Gap-junctional coupling between neurons and astrocytes in primary central nervous system cultures

  1. Maira M. Fróes*,,
  2. Ana Helena P. Correia*,
  3. José Garcia-Abreu*,
  4. David C. Spray,§,
  5. Antônio C. Campos de Carvalho,, and
  6. Vivaldo Moura Neto*,
  1. *Departamento de Anatomia, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, 21941-590, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; and Instituto de Biofísica Carlos Chagas Filho, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, 21949-900, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  1. Communicated by Michael V. L. Bennett, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY (received for review September 12, 1998)

Abstract

Gap-junctional communication between neurons and astrocytes dissociated from rat brain was identified in culture by using dye-transfer assays and electrophysiological measurements. Cell types were identified by using antibodies against β-tubulin III, glial fibrillary acidic protein, and 2′,3′-cyclic-nucleotide phosphohydrolase, which are antigenic determinants of neurons, astroglia, and oligodendrocytes, respectively. Dye coupling was examined as a function of time after dissociated embryonic brain cells were plated onto confluent monolayers of postnatal astrocytes by intracellularly injecting the fluorochrome Lucifer yellow. Coupling of neurons to the astrocytic monolayer was most frequent between 48 h and 72 h in culture and declined over the next 4 days. This gradual uncoupling was accompanied by progressive neuronal maturation, as indicated by morphological measurements in camera lucida drawings. Dye spread was abolished reversibly by octanol, an agent that blocks gap junction channels in other systems. Double whole-cell voltage-clamp measurements confirmed the presence of heterocellular electrical coupling in these cocultures. Coupling was also seen between neurons and astrocytes in cocultures of cells dissociated from embryonic cerebral hemispheres but was rarely detectable in cocultures of postnatal brain cells. These data strongly suggest that junctional communication may provide metabolic and electrotonic interconnections between neuronal and astrocytic networks at early stages of neural development and that such interactions are weakened as differentiation progresses.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: mmfroes{at}anato.ufrj.br.

  • § Present address: Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY 10461.

  • A.C.C.C. and V.M.N. contributed equally to this work.

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    CNS,
    central nervous system;
    En,
    embryonic day n;
    Pn,
    postnatal day n;
    LY,
    Lucifer yellow;
    GFAP,
    glial fibrillary acidic protein;
    RITC,
    rhodamine isothiocyanate;
    TTX,
    tetrodotoxin
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