Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience (Apr 2020)

Transgenic Cross-Referencing of Inhibitory and Excitatory Interneuron Populations to Dissect Neuronal Heterogeneity in the Dorsal Horn

  • Tyler J. Browne,
  • Tyler J. Browne,
  • Mark A. Gradwell,
  • Mark A. Gradwell,
  • Jacqueline A. Iredale,
  • Jacqueline A. Iredale,
  • Jessica F. Maden,
  • Robert J. Callister,
  • Robert J. Callister,
  • David I. Hughes,
  • Christopher V. Dayas,
  • Christopher V. Dayas,
  • Brett A. Graham,
  • Brett A. Graham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnmol.2020.00032
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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The superficial dorsal horn (SDH, LI-II) of the spinal cord receives and processes multimodal sensory information from skin, muscle, joints, and viscera then relay it to the brain. Neurons within the SDH fall into two broad categories, projection neurons and interneurons. The later can be further subdivided into excitatory and inhibitory types. Traditionally, interneurons within the SDH have been divided into overlapping groups according to their neurochemical, morphological and electrophysiological properties. Recent clustering analyses, based on molecular transcript profiles of cells and nuclei, have predicted many more functional groups of interneurons than expected using traditional approaches. In this study, we used electrophysiological and morphological data obtained from genetically-identified excitatory (vGLUT2) and inhibitory (vGAT) interneurons in transgenic mice to cluster cells into groups sharing common characteristics and subsequently determined how many clusters can be assigned by combinations of these properties. Consistent with previous reports, we show differences exist between excitatory and inhibitory interneurons in terms of their excitability, nature of the ongoing excitatory drive, action potential (AP) properties, sub-threshold current kinetics, and morphology. The resulting clusters based on statistical and unbiased assortment of these data fell well short of the numbers of molecularly predicted clusters. There was no clear characteristic that in isolation defined a population, rather multiple variables were needed to predict cluster membership. Importantly though, our analysis highlighted the appropriateness of using transgenic lines as tools to functionally subdivide both excitatory and inhibitory interneuron populations.

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