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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Kuner is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Kuner.


Neuron | 2000

A Genetically Encoded Ratiometric Indicator for Chloride: Capturing Chloride Transients in Cultured Hippocampal Neurons

Thomas Kuner; George J Augustine

We constructed a novel optical indicator for chloride ions by fusing the chloride-sensitive yellow fluorescent protein with the chloride-insensitive cyan fluorescent protein. The ratio of FRET-dependent emission of these fluorophores varied in proportion to the concentration of Cl and was used to measure intracellular chloride concentration ([Cl-]i) in cultured hippocampal neurons. [Cl-]i decreased during neuronal development, consistent with the shift from excitation to inhibition during maturation of GABAergic synapses. Focal activation of GABAA receptors caused large changes in [Cl-]i that could underlie use-dependent depression of GABA-dependent synaptic transmission. GABA-induced changes in somatic [Cl-]i spread into dendrites, suggesting that [Cl-]i can signal the location of synaptic activity. This genetically encoded indicator will permit new approaches ranging from high-throughput drug screening to direct recordings of synaptic Cl- signals in vivo.


Neuron | 2004

Maintaining Accuracy at the Expense of Speed: Stimulus Similarity Defines Odor Discrimination Time in Mice

Nixon M. Abraham; Hartwig Spors; Alan Carleton; Troy W. Margrie; Thomas Kuner; Andreas T. Schaefer

Odor discrimination times and their dependence on stimulus similarity were evaluated to test temporal and spatial models of odor representation in mice. In a go/no-go operant conditioning paradigm, discrimination accuracy and time were determined for simple monomolecular odors and binary mixtures of odors. Mice discriminated simple odors with an accuracy exceeding 95%. Binary mixtures evoking highly overlapping spatiotemporal patterns of activity in the olfactory bulb were discriminated equally well. However, while discriminating simple odors in less than 200 ms, mice required 70-100 ms more time to discriminate highly similar binary mixtures. We conclude that odor discrimination in mice is fast and stimulus dependent. Thus, the underlying neuronal mechanisms act on a fast timescale, requiring only a brief epoch of odor-specific spatiotemporal representations to achieve rapid discrimination of dissimilar odors. The fine discrimination of highly similar stimuli, however, requires temporal integration of activity, suggesting a tradeoff between accuracy and speed.


Neuron | 1996

Structure of the NMDA Receptor Channel M2 Segment Inferred from the Accessibility of Substituted Cysteines

Thomas Kuner; Lonnie P. Wollmuth; Arthur Karlin; Peter H. Seeburg; Bert Sakmann

The structure of the NMDA receptor channel M2 segment was investigated by probing the extracellular and cytoplasmic faces of cysteine-substituted NR1-NR2C channels with charged sulfhydryl-specific reagents. The pattern of accessible positions suggests that the M2 segment forms a channel-lining loop originating and ending on the cytoplasmic side of the channel, with the ascending limb in an alpha-helical structure and the descending limb in an extended structure. A functionally critical asparagine (N-site) is positioned at the tip of the loop, and a cluster of hydrophilic residues of the descending limb, adjacent to the tip, forms the narrow constriction of the channel. An apparent asymmetric positioning of the NR1- and NR2-subunit N-site asparagines may account for their unequal role in Ca2+ permeability and Mg2+ block.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

The Primordial, Blue-Cone Color System of the Mouse Retina

Silke Haverkamp; Heinz Wässle; Jens Duebel; Thomas Kuner; George J Augustine; Guoping Feng; Thomas Euler

Humans and old world primates have trichromatic color vision based on three spectral types of cone [long-wavelength (L-), middle-wavelength (M-), and short-wavelength (S-) cones]. All other placental mammals are dichromats, and their color vision depends on the comparison of L- and S-cone signals; however, their cone-selective retinal circuitry is still unknown. Here, we identified the S-cone-selective (blue cone) bipolar cells of the mouse retina. They were labeled in a transgenic mouse expressing Clomeleon, a chloride-sensitive fluorescent protein, under the control of the thy1 promoter. Blue-cone bipolar cells comprise only 1-2% of the bipolar cell population, and their dendrites selectively contact S-opsin-expressing cones. In the dorsal half of the mouse retina, only 3-5% of the cones express S-opsin, and they are all contacted by blue-cone bipolar cells, whereas all L-opsin-expressing cones (∼95%) are avoided. In the ventral mouse retina, the great majority of cones express both S- and L-opsin. They are not contacted by blue-cone bipolar cells. A minority of ventral cones express S-opsin only, and they are selectively contacted by blue-cone bipolar cells. We suggest that these are genuine S-cones. In contrast to the other cones, their pedicles contain only low amounts of cone arrestin. The blue-cone bipolar cells of the mouse retina and their cone selectivity are closely similar to primate blue-cone bipolars, and we suggest that they both represent the phylogenetically ancient color system of the mammalian retina.


