TY - JOUR
T1 - Complementary synaptic distribution of enzymes responsible for synthesis and inactivation of the endocannabinoid 2-arachidonoylglycerol in the human hippocampus
AU - Ludányi, A.
AU - Hu, S. S.J.
AU - Yamazaki, M.
AU - Tanimura, A.
AU - Piomelli, D.
AU - Watanabe, M.
AU - Kano, M.
AU - Sakimura, K.
AU - Maglóczky, Z.
AU - Mackie, K.
AU - Freund, T. F.
AU - Katona, I.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was funded by the Hungarian Scientific Research Fund-Norwegian Financial Mechanism Joint Program ( NNF 78918 ), European Research Council Grant 243153 and the János Bolyai scholarship to IK, by the Nemzeti Kutatási és Technológiai Hivatal (NKTH)-Országos Tudományos Kutatási Alapprogramok (OTKA) CNK77793 and European Union Contract LSHM-CT-2004-005166 to T.F.F., by the EPICURE FP6 EC LSH-CT-2006-037315 grant to T.F.F. and Z.M., and by National Institutes of Health grants ( DA09158 , MH54671 , NS030549 ) to T.F.F., and ( DA011322 , DA021696 ) to K.M. The authors wish to thank Mr. László Barna, the Nikon Microscopy Center at IEM, Nikon Austria GmbH and Auro-Science Consulting Ltd for kindly providing microscopy support. We are very grateful to Prof. Miklós Palkovits, Péter Sótonyi and Dr. Zsolt Borostyánkői (Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary) for providing control human tissue. The excellent technical assistance of Dr. Eszter Horváth, Győző Goda, Katalin Iványi, Gabriella Katona-Urbán, Katalin Lengyel, Balázs Pintér and Emőke Szépné Simon is also acknowledged. We also thank Barna Dudok for his help in immunocytochemistry and preparation of figures, Virág Tresóné Takács for her help in electron microscopy and Drs. Rita Nyilas, Christopher Henstridge and Zsolt Lele for their comments on this manuscript.
PY - 2011/2/3
Y1 - 2011/2/3
N2 - Clinical and experimental evidence demonstrates that endocannabinoids play either beneficial or adverse roles in many neurological and psychiatric disorders. Their medical significance may be best explained by the emerging concept that endocannabinoids are essential modulators of synaptic transmission throughout the central nervous system. However, the precise molecular architecture of the endocannabinoid signaling machinery in the human brain remains elusive. To address this issue, we investigated the synaptic distribution of metabolic enzymes for the most abundant endocannabinoid molecule, 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG), in the postmortem human hippocampus. Immunostaining for diacylglycerol lipase-α (DGL-α), the main synthesizing enzyme of 2-AG, resulted in a laminar pattern corresponding to the termination zones of glutamatergic pathways. The highest density of DGL-α-immunostaining was observed in strata radiatum and oriens of the cornu ammonis and in the inner third of stratum moleculare of the dentate gyrus. At higher magnification, DGL-α-immunopositive puncta were distributed throughout the neuropil outlining the immunonegative main dendrites of pyramidal and granule cells. Electron microscopic analysis revealed that this pattern was due to the accumulation of DGL-α in dendritic spine heads. Similar DGL-α-immunostaining pattern was also found in hippocampi of wild-type, but not of DGL-α knockout mice. Using two independent antibodies developed against monoacylglycerol lipase (MGL), the predominant enzyme inactivating 2-AG, immunostaining also revealed a laminar and punctate staining pattern. However, as observed previously in rodent hippocampus, MGL was enriched in axon terminals instead of postsynaptic structures at the ultrastructural level. Taken together, these findings demonstrate the post- and presynaptic segregation of primary enzymes responsible for synthesis and elimination of 2-AG, respectively, in the human hippocampus. Thus, molecular architecture of the endocannabinoid signaling machinery supports retrograde regulation of synaptic activity, and its similar blueprint in rodents and humans further indicates that 2-AG's physiological role as a negative feed-back signal is an evolutionarily conserved feature of excitatory synapses.
AB - Clinical and experimental evidence demonstrates that endocannabinoids play either beneficial or adverse roles in many neurological and psychiatric disorders. Their medical significance may be best explained by the emerging concept that endocannabinoids are essential modulators of synaptic transmission throughout the central nervous system. However, the precise molecular architecture of the endocannabinoid signaling machinery in the human brain remains elusive. To address this issue, we investigated the synaptic distribution of metabolic enzymes for the most abundant endocannabinoid molecule, 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG), in the postmortem human hippocampus. Immunostaining for diacylglycerol lipase-α (DGL-α), the main synthesizing enzyme of 2-AG, resulted in a laminar pattern corresponding to the termination zones of glutamatergic pathways. The highest density of DGL-α-immunostaining was observed in strata radiatum and oriens of the cornu ammonis and in the inner third of stratum moleculare of the dentate gyrus. At higher magnification, DGL-α-immunopositive puncta were distributed throughout the neuropil outlining the immunonegative main dendrites of pyramidal and granule cells. Electron microscopic analysis revealed that this pattern was due to the accumulation of DGL-α in dendritic spine heads. Similar DGL-α-immunostaining pattern was also found in hippocampi of wild-type, but not of DGL-α knockout mice. Using two independent antibodies developed against monoacylglycerol lipase (MGL), the predominant enzyme inactivating 2-AG, immunostaining also revealed a laminar and punctate staining pattern. However, as observed previously in rodent hippocampus, MGL was enriched in axon terminals instead of postsynaptic structures at the ultrastructural level. Taken together, these findings demonstrate the post- and presynaptic segregation of primary enzymes responsible for synthesis and elimination of 2-AG, respectively, in the human hippocampus. Thus, molecular architecture of the endocannabinoid signaling machinery supports retrograde regulation of synaptic activity, and its similar blueprint in rodents and humans further indicates that 2-AG's physiological role as a negative feed-back signal is an evolutionarily conserved feature of excitatory synapses.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2010.10.062
DO - 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2010.10.062
M3 - Article
C2 - 21035522
AN - SCOPUS:78650962985
SN - 0306-4522
VL - 174
SP - 50
EP - 63
JO - Neuroscience
JF - Neuroscience
ER -