Elevated pyramidal cell firing orchestrates arteriolar vasoconstriction through COX-2-derived prostaglandin E2 signaling

  1. Benjamin Le Gac
  2. Marine Tournissac
  3. Esther Belzic
  4. Sandrine Picaud
  5. Isabelle Dusart
  6. Hédi Soula
  7. Dongdong Li
  8. Serge Charpak
  9. Bruno Cauli  Is a corresponding author
  1. Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Inserm, Neuro-SU, France
  2. Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Inserm, Institut de Biologie Paris-Seine, France
  3. Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Inserm, Institut de la Vision, F-75012, France
  4. Sorbonne Université, INSERM, Nutrition and Obesities: Systemic Approaches, NutriOmics, Research Unit, France
9 figures, 4 tables and 2 additional files

Figures

Figure 1 with 2 supplements
The occurrence and strength of vasoconstriction depends on the photostimulation frequency of pyramidal cells.

(A) Representative examples of the voltage responses of a layer II-III pyramidal cell (upper traces light grey to black traces) induced by photostimulations (470 nm, 10 s train, 5ms pulses) delivered at 1, 2, 5, 10, and 20 Hz (cyan lower traces) and mean spike success rate (middle trace, n=4 cells from 3 mice). The SEMs envelope the mean traces. The red dashed lines represent a spike success rate of 100%. (B) Representative example showing IR-DGC pictures of a layer I penetrating arteriole (1) before a 20 Hz photostimulation, (2) at the maximal diameter decrease, and (3) after 10 min of recording. Pial surface is upward. Yellow calipers represent the measured diameters. White dashed lines indicate the initial position of the vessel wall. Scale bar: 25 µm. (C) Kinetics of arteriolar diameter changes induced by photostimulation (vertical cyan bars) at 1 Hz (n=4 arterioles from 3 mice), 2 Hz (n=10 arterioles from 8 mice), 5 Hz (n=6 arterioles from 6 mice), 10 Hz (n=5 arterioles from 5 mice), and 20 Hz (n=10 arteriole from 9 mice). The SEMs envelope the mean traces. The blue trace represents the kinetics of the diameter changes of the arteriole shown in (B). (D) Effects of the different photostimulation frequencies on AUC of vascular responses during 10 min of recording. Data are presented as the individual values and mean ± SEM. * statistically different from 20 Hz stimulation with p<0.05.

Figure 1—source data 1

Detection of spikes per light pulse interval from different cells used to determine spike success rate in Figure 1A.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig1-data1-v1.xls
Figure 1—source data 2

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 1C and Figure 1—figure supplement 2.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig1-data2-v1.xls
Figure 1—figure supplement 1
Vasoconstriction induced by widefield photostimulation is specific of ChR2 expression in pyramidal cells.

(A) Visualization of EYFP-ChR2 fusion transgene fluorescence in a cortical slice of an Emx1-cre;Ai32 mouse at 4 X objective. Note the presence of barrels in layer IV. (B) Photobleaching in superficial cortical layers was achieved by widefield illumination at maximum LED power for 1 min with a 40 X objective. The round photobleached area was approximately 0.15 mm². (C) Kinetics of vascular responses induced by photostimulation at 20 Hz in cortical brain slices from naive C57bl/6 J (light gray, n=3 arterioles) or ChR2-expressing Emx1-cre;Ai32 mice (black, n=10 arterioles). Dashed line represents the baseline. The SEMs envelope the mean traces. (D) Effect of pyramidal cell ChR2 expression on AUC of vascular responses evoked by photostimulation at 20 Hz. The data are shown as the individual values and mean ± SEM. * statistically different with p<0.05.

Figure 1—figure supplement 1—source data 1

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 1—figure supplement 1C.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig1-figsupp1-data1-v1.xlsx
Figure 1—figure supplement 2
Vasoconstrictions occurred during the 30 first minutes after pyramidal cells photoactivation.

