Abstract

Adenosine serves as a homeostatic factor, regulating hippocampal activity through A 1 receptor-mediated inhibition. Gamma frequency oscillations, associated with cognitive functions, emerge from increased network activity. Here we test the hypothesis that hippocampal gamma oscillations are modulated by ambient adenosine levels. In mouse hippocampal slices exogenous adenosine suppressed the power of both kainate-induced gamma oscillations and spontaneous gamma oscillations, observed in a subset of slices in normal aCSF. Kainate-induced gamma oscillation power was suppressed by the A 1 receptor agonist PIA and potentiated by the A 1 receptor antagonist 8-CPT to three times matched control values with an EC 50 of 1.1 μM. 8-CPT also potentiated spontaneous gamma oscillation power to five times control values. The A 2A receptor agonist CGS21680 potentiated kainate-induced gamma power to two times control values (EC 50 0.3 nM), but this effect was halved in the presence of 8-CPT. The A 2A receptor antagonist ZM241385 suppressed kainate-induced gamma power. The non-selective adenosine receptor antagonist caffeine induced gamma oscillations in slices in control aCSF and potentiated both kainate-induced gamma and spontaneous gamma oscillations to three times control values (EC 50 28 μM). Decreasing endogenous adenosine levels with adenosine deaminase increased gamma oscillations. Increasing endogenous adenosine levels with the adenosine kinase inhibitor 5-iodotubericidin suppressed gamma oscillations. Partial hypoxia-induced suppression of gamma oscillations could be prevented by 8-CPT. These observations indicate that gamma oscillation strength is powerfully modulated by ambient levels of adenosine through A 1 receptors, opposed by A 2A receptors. Increased gamma oscillation strength is likely to contribute to the beneficial cognitive effects of caffeine.

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