramidal neurons. (a) Representative confocal image of an aspiny, biocytin-lled ErbB4 interneuron from the PFC of an Erbb4-2A-CreERT2 X Ai14 mouse used to record evoked NMDA and
AMPA receptor currents. (b) Corresponding image of a biocytin-lled spiny PFC pyramidal neuron from a wild-type C57Bl/6J mouse. Scale bars, 25 mm. (cf) Representative scatter plots of NMDA and AMPA receptor-mediated evoked excitatory postsynaptic currents (eEPSCs) recorded from an ErbB4 interneuron (c,e) and from a pyramidal neuron (d,f). Duration of NRG2 treatment (10 nM) is indicated by horizontal bars. Arrows indicate the time points at which sample traces shown in the upper right corner were taken before (black) and after (red) NRG2. Scale bars in sample traces, 75 pA and 75 ms. (g,h) Summary plots of NRG2 effects on NMDA and AMPA eEPSCs in ErbB4 interneurons (g) and pyramidal neurons (h). Data are normalized to baseline (set as 100%). N 6 (ErbB4 ), 4 (pyramidal neurons). **Po0.01 (Students paired t-test).
using the same NRG1 antibody. Notwithstanding, these ndings suggest that association with SSCs might not be limited to NRG2.
Our analyses revealed surprisingly dynamic and bidirectional interactions between NMDARs and NRG2/ErbB4 signalling, as illustrated in our working model shown in Fig. 8. We favour a scenario in which NMDAR-mediated release of pro-NRG2 from highly clustered aggregates represents a critical rst step, with subsequent ectodomain shedding by membrane-bound extra-cellular proteases depending largely on the availability of
accessible substrate. This notion is supported by our nding that pro-NRG2 is constitutively processed in undifferentiated PC12 cells and thus does not depend on NMDAR activity for ectodomain shedding per se, and is consistent with current concepts of substrate selection by ubiquitously expressed sheddases39. Although we focused on the cell-autonomous nature of this process in interneurons, it should be noted that the signalling pathway downstream of NMDAR-mediated NRG2 ectodomain shedding almost certainly operates in other neuron
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Basal activity/low glutamate
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Figure 8 | Reciprocal signalling between NMDA and NRG2/ErbB4 receptor systems. Working model illustrating the intricate relationship between NMDARs and NRG2/ErbB4 signalling in cortical interneurons. At baseline, low glutamate concentrations and weak NMDAR activity permit the accumulation of pro-NRG2 as highly concentrated clusters atop subsurface cisternae. Sudden increases in glutamate, acting via synaptic and/or extrasynaptic NMDARs, promote the rapid dispersal of NRG2 puncta and the shedding of the NRG2 ectodomain by extracellular proteases. The NRG2 ectodomain then accumulates locally by binding to heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Dissociation from the extracellular matrix, possibly aided by additional proteolytic processing events as suggested for NRG1 (ref. 58), enables NRG2 to bind its cognate receptor ErbB4. In this manner, autocrine NRG2/ErbB4 signalling initiates downstream events, including the internalization of GluN2B-containing NMDARs themselves. Based on the NRG2-dependent augmentation of ErbB4-GluN2B interactions in detergent-soluble cortical membranes fractions, surface NMDAR internalization experiments and our prior study on the regulation of GABAa1 receptor surface expression by NRG2/ErbB4 (ref. 16), we hypothesize that NMDAR internalization occurs primarily at extrasynaptic sites. Reduction of NMDAR EPSCs may result from a net loss of synaptic receptors due to lateral diffusion out of the synapse combined with removal of extrasynaptic/perisynaptic receptors.
types as well. This is based on the observation that hippocampal neurons infected with Venus-NRG2 responded consistently and uniformly to a glutamate challenge without any apparent effect of neuron type. Interestingly, although calcium-permeable AMPARs are abundant in cortical interneurons with low NMDAR content40, our pharmacological approach of pairing glutamate with AP5 strongly suggests that calcium-permeable AMPARs are not involved in glutamate-dependent NRG2 processing.