(A) Kinetics of arteriolar diameter changes induced by photostimulation (vertical cyan bars) at 1 Hz (n=4 arterioles from 3 mice), 2 Hz (n=10 arterioles from 8 mice), 5 Hz (n=6 arterioles from 6 mice), 10 Hz (n=5 arterioles from 5 mice) and 20 Hz (n=10 arterioles from 9 mice) during 30 min recording. The SEMs envelope the mean traces. The blue trace represents the kinetics of the diameter changes of the arteriole shown in Figure 1B. (B, C) Effects of the different photostimulation frequencies on (B) AUC and (C) time to peak of vascular responses during the 30 min of recording. Data are presented as the individual values and mean ± SEM.

Figure 2 with 1 supplement
Photostimulation of pyramidal cells elicits a time-locked firing and a frequency-dependent calcium increase.

(A) Voltage response (top trace) and kinetics of relative fluorescence changes (red bottom trace) induced by photostimulation at 20 Hz. Insets, IR-DGC (top), Rhod2 fluorescence (bottom) pictures of an imaged layer II/III pyramidal cell. The somatic region of interest is outlined in white. Pial surface is upward. Scale bar: 20 µm. (B) Mean relative variations of Ca2+ fluorescence in response to photostimulation at 2 Hz (grey, n=9 cells from 5 mice) and 20 Hz (black, n=9 cells from 5 mice). Dashed line represents the baseline. The vertical cyan bar indicates the duration of photostimulation. SEMs envelope the mean traces. Inset, Maximum increase in relative fluorescence changes induced immediately after photostimulation, indicated by the black arrow. The data are shown as the individual values and mean ± SEM. * statistically different with p<0.05.

Figure 2—source data 1

Somatic fluorescence measurements (A.U.) used to determine fluorescence changes in Figure 2.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig2-data1-v1.xls
Figure 2—figure supplement 1
Photostimulation of pyramidal cells does not evoke recurrent spiking network activity.

(A, B) Representative voltage responses evoked before, during, and after photostimulation (vertical cyan bars) delivered at 2 (A) and 20 Hz (B). The insets show the enlarged voltage responses during photostimulation (cyan zones). (C, D) Mean firing frequency of pyramidal cells evoked at 2 Hz (C), n=9 cells from 5 mice and 20 Hz (D), n=9 cells from 5 mice. Note sporadic action potentials after photostimulation. The insets show the zoomed-in mean firing frequency during the 40 s period around photostimulation. The dashed line represents the 0 Hz baseline. The SEMs envelope the mean traces.

Figure 2—figure supplement 1—source data 1

Detection of spikes per second used to determine the mean firing frequency in Figure 2—figure supplement 1C and D.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig2-figsupp1-data1-v1.xls
Figure 3 with 1 supplement
Optogenetically-induced vasoconstriction requires AP firing and partially glutamatergic transmission.

Effect of TTX (1 µM, brown, n=6 arterioles from 5 mice) and cocktail antagonists of AMPA/kainate (DNQX, 10 µM), NMDA (D-AP5, 50 µM), mGluR1 (LY367385, 100 µM) and mGluR5 (MPEP, 50 µM) receptors (gray, n=10 arterioles from 6 mice) on (A) kinetics and (B) magnitude of arteriolar vasoconstriction induced by 20 Hz photostimulation (cyan bar). The SEMs envelope the mean traces. Dashed lines represent the initial diameter. The shaded traces correspond to the kinetics of arteriolar vasoconstriction in control condition (Figure 1C – 20 Hz). Data are presented as the individual values and mean ± SEM. * and *** statistically different from control condition (Figure 1D – 20 Hz) with p<0.05 and p<0.001, respectively.

Figure 3—source data 1

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 3A.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig3-data1-v1.xlsx
Figure 3—figure supplement 1
Basal network activity and tonic glutamate do not influence resting vascular tone.

(A, B) Kinetics of diameter changes (left panels) and comparison of the mean luminal diameter between the 5-min control period and after 15 or 20 min of treatment (right panels) with (A) TTX (1 µM, brown, n=4 arterioles from 2 mice) or (B) a cocktail of AMPA/kainate (DNQX, 10 µM), NMDA (D-AP5, 50 µM), mGluR1 (LY367385, 100 µM) and mGluR5 (MPEP, 50 µM) glutamate receptor antagonists (gray, n=10 arterioles from 6 mice). n.s. not statistically significant.