Nature | 2015

Brain tumour cells interconnect to a functional and resistant network

Matthias Osswald; Erik Jung; Felix Sahm; Gergely Solecki; Varun Venkataramani; Jonas Blaes; Sophie Weil; Heinz Horstmann; Benedikt Wiestler; Mustafa Syed; Lulu Huang; Miriam Ratliff; Kianush Karimian Jazi; Felix T. Kurz; Torsten Schmenger; Dieter Lemke; Miriam Gömmel; Martin Pauli; Yunxiang Liao; Peter Häring; Stefan Pusch; Verena Herl; Christian Steinhäuser; Damir Krunic; Mostafa Jarahian; Hrvoje Miletic; Anna Sophie Berghoff; Oliver Griesbeck; Georgios Kalamakis; Olga Garaschuk

Astrocytic brain tumours, including glioblastomas, are incurable neoplasms characterized by diffusely infiltrative growth. Here we show that many tumour cells in astrocytomas extend ultra-long membrane protrusions, and use these distinct tumour microtubes as routes for brain invasion, proliferation, and to interconnect over long distances. The resulting network allows multicellular communication through microtube-associated gap junctions. When damage to the network occurred, tumour microtubes were used for repair. Moreover, the microtube-connected astrocytoma cells, but not those remaining unconnected throughout tumour progression, were protected from cell death inflicted by radiotherapy. The neuronal growth-associated protein 43 was important for microtube formation and function, and drove microtube-dependent tumour cell invasion, proliferation, interconnection, and radioresistance. Oligodendroglial brain tumours were deficient in this mechanism. In summary, astrocytomas can develop functional multicellular network structures. Disconnection of astrocytoma cells by targeting their tumour microtubes emerges as a new principle to reduce the treatment resistance of this disease.


Progress in Neurobiology | 1994

Molecular biology of glutamate receptors

Ralf Schoepfer; Hannah Monyer; Bernd Sommer; William Wisden; Rolf Sprengel; Thomas Kuner; Hilda Lomelí; Anne Herb; Martin Köhler; Nail Burnashev; Willy Günther; Peter Ruppersberg; Peter H. Seeburg

The ligand-gated receptors for L-glutamate play a central role in acute neuronal degeneration. Recently cDNAs have been isolated for subunits of several glutamate receptor subtypes. By sequence homology all these subunits clearly belong to one large gene family. Several subfamilies exist and match roughly previously pharmacologically and electrophysiologically defined subtypes of glutamate receptors. Currently four genes (GluR A, B, C and D) are known that code for the AMPA subtypes of glutamate receptors. Recombinant expression of wild type and mutated sequences identified a critical residue in the putative TM2 channel-lining segment that controls Ca2+ ion permeability. The arginine (R) found in GluR B subunits at that position renders AMPA channels impermeable for Ca2+ ions, whereas glutamine (Q) containing GluR A, C and D subunits give rise to Ca2+ permeable channels. RNA editing converts the genomically encoded glutamine codon into the arginine codon found in GluR B cDNAs for the Q/R site. NMDA subtypes of glutamate receptors are formed after coexpression of the NR1 cDNA with a cDNA of the NR2 family. Depending on the member of the NR2 family used, NMDA receptors with different kinetical and pharmacological properties are generated. Common to all channels of these NMDA receptors is a high permeability for Ca2+ ions and a voltage dependent block by Mg2+ ions. All currently known NMDA receptor subunits have an asparagine at the Q/R homologous position. We found that this residue is critical for Mg2+ block and Ca2+ permeability of NMDA receptor channels.


Neuron | 2010

Synaptic inhibition in the olfactory bulb accelerates odor discrimination in mice.

Nixon M. Abraham; Veronica Egger; Derya R. Shimshek; Robert Renden; Izumi Fukunaga; Rolf Sprengel; Peter H. Seeburg; Matthias Klugmann; Troy W. Margrie; Andreas T. Schaefer; Thomas Kuner

Local inhibitory circuits are thought to shape neuronal information processing in the central nervous system, but it remains unclear how specific properties of inhibitory neuronal interactions translate into behavioral performance. In the olfactory bulb, inhibition of mitral/tufted cells via granule cells may contribute to odor discrimination behavior by refining neuronal representations of odors. Here we show that selective deletion of the AMPA receptor subunit GluA2 in granule cells boosted synaptic Ca(2+) influx, increasing inhibition of mitral cells. On a behavioral level, discrimination of similar odor mixtures was accelerated while leaving learning and memory unaffected. In contrast, selective removal of NMDA receptors in granule cells slowed discrimination of similar odors. Our results demonstrate that inhibition of mitral cells controlled by granule cell glutamate receptors results in fast and accurate discrimination of similar odors. Thus, spatiotemporally defined molecular perturbations of olfactory bulb granule cells directly link stimulus similarity, neuronal processing time, and discrimination behavior to synaptic inhibition.