To our knowledge, this is the rst study to report that NRG selectively downregulates NMDAR activity in ErbB4-expressing cortical and hippocampal GABAergic interneurons, but not in ErbB4-negative pyramidal neurons. NMDARs join a growing number of ligand-gated14,16 and voltage-gated15 ion channels that are directly regulated by neuregulin in ErbB4-expressing interneurons. In fact, the ability to internalize surface channels in response to ligand binding is emerging as a common theme in neuronal ErbB4 biology. Our nding differs from previous reports that interpreted NRG/ErbB4 effects on NMDAR function or on morphology as occurring directly in pyramidal neurons (see
refs 23,41,42), and is consistent with a growing consensus that ErbB4 is not expressed by hippocampal and neocortical pyramidal neurons7,8,15,16,18,43. Moreover, morphological and functional studies in mice with targeted receptor ablation in distinct neuron subtypes indicate that changes in pyramidal neurons are mediated indirectly via ErbB4 in inhibitory interneurons43. In addition, pyramidal neuron properties can be indirectly affected by downstream neuromodulator pathways regulated by NRG11,44 or by altered local circuits18,43,45,46. For these reasons, in order to understand how NRG2/ErbB4 and NMDAR bidirectional signalling directly affects neuronal networks and behaviours, it will be important in the future to develop the proper genetic tools to target NRG2 and NMDAR in distinct neuronal subtypes.
Genetic variants of the NRG/ErbB signalling pathway are associated with schizophrenia and its endophenotypes, as well as with neurological disorders with intellectual disabilities and cognitive decits19,47,48. Analysis of schizophrenia at risk polymorphisms associated with changes in NRG1 and ErbB4 mRNA levels, as well as a de novo microdeletion of ERBB4, suggest altered NRG/ErbB4 signalling can result in behavioural impairments resembling aspects of schizophrenia44,49. These ndings are supported by behavioural studies in mice engineered to express reduced or increased levels of NRG1 or ErbB4 (ref. 19). Atypical antipsychotics targeting dopamine receptors show efcacy for the treatment of positive symptoms, but not for negative symptoms and cognitive impairments. Presently, there is intense focus on developing novel drugs that target distinct aspects of the glutamatergic system, particularly in PFC networks, with the ultimate goal of increasing NMDAR activity as a means to improve negative symptoms and cognitive function. This approach is based on extensive clinical and animal studies showing that NMDAR antagonists have psychomimetic properties and elicit negative symptoms and cognitive decits typical of schizophrenia1,2,50. Moreover, subjects with anti-NMDAR encephalitis51, an autoimmune disorder with antibodies targeting GluN1 and causing receptor internalization52, have been misdiagnosed with rst episode schizophrenia because subjects present psychosis, disorder thoughts and catatonic dyskinesias.
Paradoxically, a variety of structurally independent NMDAR antagonists have repeatedly been shown to increase PFC excitability in humans and animals50. A likely resolution to this paradox emerges from studies in freely moving rats showing that MK-801 selectively reduces the ring of fast-spiking GABAergic interneurons in the mPFC and thereby disinhibits pyramidal neurons53, thereby modifying excitation/inhibition balance and cognitive (persevering) behaviours. In addition, NMDAR hypofunction at synaptic inputs onto fast-spiking GABAergic interneurons are associated with impairment of cortical gamma oscillations in schizophrenia and regulated by NRG/ErbB4 signalling3,44. Hence, targeting NMDARs selectively on GABAergic interneurons, rather than globally, could have pharmacological benets for cognitive processes impaired in psychiatric disorders. Based on our ndings that most ErbB4 interneurons express NRG2, and that stimulation of ErbB4 with
NRG2 causes the internalization of interneuron NMDARs, but not AMPARs, suggests that pharmacologically targeting NRG2 processing could have therapeutic value by selectively increasing NMDAR in GABAergic neurons.
Methods
Animals. Erbb4-2A-Cre-ERT2 mice were provided by Dr Hongkui Zeng (Allen Institute for Brain Science, Seattle, WA), mice expressing tdTomato uorescent protein from the Rosa26 locus (Ai14) and wild-type C57Bl/6J mice were obtained from the Jackson Laboratory31. Adult Erbb4-2A-CreERT2 Ai14 mice were
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injected intraperitoneally for three consecutive days with 1 mg tamoxifen (Sigma). Slices for electrophysiology were prepared 2 days after the last injection. Mice were kept on a 1212-h lightdark schedule with access to food and water ad libitum. Animals were treated in accordance with the National Institutes of Health Animal Welfare guidelines. All procedures were approved by the NIH animal care and user committee.
