PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Long-term culture of astrocytes attenuates the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles.

  • Hiroyuki Kawano,
  • Shutaro Katsurabayashi,
  • Yasuhiro Kakazu,
  • Yuta Yamashita,
  • Natsuko Kubo,
  • Masafumi Kubo,
  • Hideto Okuda,
  • Kotaro Takasaki,
  • Kaori Kubota,
  • Kenichi Mishima,
  • Michihiro Fujiwara,
  • N Charles Harata,
  • Katsunori Iwasaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10
p. e48034

Abstract

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The astrocyte is a major glial cell type of the brain, and plays key roles in the formation, maturation, stabilization and elimination of synapses. Thus, changes in astrocyte condition and age can influence information processing at synapses. However, whether and how aging astrocytes affect synaptic function and maturation have not yet been thoroughly investigated. Here, we show the effects of prolonged culture on the ability of astrocytes to induce synapse formation and to modify synaptic transmission, using cultured autaptic neurons. By 9 weeks in culture, astrocytes derived from the mouse cerebral cortex demonstrated increases in β-galactosidase activity and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) expression, both of which are characteristic of aging and glial activation in vitro. Autaptic hippocampal neurons plated on these aging astrocytes showed a smaller amount of evoked release of the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate, and a lower frequency of miniature release of glutamate, both of which were attributable to a reduction in the pool of readily releasable synaptic vesicles. Other features of synaptogenesis and synaptic transmission were retained, for example the ability to induce structural synapses, the presynaptic release probability, the fraction of functional presynaptic nerve terminals, and the ability to recruit functional AMPA and NMDA glutamate receptors to synapses. Thus the presence of aging astrocytes affects the efficiency of synaptic transmission. Given that the pool of readily releasable vesicles is also small at immature synapses, our results are consistent with astrocytic aging leading to retarded synapse maturation.