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Dive into the research topics where Stephan D. Brenowitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephan D. Brenowitz.


Nature Neuroscience | 2003

Brief presynaptic bursts evoke synapse-specific retrograde inhibition mediated by endogenous cannabinoids

Solange P. Brown; Stephan D. Brenowitz; Wade G. Regehr

Many types of neurons can release endocannabinoids that act as retrograde signals to inhibit neurotransmitter release from presynaptic terminals. Little is known, however, about the properties or role of such inhibition under physiological conditions. Here we report that brief bursts of presynaptic activity evoked endocannabinoid release, which strongly inhibited parallel fiber–to–Purkinje cell synapses in rat cerebellar slices. This retrograde inhibition was triggered by activation of either postsynaptic metabotropic or ionotropic glutamate receptors and was restricted to synapses activated with high-frequency bursts. Thus, endocannabinoids allow neurons to inhibit specific synaptic inputs in response to a burst, thereby dynamically fine-tuning the properties of synaptic integration.


Neuron | 2005

Associative Short-Term Synaptic Plasticity Mediated by Endocannabinoids

Stephan D. Brenowitz; Wade G. Regehr

Associative learning is important on rapid timescales, but no suitable form of short-term plasticity has been identified that is both associative and synapse specific. Here, we assess whether endocannabinoids can mediate such plasticity. In the cerebellum, bursts of parallel fiber (PF) activity evoke endocannabinoid release from Purkinje cell dendrites that results in retrograde synaptic inhibition lasting seconds. We find that the powerful climbing fiber (CF) to Purkinje cell synapse regulates this inhibition. Compared to PF stimulation alone, coactivation of PF and CF synapses greatly enhanced endocannabinoid-mediated inhibition of PF synapses. Retrograde inhibition was restricted to PFs activated within several hundred milliseconds of CF activation. This associative plasticity reflects two aspects of calcium-dependent endocannabinoid release. First, PF-mediated activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors locally reduced the dendritic calcium levels required for endocannabinoid release. Second, CF and PF coactivation evoked localized supralinear dendritic calcium signals. Thus, endocannabinoids mediate transient associative synaptic plasticity.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Sox2 Induces Neuronal Formation in the Developing Mammalian Cochlea

Chandrakala Puligilla; Alain Dabdoub; Stephan D. Brenowitz; Matthew W. Kelley

In the cochlea, spiral ganglion neurons play a critical role in hearing as they form the relay between mechanosensory hair cells in the inner ear and cochlear nuclei in the brainstem. The proneural basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors Neurogenin1 (Neurog1) and NeuroD1 have been shown to be essential for the development of otocyst-derived inner ear sensory neurons. Here, we show neural competence of nonsensory epithelial cells in the cochlea, as ectopic expression of either Neurog1 or NeuroD1 results in the formation of neuronal cells. Since the high-mobility-group type transcription factor Sox2, which is also known to play a role in neurogenesis, is expressed in otocyst-derived neural precursor cells and later in the spiral ganglion neurons along with Neurog1 and NeuroD1, we used both gain- and loss-of-function experiments to examine the role of Sox2 in spiral ganglion neuron formation. We demonstrate that overexpression of Sox2 results in the production of neurons, suggesting that Sox2 is sufficient for the induction of neuronal fate in nonsensory epithelial cells. Furthermore, spiral ganglion neurons are absent in cochleae from Sox2Lcc/Lcc mice, indicating that Sox2 is also required for neuronal formation in the cochlea. Our results indicate that Sox2, along with Neurog1 and NeuroD1, are sufficient to induce a neuronal fate in nonsensory regions of the cochlea. Finally, we demonstrate that nonsensory cells within the cochlea retain neural competence through at least the early postnatal period.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Reliability and Heterogeneity of Calcium Signaling at Single Presynaptic Boutons of Cerebellar Granule Cells