Figure 3—figure supplement 1—source data 1

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 3—figure supplement 1.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig3-figsupp1-data1-v1.xlsx
Figure 4 with 1 supplement
Layer II-III pyramidal cells express PGE2 and PGF2α synthesizing enzymes.

(A) Voltage responses of a layer II-III pyramidal cell induced by injection of current (bottom traces). In response to a just-above-threshold current pulse, the neuron fired long-lasting action potentials with little frequency adaptation (middle black trace). Near saturation, it exhibits the pronounced spike amplitude accommodation and marked frequency adaptation characteristic of regular spiking cells (upper grey trace). (B) Agarose gel analysis of the scRT-PCR products of the pyramidal cell shown in (A) revealing expression of vGluT1, COX-2, mPGES2, cPGES, PM-PGFS and CBR1. Φx174 digested by HaeIII (Φ in bps) was used as molecular weight marker (C) Histogram summarizing the single-cell detection rate of PGE2 and PGf2α synthesizing enzymes in layer II-III pyramidal cells (n=16 cells from 6 mice). PGES (green zone) corresponds to mPGES1, mPGES2 and/or cPGES and PGFS (blue zone) to PM-PGFS, CBR1 and/or AKR1B3. (D) Co-expression of PGE2 and PGf2α synthesizing enzymes in pyramidal cells. The box size is proportional to the detection rate. Note the absence of co-expression between COX-1 (purple) and COX-2 (red). Co-expression of a PGES (left, green) and a PGFS (right, blue) with COX-1 (up) and COX-2 (bottom).

Figure 4—figure supplement 1
Sensitivity of the RT-mPCR protocol.

Agarose gel analysis of a RT-PCR performed from 500 pg of forebrain total RNAs Φx174 digested by HaeIII (Φ in bps) was used as molecular weight marker. All the amplicons were detected with the expected sized from the gene sequences (Appendix 1—key resources table).

Figure 5 with 2 supplements
GE2 mostly derived from COX-2 activity and its EP1 and EP3 receptors mediates vasoconstriction induced by optogenetically activated pyramidal cells.

(A, B) Ex vivo effects of the COX1/2 inhibitor indomethacin (magenta, n=10 arterioles from 9 mice), the COX-1 inhibitor SC-560 (purple, n=10 arterioles from 7 mice), and the COX-2 inhibitor NS-398 (red, n=7 arterioles from 6 mice) on kinetics (A) and AUC (B) of arteriolar vasoconstriction induced by 20 Hz photostimulation (vertical cyan bar). In vivo experiments are highlighted by a black frame. (C) Optogenetic stimulation was achieved in vivo with an optic fiber through a chronic cranial window over the barrel cortex. (D) Left, diameter of pial arterioles labeled with fluorescein dextran (i.v) was measured with line-scan crossing the vessel (white line). Right, Representative examples of vascular response upon photostimulation (10 Hz, 10 s) under control (top) and indomethacin condition (bottom). (E) Diameter changes upon photostimulation under control (black; n=5 arterioles, 4 mice) or indomethacin (magenta; n=4 arterioles, 4 mice) conditions. (F) Area under the curve of the diameter change in control (black) or indomethacin (magenta) conditions calculated between 20 and 40 s (unpaired, two-tailed Mann Whitney test, * p<0.05). (G, H) Effects of the EP1, EP3 and FP antagonists, ONO-8130 (10 nM, dark green, n=9 arterioles from 7 mice), L798,106 (1 µM, light green, n=9 arterioles from 5 mice) and AL8810 (10 µM, dark blue, n=9 arterioles from 7 mice), respectively, on kinetics (G) and AUC (H) of arteriolar vasoconstriction induced by 20 Hz photostimulation. The data are shown as the individual values and mean ± SEM. Dashed line represents the baseline. The SEMs envelope the mean traces. The shaded traces in A and G correspond to the control condition (from Figure 1C – 20 Hz). *, ** and *** statistically different from 20 Hz control condition with p<0.05, 0.01 and 0.001, respectively.