Drugs. NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartatic acid), AP5, picrotoxin, BiC, CNQX, tetrodotoxin and 4AP were from Tocris. Glutamate was obtained from Sigma. GM6001, L-685,458 and BACE-IV were obtained from Calbiochem.
NRG2-ECD. The sequence encoding the ECD (amino acids 20 through 313, based on the annotation in ref. 24) was cloned into a bacmid vector and anked at the 50-end by a gp67 signal peptide sequence and at the 30-end by a hexahistidine tag sequence. Recombinant NRG2-ECD was puried by metal afnity chromatography from 5 l of insect cell medium conditioned by Sf9 cells infected with NRG2-ECD baculovirus (Genscript). Protein integrity and function were validated by SDSpolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDSPAGE), western blotting and by assaying ErbB receptor-dependent Erk pathway activation in HEK293 cells (American Tissue Culture Collection (ATCC)).
NRG2 antibodies. Baculovirus/Sf9-derived NRG2-ECD was used as an immunogen to develop mouse monoclonal anti-NRG2 antibody 8D11 (hybridomas generated at Precision Antibodies) and rabbit polyclonal antiserum 7215 (Covance Research Products). An Escherichia coli-derived glutathione-S-transferase (GST) fusion protein harbouring 128 amino acids of the ICD of mouse NRG2b (residues 519 through 646) was used to develop rabbit monoclonal antibody mAB11 (hybridomas generated at Epitomics). Rabbit polyclonal antibody 1349 against the carboxyl terminus of mouse/rat NRG2 has been described elsewhere20. Polyclonal antibodies 7215 and 1349 were afnity puried against their respective immunogens. Monoclonal antibodies 8D11 and mAB11 were used as conditioned hybridoma supernatants or as Protein A-puried gamma-Ig (IgG) fractions. All antibodies were tested for their utility in western blotting, immunohistochemistry and immunouorescence cytochemistry (see Supplementary Fig. 2 for additional information). In addition, the ECD antibody 7215 was validated for use as a neutralizing antibody. All NRG2 antibodies were used at 1 mg ml 1.
AAV_Venus-NRG2. AAV (capsid serotype 8) harbouring the open reading frame of human hNRG2b was generated by Gateway-mediated recombination of entry vector pENTR223.1-hNRG2b (IMAGE clone 100066341) with Gateway-converted destination vector pAAV-MCS (Stratagene). For live-imaging experiments and western blotting, Venus uorescent protein was inserted into the ECD of human hNRG2b immediately downstream of the signal sequence, and the fusion protein was expressed from the human Synapsin I promoter. AAV preparations were puried by iodixanol gradient centrifugation (Vector Development Core at Loyola University Chicago).
Other antibodies. In addition to the NRG2 antibodies described above, commercial and custom antibodies against the following proteins were used in this study: ErbB4, rabbit monoclonal mAB10 (1 mg ml 1; ref. 7) and rabbit polyclonal custom antibody 5721 (unpublished; 0.4 mg ml 1); Kv2.1, mouse monoclonal (clone K89/34; NeuroMab; 1 mg ml 1); rabbit polyclonal antibody against NRG1 (SC-348; Santa Cruz Biotechnology; 0.2 mg ml 1); anti-V5 epitope tag (AbD
Serotech; 1 mg ml 1); Bassoon, rabbit polyclonal (Synaptic Systems; 1:1,000); Gephyrin, mouse monoclonal (clone mAb7a; Synaptic Systems; 1:500); PSD95, mouse monoclonal (clone 7E3-1B8; Pierce; 1:500); Calbindin, mouse monoclonal (clone CB-955; Sigma; 1:1,000); GFP, rabbit polyclonal (Molecular Probes; 1:2,000); Erk2, rabbit polyclonal (C-14; Santa Cruz; 0.2 mg ml 1); phospho-Erk2, mouse monoclonal (clone E-4; Santa Cruz; 0.2 mg ml 1); GAPDH, mouse monoclonal (clone 6C5; Santa Cruz; 0.2 mg ml 1); clathrin heavy chain, mouse monoclonal (SC-12,734; Santa Cruz; 0.1 mg ml 1); GluN2A, rabbit monoclonal (clone A12W;
Millipore; 1:2,000); GluN2B (clone 13; BD Biosciences; 1 mg ml 1); and GluA1 (AB1504; Millipore; 0.2 mg ml 1).