Stephan D. Brenowitz; Wade G. Regehr

Activity-dependent elevation of calcium within presynaptic boutons regulates many aspects of synaptic transmission. Here, we examine presynaptic residual calcium (Cares) transients in individual presynaptic boutons of cerebellar granule cells at near-physiological temperatures using two-photon microscopy. Properties of Cares under conditions of zero-added buffer were determined by measuring Cares transients while loading boutons to a steady-state indicator concentration. These experiments revealed that, in the absence of exogenous calcium buffers, a single action potential evokes transients of Cares that vary widely in different boutons both in amplitude (400–900 nm) and time course (25–55 ms). Variation in calcium influx density, endogenous buffer capacity, and calcium extrusion density contribute to differences in Cares among boutons. Heterogeneity in Cares within different boutons suggests that plasticity can be regulated independently at different synapses arising from an individual granule cell. In a given bouton, Cares signals were highly reproducible from trial to trial and failures of calcium influx were not observed. We find that a factor contributing to this reliability is that an action potential opens a large number of calcium channels (20–125) in a bouton. Presynaptic calcium signals were also used to assess the ability of granule cell axons to convey somatically generated action potentials to distant synapses. In response to pairs of action potentials or trains, granule cell boutons showed a remarkable ability to respond reliably at frequencies up to 500 Hz. Thus, individual boutons appear specialized for reliable calcium signaling during bursts of high-frequency activation such as those that are observed in vivo.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Sustained Elevation of Dendritic Calcium Evokes Widespread Endocannabinoid Release and Suppression of Synapses onto Cerebellar Purkinje Cells

Stephan D. Brenowitz; Aaron R. Best; Wade G. Regehr

Endocannabinoids can act as retrograde messengers that allow postsynaptic cells to regulate the strength of their synaptic inputs. In the cerebellum, Purkinje cells (PCs) release endocannabinoids through two mechanisms. Synaptic activation evokes local endocannabinoid release that relies on a pathway that involves the metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR1 and phospholipase-C (PLC). In contrast, depolarization evokes endocannabinoid release from the entire dendritic arbor. This leads to depolarization-induced suppression of inhibitory (DSI) and excitatory (DSE) synapses by a mechanism that does not involve mGluR1 or PLC. This latter mechanism of endocannabinoid release has only been observed under artificial conditions that transiently elevate postsynaptic calcium to >5 μm. Here, we tested the possibility that this mechanism could lead to retrograde inhibition in response to more realistic calcium signals. At both climbing fiber and inhibitory synapses onto PCs, we found that prolonging the elevation of calcium significantly lowered the peak calcium required to evoke PLC-independent endocannabinoid release. This suggests that the mechanism of endocannabinoid release involved in DSI and DSE is likely to evoke endocannabinoid release in response to physiologically relevant levels of calcium. When dendritic calcium was elevated to 0.4–1 μm for 15 s or more, endocannabinoid release from PCs selectively suppressed inhibitory synapses. This suggests that inhibitory synapses are more sensitive to prolonged calcium increases. Thus, in contrast to localized retrograde inhibition evoked by synaptic activation, modest but sustained calcium elevation could globally suppress inhibitory synapses onto PCs.


Neuron | 2008

Active Dendritic Conductances Dynamically Regulate GABA Release from Thalamic Interneurons

Claudio Acuna-Goycolea; Stephan D. Brenowitz; Wade G. Regehr

Inhibitory interneurons in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) process visual information by precisely controlling spike timing and by refining the receptive fields of thalamocortical (TC) neurons. Previous studies indicate that dLGN interneurons inhibit TC neurons by releasing GABA from both axons and dendrites. However, the mechanisms controlling GABA release are poorly understood. Here, using simultaneous whole-cell recordings from interneurons and TC neurons and two-photon calcium imaging, we find that synchronous activation of multiple retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) triggers sodium spikes that propagate throughout interneuron axons and dendrites, and calcium spikes that invade dendrites but not axons. These distinct modes of interneuron firing can trigger both a rapid and a sustained component of inhibition onto TC neurons. Our studies suggest that active conductances make LGN interneurons flexible circuit-elements that can shift their spatial and temporal properties of GABA release in response to coincident activation of functionally related subsets of RGCs.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Functional NMDA Receptors at Axonal Growth Cones of Young Hippocampal Neurons

Philip Y. Wang; Ronald S. Petralia; Ya-Xian Wang; Robert J. Wenthold; Stephan D. Brenowitz