Figure 5—source data 1

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 5A, B, G and H.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig5-data1-v1.xlsx
Figure 5—source data 2

Diameter changes of individual arterioles shown in Figure 5E under control condition.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig5-data2-v1.xlsx
Figure 5—source data 3

Diameter changes of individual arterioles shown in Figure 5E after indomethacin treatment.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig5-data3-v1.xlsx
Figure 5—figure supplement 1
Tonic PGE2 does not affect basal vascular tone.

Kinetics of diameter changes (left panels) and comparison of the mean luminal diameter between the five minutes control period and the five minutes following 30 min treatment by the COX inhibitors (A) indomethacin (5 µM, magenta, n=8 arterioles from 7 mice), (B) SC-560 (100 nM, purple, n=10 arterioles from 7 mice), (C) NS-398 (10 µM, red, n = 5 arterioles from 4 mice), and the EP1, EP3 and FP antagonists (D) ONO-8130 (10 nM, dark green, n = 9 arterioles from 7 mice), (E) L-798,106 (1 µM, light green, n = 9 arterioles from 4 mice) and (F) AL8810 (10 µM, dark blue, n = 9 arterioles from 7 mice), respectively. n.s. not statistically significant and * statistically different with p< 0.05.

Figure 5—figure supplement 1—source data 1

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 5—figure supplement 1.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig5-figsupp1-data1-v1.xls
Figure 5—figure supplement 2
PGE2 dose-dependently induces vasoconstriction.

(A, B) Kinetics of arteriolar diameter changes induced by exogenous application of PGE2 (vertical green zones) at (A1) 10 nM (n = 7 arterioles from 4 mice), (A2) 100 nM (n=8 arterioles from 6 mice), (A3) 1 µM (n=7 arterioles from 4 mice) and (A4) 10 µM (n=6 arterioles from 4 mice), by (B) the EP1/EP3 agonist sulprostone (fluorescent green, 10 µM, n=8 arterioles from 5 mice) or (C) by 10 µM PGE2 under a TTX application (1 µM, n=5 arterioles from 3 mice). Dashed line represents the baseline. The SEMs envelope the mean traces. (D) Dose-dependent effect of PGE2 or sulprostone effect on AUC of vascular responses. The data are shown as the individual values and mean ± SEM.

Figure 5—figure supplement 2—source data 1

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 5—figure supplement 2.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig5-figsupp2-data1-v1.xls
Figure 6 with 1 supplement
NPY Y1 receptors activation and 20-HETE synthesis mediates the vasoconstriction induced by pyramidal neurons.

Effects of paxilline (1 µM, orange, n=10 arterioles from 6 mice), HET-0016 (100 nM, blue-grey, n=10 arterioles from 7 mice) and BIBP3226 (1 µM, yellow, n=10 arterioles from 6 mice) on (A) kinetics and (B) AUC of arteriolar vasoconstriction induced by 20 Hz photostimulation (vertical blue bar). Dashed line represents the baseline. The SEMs envelope the mean traces. The shaded traces correspond to the control condition (Figure 1C – 20 Hz). The data are shown as the individual values and mean ± SEM. * and *** statistically different from 20 Hz control condition with p<0.05 and 0.001.

Figure 6—source data 1

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 6.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig6-data1-v1.xlsx
Figure 6—figure supplement 1
Vasoconstrictive pathways do not influence resting vascular tone.

Kinetics of diameter changes (left panels) and comparison of the mean luminal diameter between the five-minute control period and the last five minutes (right panels) of treatment with (A) paxilline (1 µM, orange, n=5 arterioles from 3 mice) for five minutes or with (B) HET-0016 (100 nM, blue-grey, n = 10 arterioles from 7 mice) or (C) BIBP3226 (1 µM, yellow, n=10 arterioles from 6 mice) for 30 min. n.s. not statistically significant.

Figure 6—figure supplement 1—source data 1

Diameter measurements (µm) of individual arterioles used to determine diameter changes in Figure 6—figure supplement 1.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-fig6-figsupp1-data1-v1.xls
Possible pathways of vasoconstriction induced by pyramidal neurons.