Double ISH. We used RNAscope, a uorescence-based multiplexing ISH technique54, to analyse expression of NRG2 mRNA in ErbB4 GABAergic interneurons. Briey, 12 mm fresh-frozen sagittal sections from 4-week-old wild-type mice were hybridized at 40 C for 2 h with specic probe sets for mouse NRG2 and ErbB4 or NRG2 and Gad67. Probes were as follows: NRG2, accession no. NM_001167891.1, probe region 3241,270; ErbB4: NM_010154.1, probe region 3611,257 and Gad67: NM_008077.4, probe region: 623,113. Specic hybridization signals were amplied following the manufacturers instructions, and detected with Alexa 488 (for ErbB4 and Gad67) and Atto 550 (for NRG2) uorophores. Sections were additionally labelled with the nuclear stain DAPI (40,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole). Images were acquired using a LSM780 confocal
microscope at 63 magnication (Zeiss) and adjusted for overall brightness and
contrast using ImageJ software.
Immunohistology. Mice were transcardially perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) in 0.1 M phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4. Brains were postxed overnight in the same xative and 50 mm sections were cut on a vibratome. Sections were blocked in 20% normal donkey serum (NDS), 1% bovine serum albumin,0.25% TX-100 in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (PB) for 1 h at room temperature (RT) and incubated with primary antibodies in 0.1 M PB with 2% NGS and 0.25% TX-100 (dilution buffer) for 24 h at 4 C with gentle rocking. Slices were washed in
0.1 M PB with 0.25% TX-100 for at least 30 min before incubation with uorophore-conjugated donkey secondary antibodies for 90 min at RT in dilution buffer. DAPI stain was included to label nuclei (Molecular Probes). After extensive washes in PBS with 0.25% TX-100, sections were mounted on gelatin-coated slides, dried and mounted in Mowiol-DABCO (1,4-diazabicyclo-[2,2,2]-octane). Fluorescence was analysed on a Zeiss LSM510 Meta confocal microscope (Zeiss Microimaging) at 20 and 40 magnications. Images were adjusted for overall
brightness and contrast in Adobe Photoshop (Adobe Systems).
Rat hippocampal neuron cultures. Dissociated hippocampal neurons were prepared from E19 SpragueDawley rat pups and plated on poly-D-lysine coated plastic for western blotting, or on poly-D-lysine coated coverslips for live imaging and post-xation immunouorescence cytochemistry and immunogold electron microscopy. Neurons were maintained in dened neurobasal/B27 medium (Life Technologies), and half of the medium was changed once every week. For the analysis of NRG2 puncta, medium was not changed for at least a week before the date of the experiment, based on our observations that medium change can trigger transient downregulation of puncta.
Validation of NRG2 antibody specicity in HEK293 cells. HEK293 cells were plated on poly-D-lysine-coated coverslips and transfected with expression vectors for human NRG2 or mouse NRG1 types I-III using Xtreme HP DNA transfection reagent (Roche). All NRG1 isoforms were of the b1a type and harboured an additional V5 epitope tag right upstream of the EGF-like domain. The next day, cells were xed in fresh 4% PFA in PBS supplemented with 4% sucrose for 15 min at RT. All subsequent incubations were carried out at RT. After extensive washing in PBS, cells were blocked and permeabilized for 1 h in PBS supplemented with 10% normal donkey serum and 0.1% TX-100. Cells were then incubated with mouse monoclonal NRG2 antibody 8D11 and rabbit monoclonal NRG2 antibody mAB11 (both at 1 mg ml 1) for 1 h in antibody dilution buffer (PBS with 2%
normal donkey serum and 0.1% TX-100). Primary NRG2 antibodies were visualized by secondary anti-mouse and anti-rabbit antibodies conjugated to Cy3 and Alexa 488, respectively. After washout of unbound secondary antibodies, cells transfected with NRG1 constructs were additionally incubated with mouse monoclonal anti-V5 tag for 1 h in antibody dilution buffer, followed by anti-mouse secondary antibody conjugated to Alexa 405. Nuclei were labelled with RedDot2 uorescent dye (Biotium). Coverslips were mounted in Mowiol/DABCO mounting medium and imaged on a Zeiss LSM510 confocal microscope at 63
magnication.
