Correlating Fluorescence and High-Resolution Scanning Electron Microscopy
(HRSEM) for the study of GABAA receptor clustering induced by inhibitory
synaptic plasticity
Both excitatory and inhibitory synaptic contacts display activity dependent
dynamic changes in their efficacy that are globally termed synaptic
plasticity. Although the molecular mechanisms underlying glutamatergic
synaptic plasticity have been extensively investigated and described, those
responsible for inhibitory synaptic plasticity are only beginning to be
unveiled. In this framework, the ultrastructural changes of the inhibitory
synapses during plasticity have been poorly investigated. Here we combined
confocal fluorescence microscopy (CFM) with high resolution scanning electron
microscopy (HRSEM) to characterize the fine structural rearrangements of post-
synaptic GABAA Receptors (GABAARs) at the nanometric scale during the
induction of inhibitory long-term potentiation (iLTP). Additional electron
tomography (ET) experiments on immunolabelled hippocampal neurons allowed the
visualization of synaptic contacts and confirmed the reorganization of post-
synaptic GABAAR clusters in response to chemical iLTP inducing protocol.
Altogether, these approaches revealed that, following the induction of
inhibitory synaptic potentiation, GABAAR clusters increase in size and number
at the post-synaptic membrane with no other major structural changes of the
pre- and post-synaptic elements