20 Hz photostimulation induces activation of pyramidal neurons expressing channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2H134R) and increases intracellular calcium (Ca2+). Arachidonic acid (AA) is released from membrane phospholipids (MPL) by phospholipases (PL) activated by intracellular Ca2+ and is metabolized by type-1 and type-2 cyclooxygenases (COX-1 and COX-2) and prostaglandin E2 synthases (PGES) to produce prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). Three non-exclusive pathways can be proposed for arteriolar vasoconstriction in layer I: (1) PGE2 released into the extracellular space may act directly on arteriolar EP1 and EP3 receptors to induce smooth muscle cell constriction. (2) Glutamate released from pyramidal cells may activate neuropeptide Y (NPY) interneurons and NPY is released to act on vascular and neuronal Y1 receptors to constrict smooth muscle cells and promote glutamate release, respectively. Glutamate can also activate astrocytes to induce constriction through the 20-HETE and the COX-1/PGE2 pathways. (3) PGE2 may act on pre- and postsynaptic EP2 receptors to facilitate glutamate release and NPY interneuron activation, respectively.

Author response image 1
Example of a pial arteriole filled with fluorescein dextran (cyan) in an Emx1-EYFP mouse (parenchyma labeled with YFP, in cyan).

The red line represents a line-scan to record the change in diameter. Due to the perivascular space surrounding the arterioles, the vessel walls are clearly identified and separated from the fluorescent parenchyma.

Author response image 2
Optogenetic stimulation in a wild-type mouse.

A. No diameter changes upon stimulations of 10 seconds, 10 Hz, 1 mW, 5 ms pulses, i.e. the conditions we used for the experiments in Emx1 mice. B. Stimulation of higher power (4 mW), longer duration (20 ms pulses) and at a higher frequency elicited a small dilation in 1 (grey traces) of 2 pial arterioles.

Tables

Table 1
Morphological and physiological properties, and neurovascular responses of diving arterioles used in the analysis of the frequency-dependence of the polarity of neurovascular response evoked by pyramidal cells.
Frequency1 Hz2 Hz5 Hz10 Hz20 Hz
Number of arteriolesn=4n=10n=6n=5n=10
Resting stability (%)1.2±0.21.6±0.21.6±0.21.3±0.21.0±0.1
F (4, 30)=2.161
p=0.098
n.s.
Wall thickness (µm)3.6±0.83.8±0.33.2±0.54.1±0.84.0±0.2
F (4, 30)=0.656
p=0.627
n.s.
Area under the curve after photostimulation (AUC; x103 %.s)0.5±0.20.0±0.50.2±1–1.7±1.1–3.7±0.7
F (4, 30)=6.135
p=0.00099
***
Maximal dΔT/dt (%.s–1)0.19±0.090.64±0.140.22±0.040.43±0.190.8±0.11
All <2 %.s–1
  1. Data are mean ± SEM, one-way ANOVA F test and corresponding exact p-value. n.s., not statistically different and ***: p<0.001.