Immunouorescence cytochemistry of cultured neurons. Neurons grown on 12 mm coverslips were xed in fresh 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS supplemented with 4% sucrose for 15 min at RT. After extensive washing with PBS, cells were blocked and permeabilized with 10% NGS/0.1% TX-100 in PBS. For surface labelling, blocking solution without detergent was used. Cells were incubated with primary antibody for several hours at RT or overnight at 4 C with gentle
rocking, and for 1 h with donkey or goat secondary antibodies conjugated to Alexa Fluor 488 and Cy3 uorophores (Molecular Probes or Jackson ImmunoResearch). DAPI or RedDot2 (Biotium) stains were included in all experiments to label nuclei. Coverslips were again washed with PBS, dipped in water and mounted on slides using Mowiol/DABCO mounting medium. For gated stimulated emission depletion super-resolution microscopy, NRG2 immunoreactivity was visualized with anti-rabbit IgG conjugated to Oregon Green 488 (Molecular Probes) and Kv2.1 immunoreactivity was visualized with anti-mouse IgG conjugated to biotin (Sigma), followed by Atto 425-Streptavidin (Fluka). Images were acquired using a
100 objective. Laser lines were 470 and 506 nm, and 592 nm for the depletion beam. Signals were acquired with a hybrid detector. Structured illumination uorescence microscopy was performed using the Delta-vision OMX V4 imaging system in 3D-SIM mode (Applied Precision). Images were taken with an Olympus PlanApo N 60 1.42 NA oil objective. The microscope was calibrated before
experiments to calculate both the lateral and axial limits of image resolution under our experimental conditions. Raw images were processed and reconstructed in 3D using SoftWoRx software (Applied Precision).
Morphometric analysis of NRG2 puncta. Experiments were performed using 34-week-old cultured hippocampal neurons. For BiC/4AP treatments30, neurons were treated for 30 min or 12 h with 50 mM BiC and 250 mM 4AP in the presence or absence of 50 mM AP5. For glutamate treatments, neurons were treated for 10 min
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with 20 mM glutamate without or with AP5. Neurons were then xed and labelled for NRG2 and ErbB4. Images of NRG2 puncta on ErbB4 interneurons were acquired at 63 magnication using LSM780 (BiC/4AP) or LSM510 (glutamate)
confocal microscopes and analysed with Volocity 6 (PerkinElmer). NRG2 puncta were ltered for pixel intensity and a minimum particle size of 0.18 mm2. NRG2 signals were analysed for intensity (a.u. based on 8-bit scale) and puncta size (mm2). For the glutamate experiment, the number of NRG2 puncta per cell and the number of ErbB4 cells with detectable NRG2 puncta was also recorded. Data were plotted using Prism6 (GraphPad software) and analysed for statistical signicance using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Bonferronis multiple comparisons test.
Pre-embedding immunogold electron microscopy of NRG2 puncta. Fixed cells were washed and then blocked with 5% NGS with or without 0.1% saponin for 4060 min. Samples were incubated with mouse monoclonal anti-NRG2 (clone 8D11) and secondary antibodies (Nanogold, Nanoprobes) for 1 h, xed with 2% glutaraldehyde in PBS overnight, silver enhanced (HQ kit, Nanoprobes), treated with 0.2% osmium tetroxide in 0.1 M PB at pH 7.4 for 30 min, en bloc stained with0.25% uranyl acetate in acetate buffer at pH 5.0 for 1 h, dehydrated in graded ethanols and embedded in epoxy resin. Thin sections were examined on a JEOL 1200 EX transmission electron microscope and images collected with a digital CCD camera (AMT XR-100, Adanced Microscopy Techniques).
Live imaging of Venus-NRG2 in cultured neurons. Hippocampal neurons grown on 25 mm coverslips were infected at DIV 3 with AAV8_Venus-NRG2. Cultures were changed on DIV 9 to phenol red-free neurobasal/B27 medium and imaged on DIV 21 or DIV 22 using a Nikon Eclipse Ti spinning disk microscope equipped with a heated stage. Cells were transferred to an Attouor cell chamber and maintained at 37 C and 5% CO2 for the duration of the experiment. Up to six individual cells were imaged simultaneously, and single frames were acquired every 30 s. Glutamate (20 mM) was bath-applied after recording a stable baseline for5 min, and images were acquired for an additional 20 min. In some experiments, cells were pre-treated with AP5 (50 mM) during baseline acquisition. Following background subtraction, uorescence intensities were quantied from regions of interest using Volocity software, and plotted against time using a sliding average of three frames. For summary analyses, uorescence intensities were compared 3 min before and 6 min after the onset of treatment. Data were analysed using Prism6 (GraphPad software), normalized to baseline and tested for signicance using one-way analysis of variance.
