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OPINION article

Front. Mol. Neurosci., 26 February 2014
Sec. Methods and Model Organisms

Life without glutamate: the epigenetic effects of glutamate deletion

  • 1Medimark Corporation, Del Mar, CA, USA
  • 2Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
  • 3Department of Psychology, Center for Brain and Cognition, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA

Introduction

Li et al. (2013) studied ThVGdKO mice produced by genetic elimination of the genes for both vesicular transporters Vglut-1 and Vglut-2. In these mice thalamocortical glutamate neurotransmission in somatosensory cortex (but not in visual or auditory cortex) is silenced or knocked-out, thereby disabling the release of glutamate from synaptic vesicles. This resulted in a failure to construct barrel cortex columns, and induced severe defects in both cortical layer 4 lamination and in the morphology of spiny stellate cells. The authors explain this finding as follows: “We favor a model in which stellate neurons modulate activity and direct the local migration of neurons into barrels, modify gene expression, and influence cell morphologic development.” Li et al. (2013) present an hypothesis to explain their results: see also the preview of this paper by Barth and Kuhlman (2013). They suggest that it is possible that, by binding to its NMDA or metabotropic receptors, glutamate would stimulate second messenger chains that terminate by activating the appropriate transcription factors. We accept their hypothesis as a partial explanation, but we suggest that there may be other factors involved that they have not considered. To explain these more fully we add two additional hypotheses. These hypotheses are not competitive, either with each other or with the original hypothesis of Li et al. (2013), but constitute additions.

Hypothesis 1. The Role of Exosomes

The first factor is the exosome. There is now abundant evidence that almost all cells, neurons included, bud-off exosomes that are, in essence, cargo-carrying vesicles. Exosomes transport genetic material between cells, including protein transcription factors, various types of RNA (including microRNAs), and segments of DNA that may induce phenotypic changes in recipient neurons (Ratajczak et al., 2006; Valadi et al., 2007; Lee et al., 2012; O'Loughlin et al., 2012; Tetta et al., 2012; Turola et al., 2012). The INSERM research group at the University of Grenoble (Fauré et al., 2006; Lachenal et al., 2011; Chivet et al., 2012) has suggested that exosomes may have a regulatory function at synapses and thus may offer an ideal mechanism for the interneuronal transfer of information. Smalheiser (2007) has suggested that exosomes are greatly involved with trans synaptic activity, and that exosomal secretion of proteins and RNAs may play a fundamental role in communication within the nervous system.

These researchers limited their hypotheses of the function of the exosome system to local retrograde activity at the synapses on which the exosomes attach (save a brief mention by Von Bartheld et al., 1996). We have suggested that the function of exosomes that cross the synapse may include anterograde activity in the entire postsynaptic neuron and beyond (Smythies and Edelstein, 2013a,b; Okuno et al., 2014). There is evidence that, from the host cytoplasm, a system of carrier molecules delivers exosomes and their cargoes to the rest of the postsynaptic neuron. Tian et al. (2010) isolated exosomes from PC12 cells, labeled them with a lipophilic dye and an amino-reactive fluorophore. The exosomes were then incubated with these PC12 cells. Live-cell microscopy revealed that the exosomes were endocytosed, enclosed in vesicles and transported to the perinuclear region. This transport may have been mediated by the cytoskeleton. Using a specific technique involving terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TDT) polymerase, Waldenström et al. (2012) identified 343 different chromosomal DNA sequences in the microvesicles/exosomes from cultured cardiomyocytes. Microvesicular/exosomal DNA was observed to transfer into target fibroblasts, where exosomes stained for DNA were seen in the fibroblast cytosol and in the nuclei themselves.

There is now considerable evidence to indicate that microRNAs modulate a number of neuronal functions. For example:

— spine numbers and synapse formation are controlled in an activity-regulated manner by miR-485 (Cohen et al., 2011).

— transcription of the microRNA miP335 is promoted by naturally evoked synaptic activity at the climbing fiber-Purkinje cell synapse in the mouse cerebellar flocculus (Barmack et al., 2010).

— neuronal activity regulates spine formation, in part, by increasing miR132 transcription, which in turn activates a Rac1-protein activated kinase (Rac1-Pak) actin remodeling pathway (Impey et al., 2010).

— microR-181a activity in primary neurons, induced by dopamine signaling, is a negative posttranscriptional regulator of GluA2 expression (Saba et al., 2012).

— utilizing a mouse line with a conditional neuronal deletion of Dgcr8 (a microRNA biogenesis protein predicted to process microRNAs exclusively) Hsu et al. (2012) produced evidence that some microRNAs govern essential aspects of inhibitory transmission and interneuron development in the mammalian nervous system.

Gennebäck et al. (2013) and de Jong et al. (2012) show that particular modes of stimulation of parental cells by platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF and hypoxia respectively) induce changes in the transcriptional contents of secreted exosomes. This offers new mechanisms of modulation of computational activities in neurons by exosomal payloads.

— MiRNA-124a is carried by exosomes from neurons to astrocytes and increases levels of excitatory amino acid transporter (EAAT2) therein (Morel et al., 2013).

The designs of most studies of neuronal microRNA have concentrated on the effects of these agents on the processes within the same neuron that produced them. However, the evidence now suggests that it is possible that microRNAs, as well as other signaling agents, may be exported from a presynaptic neuron by synaptic or perisynaptic transfer via the exosome system, to induce extensive structural and functional changes in the entire postsynaptic neuron.