The Journal of Physiology | 1998

Adjacent asparagines in the NR2-subunit of the NMDA receptor channel control the voltage-dependent block by extracellular Mg2+

Lonnie P. Wollmuth; Thomas Kuner; Bert Sakmann

1 The voltage‐dependent block of N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate (NMDA) receptor channels by extracellular Mg2+ is a critical determinant of its contribution to CNS synaptic physiology. The function of the narrow constriction of the channel in determining the block was investigated by analysing the effects of a set of different amino acid substitutions at exposed residues positioned at or near this region. NMDA receptor channels, composed of wild‐type and mutant NR1‐ and NR2A‐subunits, were expressed in Xenopus oocytes or human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells. 2 In wild‐type channels, the voltage dependence (δ) of the block by Mg2+ was concentration dependent with values of δ of ≈0.58 in 0.01 mM and ≈0.82 in 0.07 mM and higher concentrations. Under biionic conditions with high extracellular Mg2+ and K+ as the reference ion, Mg2+ weakly permeated the channel. Over intermediate potentials (≈‐60 to ‐10 mV), this weak permeability had no apparent effect on the block but at potentials negative to ≈‐60 mV, it attenuated the extent and voltage dependence of the block. 3 Substitutions of glycine, serine, glutamine or aspartate for the N‐site asparagine in the NR1‐subunit enhanced the extent of block over intermediate potentials but left the voltage dependence of the block unchanged indicating that structural determinants of the block remained. These same substitutions either attenuated or left unchanged the apparent Mg2+ permeability. 4 In channels containing substitutions of glycine, serine or glutamine for the N‐site asparagine in the NR2A‐subunit, the block by Mg2+ was reduced at negative potentials. Over intermediate potentials, the block was not strongly attenuated except for the glutamine substitution which reduced the voltage dependence of the block to ≈0.57 in 0.7 mM Mg2+. 5 Equivalent substitutions for the N + 1 site asparagine in the NR2A‐subunit strongly attenuated the block over the entire voltage range. In 0.7 mM Mg2+, the voltage dependence of the block was reduced to 0.50 (glycine), 0.53 (serine) and 0.46 (glutamine). 6 Channels containing substitutions of the N‐site or N + 1 site asparagines in the NR2A‐subunit showed an increased Mg2+ permeability suggesting that these adjacent asparagines form a barrier for inward Mg2+ flux. Changes in this barrier contribute, at least in part, to the mechanism underlying disruption of the block following substitution of these residues. 7 The adjacent NR2A‐subunit asparagines are positioned at or near the narrow constriction of the channel. Pore size, however, did not determine how effectively Mg2+ blocks mutant channels. 8 It is concluded that, at the narrow constriction in the NMDA receptor channel, the adjacent NR2A‐subunit asparagines, the N‐site and N + 1 site, but not the N‐site asparagine of the NR1‐subunit, form a critical blocking site for extracellular Mg2+. The contribution to the blocking site, in contrast to the prevailing view, is stronger for the N + 1 site than for the N‐site asparagine. The block may involve binding of Mg2+ to these residues.


Neuron | 1999

NMDAR Channel Segments Forming the Extracellular Vestibule Inferred from the Accessibility of Substituted Cysteines

Christine Beck; Lonnie P. Wollmuth; Peter H. Seeburg; Bert Sakmann; Thomas Kuner

In NMDA receptor channels, the M2 loop forms the narrow constriction and the cytoplasmic vestibule. The identity of an extracellular vestibule leading toward the constriction remained unresolved. Using the substituted cysteine accessibility method (SCAM), we identified channel-lining residues of the NR1 subunit in the region preceding M1 (preM1), the C-terminal part of M3 (M3C), and the N-terminal part of M4 (M4N). These residues are located on the extracellular side of the constriction and, with one exception, are exposed to the pore independently of channel activation, suggesting that the gate is at the constriction or further cytoplasmic to it. Permeation of Ca2+ ions was decreased by mutations in M3C and M4N, but not by mutations in preM1, suggesting a functionally distinct contribution of the segments to the extracellular vestibule of the NMDA receptor channel.


Cerebral Cortex | 2010

Dimensions of a projection column and architecture of VPM and POm axons in rat vibrissal cortex.

Verena C. Wimmer; Randy M. Bruno; Christiaan P. J. de Kock; Thomas Kuner; Bert Sakmann

This is the first article in a series of 3 studies that investigate the anatomical determinants of thalamocortical (TC) input to excitatory neurons in a cortical column of rat primary somatosensory cortex (S1). S1 receives 2 major types of TC inputs, lemiscal and paralemniscal. Lemiscal axons arise from the ventral posteromedial nucleus (VPM) of the thalamus, whereas paralemniscal fibers originate in the posteromedial nucleus (POm). While these 2 TC projections are largely complementary in L4, overlap in other cortical layers is still a matter of debate. VPM and POm axons were specifically labeled in the same rat by virus-mediated expression of different fluorescent proteins. We show that columnar and septal projection patterns are maintained throughout most of the cortical depth with a lower degree of separation in infragranular layers, where TC axons form bands along rows. Finally, we present anatomical dimensions of “TC projection domains” for a standard column in S1.

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Guoping Feng

McGovern Institute for Brain Research

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