Analysis of NMDAR surface expression. Dissociated hippocampal neurons grown on 12 mm glass coverslips were transfected on DIV 10 with plasmids encoding GFP-GluN2A or GFP-GluN2B (ref. 55) and treated at 4DIV 21 with
NRG2 (10 nM) for 10 min. Cells were xed in 4% PFA in PBS containing 4% sucrose at RT for 15 min and blocked with 10% donkey serum in PBS for 1 h. For surface labelling, cells were incubated with anti-GFP antibody in blocking buffer for 3 h. Cells were washed several times with PBS and permeabilized with blocking buffer containing 0.1% TX-100. Cells were then incubated with rabbit polyclonal antibody 5721 against ErbB4. Following extensive washing with PBS containing0.1% TX-100, cells were incubated with uorescently labelled secondary antibodies for 45 min, washed and mounted in Mowiol/DABCO mounting medium.
Laser-scanning confocal images were acquired using an LSM510 microscope (Zeiss) and analysed using Volocity software. To quantify surface NMDARs, transfected cell were selected using the nd objects function on the GFP channel with a threshold lter of two s.d.s and a minimum particle size of 0.18 mm2.
Surfaces outside ErbB4-expressing cells were selected similarly and combined using the exclude non-touching function (that is, GFP not touching ErbB4), resulting in surfaces that expressed GFP-NMDAR constructs and that were conned to ErbB4 cells. Raw data were exported to Excel and the ratio of surface GFP over total GFP was calculated. Data were processed for statistical analysis using
GraphPad Prism 5.0, and plotted as mean intensities.
NRG2 ectodomain purication from conditioned medium. Conditioned medium was obtained from DIV 21 hippocampal neurons infected with Venus-NRG2 at DIV 3, and the NRG2 ectodomain was captured using heparin-agarose beads (Sigma). Beads were rst equilibrated with cold neurobasal/B27 medium, and then incubated for several hours at 4 C with conditioned medium. Protein
bound to heparin was eluted with 500 mM NaCl following three washes with cold PBS. To analyse NRG2 ectodomain shedding in response to glutamate, infected cells were rst washed into conditioned medium from age-matched uninfected cultures to reduce baseline NRG2-ECD levels, and heparin-associated proteins were eluted with SDSPAGE sample buffer.
Brain membrane fractionation. Brain tissue was dissected and quickly homogenized in 1020 volumes cold 0.32 M sucrose/10 mM HEPES pH 7.4 using a glass-teon homogenizer rotating at 900 r.p.m. or a hand-operated glass-glass homogenizer (for metabolizing synaptosomes). Nuclei and unbroken cells were spun out for 10 min at 1,000g. The supernatant S1 was centrifuged for 30 min at
17,000g to obtain the crude membrane pellet P2. Following hypoosmotic shock to release synaptic vesicles, the resulting P3 fraction was loaded onto a discontinuous sucrose gradient (0.32 M/0.8 M/1.0 M/1.2 M) in 10 mM HEPES pH 7.4 and centrifuged for 2 h at 4 C and 150,000g using a SW60Ti rotor (Beckman). The
1.0/1.2 M sucrose interphase containing SMs was collected and extracted with 1% TX-100 to obtain detergent-soluble and detergent-insoluble subfractions. All solutions were supplemented with protease inhibitors (Roche). P2 fractions from whole rat brain were used as metabolizing SMs for NRG2 stimulation experiments.
ErbB4 immunoprecipitation. NRG2- and vehicle-treated P2 SMs were solubilized with 1% TX-100 and incubated for 30 min at 4 C with gentle agitation. Soluble and insoluble fractions were separated by centrifugation at 32,000g for 20 min. Soluble protein was adjusted to 1 mg ml 1 by addition of Ringer solution with 1% TX-100, protease inhibitors and NaVO4. Equal amounts of protein were pre-cleared with 20 ml per mg Protein A-agarose (Pierce) for 1 h at 4 C with agitation. ErbB4 was immunoprecipitated with 10 mg per mg protein of rabbit monoclonal antibody mAb-107 crosslinked to Protein A with 100 mM disuccinimidyl suberate (Pierce). For immunoprecipitation from hippocampal cultures, two wells of a six-well plate or 110 cm dish was used per condition. Following treatments, cultures were washed three times on ice with cold PBS and then lysed in PBS 1% TX-100 with
protease and phosphatase inhibitors. Following a 30-min incubation at 4 C, lysates were cleared at 5,000g for 5 min. Protein was adjusted to equal concentrations and ErbB4 was immunoprecipitated as above.