NMDA receptors (NMDARs) are critical to the development of the nervous system, although their roles at axonal growth cones are unclear. We examined NMDAR localization and function at axonal growth cones of young hippocampal neurons. Our immunocytochemical data showed that native and transfected NMDAR subunits are expressed in axons and growth cones of young (days in vitro 3–6) hippocampal rat neurons. Moreover, immunogold electron microscopy showed that NR1 is expressed in growth cones of postnatal day 2 rat hippocampus. Local application of NMDAR agonists to growth cones of voltage-clamped neurons evoked inward currents that were blocked by bath application of an NMDAR antagonist (dl-APV), indicating that these NMDARs are functional. In addition, calcium imaging experiments indicated that NMDARs present in growth cones mediate calcium influx. Calcium transients in growth cones persisted despite pharmacological blockade of voltage-sensitive calcium channels and depletion of intracellular calcium stores. Our findings reveal the presence of functional NMDARs in axons and growth cones of young neurons, suggesting a role for these receptors in axonal guidance and synapse formation during neuronal development.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Sustained Firing of Cartwheel Cells in the Dorsal Cochlear Nucleus Evokes Endocannabinoid Release and Retrograde Suppression of Parallel Fiber Synapses

Miloslav Sedlacek; Philip W. Tipton; Stephan D. Brenowitz

Neurons in many brain regions release endocannabinoids from their dendrites that act as retrograde signals to transiently suppress neurotransmitter release from presynaptic terminals. Little is known, however, about the physiological mechanisms of short-term endocannabinoid-mediated plasticity under physiological conditions. Here we investigate calcium-dependent endocannabinoid release from cartwheel cells (CWCs) of the mouse dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) in the auditory brainstem that provide feedforward inhibition onto DCN principal neurons. We report that sustained action potential firing by CWCs evokes endocannabinoid release in response to submicromolar elevation of dendritic calcium that transiently suppresses their parallel fiber (PF) inputs by >70%. Basal spontaneous CWC firing rates are insufficient to evoke tonic suppression of PF synapses. However, elevating CWC firing rates by stimulating PFs triggers the release of endocannabinoids and heterosynaptic suppression of PF inputs. Spike-evoked suppression by endocannabinoids selectively suppresses excitatory synapses, but glycinergic/GABAergic inputs onto CWCs are not affected. Our findings demonstrate a mechanism of transient plasticity mediated by endocannabinoids that heterosynaptically suppresses subsets of excitatory presynaptic inputs to CWCs that regulates feedforward inhibition of DCN principal neurons and may influence the output of the DCN.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

Cholinergic Modulation of Large-Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channels Regulates Synaptic Strength and Spine Calcium in Cartwheel Cells of the Dorsal Cochlear Nucleus

Shan He; Ya-Xian Wang; Ronald S. Petralia; Stephan D. Brenowitz

Acetylcholine is a neuromodulatory transmitter that controls synaptic plasticity and sensory processing in many brain regions. The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) is an auditory brainstem nucleus that integrates auditory signals from the cochlea with multisensory inputs from several brainstem nuclei and receives prominent cholinergic projections. In the auditory periphery, cholinergic modulation serves a neuroprotective function, reducing cochlear output under high sound levels. However, the role of cholinergic signaling in the DCN is less understood. Here we examine postsynaptic mechanisms of cholinergic modulation at glutamatergic synapses formed by parallel fiber axons onto cartwheel cells (CWCs) in the apical DCN circuit from mouse brainstem slice using calcium (Ca) imaging combined with two-photon laser glutamate uncaging onto CWC spines. Activation of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) significantly increased the amplitude of both uncaging-evoked EPSPs (uEPSPs) and spine Ca transients. Our results demonstrate that mAChRs in CWC spines act by suppressing large-conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channels, and this effect is mediated through the cAMP/protein kinase A signaling pathway. Blocking BK channels relieves voltage-dependent magnesium block of NMDA receptors, thereby enhancing uEPSPs and spine Ca transients. Finally, we demonstrate that mAChR activation inhibits L-type Ca channels and thus may contribute to the suppression of BK channels by mAChRs. In summary, we demonstrate a novel role for BK channels in regulating glutamatergic transmission and show that this mechanism is under modulatory control of mAChRs.


Neuron | 2003

“Resistant” Channels Reluctantly Reveal Their Roles

Stephan D. Brenowitz; Wade G. Regehr

Abstract Presynaptic calcium influx is mediated by a variety of different calcium channel subtypes with distinct pharmacological and biophysical properties. In this issue of Neuron , Dietrich et al. show that although Ca V 2.3 calcium channels do not contribute to fast transmitter release at hippocampal mossy fiber synapses, they play a specialized role in induction of multiple presynaptic forms of synaptic plasticity.

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Laurence O. Trussell

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Miloslav Sedlacek

National Institutes of Health

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Ronald S. Petralia

National Institutes of Health

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Ya-Xian Wang

National Institutes of Health

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Chandrakala Puligilla

National Institutes of Health

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F. Aura Ene

University of Pittsburgh

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