Table 2
Electrophysiological properties of pyramidal cells recorded during single-cell RT-PCR experiments.
COXs-negative(n=7)COX-1 positive(n=4)COX-2 positive(n=5)
Passive properties
Resting potential (mV)–82.0±2.2–84.7±4.2–82.0±6.1
Input resistance (MΩ)329±53.7360.8±63.7314.2±79.7
Time constant (ms)50.7±6.447.3±7.247.74±10.1
Membrane capacitance (pF)161.4±14.7133.2±7.8159.4±23.0
Sag index (%)11.3±3.86.7±1.16.9±1.8
Just above threshold properties
Rheobase (pA)52.7±8.751.7±15.562.3±18.2
First spike latency (ms)295.2±50.8271.6±62.9178.7±55.6
Adaptation (Hz/s)–3.1±0.9–2.6±0.3–3.3±1.3
Minimal frequency (Hz)5.5±0.74.6±0.46.3±1.2
Firing properties
Accommodation (mV)16.4±4.624.8±4.911.9±3.7
Amplitude of early adaptation (Hz)62.1±13.389.8±8.562.3±16.4
Time constant of early adaptation (ms)29.7±4.428.3±2.243.1±18.7
Late adaptation (Hz/s)–11.6±2.3–9.6±3.9–10.7±1.7
Maximal frequency (Hz)23.4±1.727.6±3.322.0±2.9
Action potentials properties
1st spike amplitude (mV)94.8±1.793.0±5.088.6±1.9
1st spike duration (ms)1.8±0.11.9±0.11.8±0.1
2nd spike amplitude (mV)91.6±1.991.9±4.585.5±2.5
2nd spike duration (ms)1.9±0.11.9±0.11.9±0.1
Amplitude Reduction (%)3.4±0.41.1±0.73.6±1.4
Duration Increase (%)5.3±0.93.8±1.57.5±1.6
AHP and ADP properties
1st spike fast AHP (mV)–8.7±0.8–8.7±0.6–7.9±1.1
1st spike ADP (mV)0.2±0.10.2±0.20±0
1st spike medium AHP (mV)–13.8±1.4–15.5±0.6–13.7±0.8
1st spike fast AHP latency (ms)8.2±1.07.7±1.49.8±1.5
1st spike ADP latency (ms)4.6±2.22.0±2.00±0
1st spike, medium AHP latency (ms)49.2±3.348.2±5.454.8±6.1
2nd spike fast AHP (mV)–9.8±1.1–8.5±0.5–9.6±1.0
2nd spike ADP (mV)0±00.1±0.10±0
2nd spike medium AHP (mV)–16.1±1.2–17.1±0.6–15.8±0.4
2nd spike, fast AHP latency (ms)8.6±0.97.1±0.711.7±1.3
F (2.13)=4.063
p=0.0426
*
No significant difference in multiple comparisons.
2nd spike ADP latency (ms)1.2±1.21.7±1.70±0
2nd spike, medium AHP latency (ms)57.1±5.851.9±4.658.3±6.7
  1. Data are presented as mean ± SEM. Statistical analyses were performed using a one-way ANOVA (F test) or a Kruskal-Wallis test, depending on the result of the Shapiro-Wilk normality test. If a significant result was found, the corresponding statistics are reported, and post-hoc multiple comparisons are performed.

Table 2—source data 1

Electrophysiological and molecular properties of pyramidal cells used for Table 2.