MS of ErbB4-interacting proteins. ErbB4 immunoprecipitates from controls and NRG2-treated metabolizing synaptosomes were size-fractionated by SDSPAGE, and Coomassie-stained gel bands were manually excised. In-gel tryptic digestion and peptide extraction were performed using a standard protocol56, followed by 1D liquid chromatography tandem MS (1D-LC-MS/MS) analysis using a Nano LC 1D Proteomics HPLC system (Eksigent) coupled online to an (LTQ)-Orbitrap mass spectrometer (Thermo Fisher) equipped with a Nanomate nanoelectrospray ionization source (Advion). 1D-LC-MS/MS experiments for protein pulldowns were performed such that spectra were acquired for 60 min in the data-dependent mode with dynamic exclusion enabled. The top ve peaks in the 4002,000 m/z range of every MS survey scan were fragmented. Survey spectra were acquired with 60,000 resolution in the Orbi-mass analyser and fragmented in the LTQ ion trap. 1D-LC-MS/MS experiments for peptide pulldowns were performed in a similar manner except the top three peaks in the 4002,000 m/z range of every MS survey scan were fragmented, and survey spectra were acquired with 30,000 resolution.
Western blotting. Protein samples from tissue lysates, cultured cells, conditioned medium or ErbB4 immunoprecipitates were size fractionated on 7.5% or 415% Mini-Protean TGX precast gels (Bio-Rad) and electroblotted onto nitrocellulose. Membranes were blocked with 3% bovine serum albumin in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) containing 0.1% Tween-20 (TBS/T), and incubated with primary antibodies in blocking solution for several hours at RT or overnight at 4 C. After several washes with TBS/T, membranes were incubated with horseradish peroxidaseconjugated secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch) for 1 h at RT. Signals were detected by chemiluminescence using a ChemiDoc MP imager (Bio-Rad) and quantied using Image Lab software (Bio-Rad). Full blots for all western blots shown in the gures are shown in Supplementary Fig.11.
Whole-cell NMDAR currents. Hippocampal neurons grown on glass coverslips were transferred to a submerged recording chamber continuously perfused at 2 ml min 1 at 3032 C with articial cerebrospinal uid (ACSF) containing(in mM) 124 NaCl, 25 Na2HCO3, 11 glucose, 2.5 KCl, 1.3 MgCl2, 2.5 CaCl2 and1.25 NaH2PO4 buffered via continuous bubbling with carbogen. Currents were low-pass ltered at 2 kHz and digitized at 1 kHz using Axopatch 200B amplier, Digidata 1440A data acquisition boards, and pCLAMP10 software (all from Molecular Devices). Access resistance was monitored during recordings and experiments with 420% change were discarded. Whole-cell voltage clamp recordings of NMDA-evoked currents were performed with borosilicate glass microelectrodes (35 MO) lled with internal solution containing (in mM)
130 CsMeSO3, 8 NaCl, 10 HEPES, 0.5 EGTA, 4 Mg-ATP, 0.3 Na-GTP, 1 BAPTA,5 QX-314Cl, 10 phosphocreatine and 0.3% biocytin at pH 7.2 adjusted with KOH. Following acquisition of whole-cell conguration, neurons were depolarized to
40 mV to alleviate Mg blockade of NMDARs and allowed to recover for B57 min. Outward NMDA-mediated currents were isolated by bath application of tetrodotoxin (1 mM), 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (10 mM) and picrotoxin (100 mM). Currents were evoked by 100 mM NMDA and conrmed with the NMDAR antagonist AP5 (25 mM). All drugs delivered by bath application were also delivered through the Y-tube with the exception of NMDA and NRG2 that where delivered only via the Y-tube57. Data were normalized to baseline and tested for signicance using a paired students t-test. For post hoc analysis of ErbB4 expression, neurons were xed following recordings and labelled with anti-ErbB4 antibody 5721, Alexa Fluor 488-Streptavidin and DAPI.