The relevance of exosomes to the question of the mechanism of action of glutamate deletion is that the INSERM research group at the University of Grenoble report that exosomal release is regulated by K+-induced depolarization. Furthermore, exosome release from neurons in culture is “massively increased” by the introduction of GABA antagonists. This increase is inhibited by both AMPA and NMDA antagonists, indicating that exosome secretion is activated by glutamate activity at both the NMDA and AMPA receptors (Frühbeis et al., 2013). Thus, it would appear likely that, in the genetically engineered glutamate-silenced mice of Li et al. (2013), the release of exosomes is severely reduced. This would suspend a major source of epigenetic factors controlling the structure and function of the postsynaptic neuron. Another link between glutamate activity and exosomes is provided by Frühbeis et al. (2013). They showed that activity-dependent release of the neurotransmitter glutamate triggers oligodendroglial exosome secretion mediated by Ca2+entry through oligodendroglial NMDA and AMPA receptors. In turn, neurons internalize the released exosomes by endocytosis. This renders support to the neuron.

It is possible that the roamer type of volume transmission can participate, possibly involving shedding vesicles but mainly exosomes (Agnati and Fuxe, in preparation). They likely play a significant role in the current experiments, and the firing can operate in the case of thalamocortical glutamate neurons in this transgenic model, but without release of glutamate since glutamate is no longer stored in the synaptic vesicles in view of the deletion of the vesicular glutamate transporters. Thus, exosomes with their multiple types of biomolecules (proteins, receptors, mRNA, microRNA, transcription factors, etc.) can be released and internalized into cortical neurons and glia. However, the transcriptional and translational actions of these biomolecules are not sufficient to organize the cortical networks when the multiple glutamate subtypes are not activated by glutamate. It may be that under these conditions the exosomes are not effectively internalized and/or that synergy between the actions of the internalized molecules and the glutamate activated intracellular cascades is necessary for the column and cortical organization.

Hypothesis 2. The Role of Otx2

It is possible that another part of the mechanism responsible may be a homeoprotein such as Otx2 that is carried from the thalamus to the cortex, via the glutamatergic input (Sugiyama et al., 2008; Beurdeley et al., 2012; Carlier et al., 2013; Spatazza et al., 2013). After eye opening, Otx2 starts to be synthesized by the bipolar cells of the retina and is then exported up the visual pathway via retinal ganglion cells, the optic nerve, LGN and optic radiations to target parvalbumin (PV)-expressing GABAergic interneurons (PV cells) in the primary visual cortex. When a critical concentration of Otx2 is reached, plasticity develops in that part of the cortex in order that the circuitry necessary for binocular vision can be established. All during this period, Otx2 is exported from the eye to the cortex, with levels continuing to rise. After a period of time (20 days in mice), Otx2 levels reach another threshold, and plasticity is switched off in order that the cortex can maintain its adult circuitry. However, this maintenance requires continuous transfer of Otx2 from the eye to the cortex. If it is cut-off by deafferentation, plasticity returns.

The activity of Otx2, and of possible related molecules in other modalities of sensory cortex, depends on the continuous activity of the glutamatergic neuron. Therefore, in the absence of glutamate, the supply of homeoprotein may be disrupted. Moreover, in the experiments reported by Li et al. (2013), the glutamate system was never active. Thus, the homeoprotein required for constructing and maintaining PV-expressing GABAergic interneurons was never available. This may well have contributed to the disorganization of the barrels, layer 4 lamination and morphologic reconfiguration observed. Indeed, it is entirely possible that all three mechanism are involved. Further experiments are needed to explore this matter further.

Otx2 may still be released and internalized by the surrounding neurons and glia in this transgenic model, but cannot induce its transcriptional actions and regulation of local protein synthesis in the absence of continuously released glutamate activating multiple glutamate receptor subtypes with their signaling cascades to the nucleus.

It may be proposed that the hypothetical homeoprotein inter alia increases the synthesis of certain types of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), which can increase the signaling of discrete trophic factors like fibroblast-derived growth factor (FGF2) or brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). However, to obtain the necessary synergistic activation to produce the barrel and lamina organization of the cortex, it may be necessary to form inter alia receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK)-NMDAR and RTK-classI mGluR heteroreceptor complexes in the plasma membrane, which may demand continuously activated glutamate receptors (Borroto-Escuela et al., 2013). Such molecular events may help lead to the epigenetic changes necessary to produce the barrels, etc. and the exosomally derived biomolecules may contribute when the above circuits are in place.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to Eva-Maria Krämer-Albers for her helpful comments on the manuscript.

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Keywords: glutamate, epigenetics, exosomes, homeoproteins, Otx2, microRNAs

Citation: Edelstein L, Fuxe K and Smythies J (2014) Life without glutamate: the epigenetic effects of glutamate deletion. Front. Mol. Neurosci. 7:14. doi: 10.3389/fnmol.2014.00014

Received: 21 November 2013; Accepted: 10 February 2014;
Published online: 26 February 2014.

Edited by:

Nicola Maggio, The Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Israel

Reviewed by:

Michael Hollmann, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany
Ralf Enz, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany

Copyright © 2014 Edelstein, Fuxe and Smythies. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: larry.edelstein@claustrum.com

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