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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8222 ARTICLE
Synaptic electrophysiological recordings in acute slices. PFC slices (300 mm) from tamoxifen-injected ErbB4_2A_CreERT2 x Ai14 mice on a C57Bl/6J background (46 weeks of age) and C57Bl/6J wild-type mice of both sexes were used to record from ErbB4 interneurons and pyramidal neurons, respectively. Coronal slices were prepared in ice-cold ACSF (in mM: 125 NaCl, 24 NaHCO3, 2.5 KCl,1.25 NaH2PO4, 0.5 CaCl2, 5 MgCl2 and 10 glucose). Slices were incubated in a holding chamber at 32 C for 1 h in ACSF saturated with 95% O2 and 5% CO2, and then transferred to 28 C ACSF and kept for at least 1 h before recording. Neurons were recorded from the layer 2/3 of the medial PFC and stimulated in the same layer at a distance of B100 mm using a glass monopolar electrode lled with ACSF.
Stimulation intensity was adjusted to 50% of maximal response. To measure NMDAR and AMPAR currents, pipettes were lled with an internal solution containing (in mM) 130 CsCH3SO3, 8 NaCl, 10 HEPES, 0.5 EGTA, 4 Mg-ATP, 0.3
Na-GTP and 10 phosphocreatine at pH 7.2. The internal solution additionally included biocytin for post hoc neuron identication. Pipette and whole-cell capacitance as well as series resistance were compensated by 485%. ErbB4 interneurons were identied by the expression of red uorescence. Peak synaptic
AMPA currents were measured at 70 mV and NMDA currents were measured
at 40 mV; measurements of the NMDA receptor component were calculated
50 ms following the stimulation artefact to minimize contributions from AMPA receptor currents11. The recording solution contained picrotoxin (100 mM) to block
GABAR-mediated currents. After recording an initial baseline for 1012 min, recombinant NRG2 (10 nM) was bath-applied until a stable response was attained (1525 min). Command voltage and current stimulus were controlled by pClamp10.1 via a digital/analogue interface (Digidata 1322A, Molecular Devices). The acquisition rate was 4 kHz and digitized at 20 kHz. Data were analysed using SigmaPlot (Systat Software), normalized to baseline and tested for signicance using a paired Students t-test.
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Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Vincent Schram, Carolyn Smith and Xufeng Wu from the Eunice Shriver Kennedy National Institutes of Child and Human Development, National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute imaging cores for expert assistance with super-resolution and live-imaging microscopy. We thank Sandford Markey for proteomics support, Ron Petralia for help with initial EM experiments, Sara Johansen for help with RNAScope experiments, Jody Martin for the generation of AAVs for NRG2, and Wei Lu and Dax Hoffman for their comments. This work was supported by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Author contributions
D.V., R.M.M. and A.B. conceived of the project, designed experiments and wrote the manuscript. D.V., R.M.M., C.K., S.R., I.K. and J.-H.T.-C. conducted experiments and analysed the data. D.V., R.M.M. and A.B. supervised the project.
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How to cite this article: Vullhorst, D. et al. A negative feedback loop controls NMDA receptor function in cortical interneurons via neuregulin 2/ErbB4 signalling. Nat. Commun. 6:7222 doi: 10.1038/ncomms8222 (2015).
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Abstract
The neuregulin receptor ErbB4 is an important modulator of GABAergic interneurons and neural network synchronization. However, little is known about the endogenous ligands that engage ErbB4, the neural processes that activate them or their direct downstream targets. Here we demonstrate, in cultured neurons and in acute slices, that the NMDA receptor is both effector and target of neuregulin 2 (NRG2)/ErbB4 signalling in cortical interneurons. Interneurons co-express ErbB4 and NRG2, and pro-NRG2 accumulates on cell bodies atop subsurface cisternae. NMDA receptor activation rapidly triggers shedding of the signalling-competent NRG2 extracellular domain. In turn, NRG2 promotes ErbB4 association with GluN2B-containing NMDA receptors, followed by rapid internalization of surface receptors and potent downregulation of NMDA but not AMPA receptor currents. These effects occur selectively in ErbB4-positive interneurons and not in ErbB4-negative pyramidal neurons. Our findings reveal an intimate reciprocal relationship between ErbB4 and NMDA receptors with possible implications for the modulation of cortical microcircuits associated with cognitive deficits in psychiatric disorders.
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