https://cdn.elifesciences.org/articles/102424/elife-102424-table2-data1-v1.xlsx
Table 3
IC50 and concentrations of inhibitors, blocker and antagonists used in tissue.
Concentrations used for inhibition/antagonism
Inhibitor/antagonistIn vitro IC50PreparationConcentration
IndomethacinCOX-1: 22 nM; Lora et al., 1998COX-2: 87 nMMouse brain slices; Lacroix et al., 20155 µM
SC560COX-1: 9 nM; Smith et al., 1998COX-2: 6.3 µMMouse brain slices; Lacroix et al., 2015100 nM
NS-398COX-1: 50 µM; Lora et al., 1998COX-2: 0.6 µMMouse brain slices; Lacroix et al., 201510 µM
ONO-8130EP1 receptors: 9.3 nM; Säfholm et al., 2013aisolated guinea pig trachea; Säfholm et al., 2013b10 nM
L798,106EP3 receptors: 0.3 nM (Ki); Juteau et al., 2001Isolated mouse mesenteric arteries; Chia et al., 20111 µM
AL8810FP receptors: 426 nM (Ki); Griffin et al., 1999Isolated porcine retinal arterioles; Oversø Hansen et al., 201510 µM
PaxillineBK channels: 97 nM; Tammaro et al., 2004Mouse brain slices; Girouard et al., 20101 µM
HET-0016CYP4A isoforms: 35 nM; Miyata et al., 2001Mouse brain slices; Blanco et al., 2008100 nM
BIBP3226Y1 receptors: 26 nM; Rudolf et al., 1994Mouse brain slices; Sun et al., 20031 µM
Appendix 1—key resources table
Reagent type (species) or resourceDesignationSource or referenceIdentifiersAdditional information
Strain, strain background (Mus musculus, male and female)C57BL/6RJ, Wild typeJanvier LabsC57BL/6RJ
Strain, strain background (Mus musculus, male and female)B6.129P2- Emx1tm1(cre)Krj/J, Emx1 Cre/CrePMID:12151506; Gorski et al., 2002RRID:IMSR_JAX:005628
Strain, strain background (Mus musculus, male and female)B6.129P2- Gt(ROSA)26Sortm32(CAG-COP4*H134R/EYFP)Hze, Gt(ROSA)26Sor ChR2(H134R)-EYFP/ ChR2(H134R)-EYFPPMID:22446880; Madisen et al., 2012RRID:IMSR_JAX:024109
Sequence-based reagentSlc17a7 external sense PCR primer
(vGluT1)
PMID:23565079; Cabezas et al., 2013GGCTCCTTTTTCTGGGGCTAC
Sequence-based reagentSlc17a7 external antisense PCR primer
(vGluT1)
PMID:23565079; Cabezas et al., 2013CCAGCCGACTCCGTTCTAAG
Sequence-based reagentSlc17a7 internal sense PCR primer
(vGluT1)
PMID:23565079; Cabezas et al., 2013ATTCGCAGCCAACAGGGTCT
Sequence-based reagentSlc17a7 internal antisense PCR primer
(vGluT1)
PMID:23565079; Cabezas et al., 2013TGGCAAGCAGGGTATGTGAC
Sequence-based reagentGad2 external sense PCR primer
(GAD 65)
PMID:19295167; Karagiannis et al., 2009CCAAAAGTTCACGGGCGG
Sequence-based reagentGad2 external antisense PCR primer
(GAD 65)
PMID:19295167; Karagiannis et al., 2009TCCTCCAGATTTTGCGGTTG
Sequence-based reagentGad2 internal sense PCR primer
(GAD 65)
PMID:22754499; Perrenoud et al., 2012CACCTGCGACCAAAAACCCT
Sequence-based reagentGad2 internal antisense PCR primer
(GAD 65)
PMID:22754499; Perrenoud et al., 2012GATTTTGCGGTTGGTCTGCC
Sequence-based reagentGad1 external sense PCR primer
(GAD 67)
PMID:12196560; Férézou et al., 2002TACGGGGTTCGCACAGGTC
Sequence-based reagentGad1 external antisense PCR primer
(GAD 67)
PMID:12196560; Cabezas et al., 2013CCCAGGCAGCATCCACAT
Sequence-based reagentGad1 internal sense PCR primer
(GAD 67)
PMID:23565079; Cabezas et al., 2013CCCAGAAGTGAAGACAAAAGGC
Sequence-based reagentGad1 internal antisense PCR primer
(GAD 67)
PMID:23565079; Cabezas et al., 2013AATGCTCCGTAAACAGTCGTGC
Sequence-based reagentPtgs1 external sense PCR primer
(COX-1)
This paperATCCCTGTTGTTACTATCCGTGC
Sequence-based reagentPtgs1 external antisense PCR primer
(COX-1)
This paperTGTGGGGCAGTCTTTGGGTA
Sequence-based reagentPtgs1 internal sense PCR primer
(COX-1)
This paperAGGGTGTCTGTGTCCGCTTT
Sequence-based reagentPtgs1 internal antisense PCR primer
(COX-1)
This paperGGCTGGGGATAAGGTTGGAC
Sequence-based reagentPtgs2 external sense PCR primer
(COX-2)
PMID:21734275; Lecrux et al., 2011CTGAAGCCCACCCCAAACAC
Sequence-based reagentPtgs2 external antisense PCR primer
(COX-2)
PMID:29985318; Devienne et al., 2018CCTTATTTCCCTTCACACCCAT
Sequence-based reagentPtgs2 internal sense PCR primer
(COX-2)
PMID:29985318; Devienne et al., 2018AACAACATCCCCTTCCTGCG
Sequence-based reagentPtgs2 internal antisense PCR primer
(COX-2)
PMID:29985318; Devienne et al., 2018TGGGAGTTGGGCAGTCATCT
Sequence-based reagentPtges external sense PCR primer
(mPGES1)
This paperGCCTGGTGATGGAGAGCG
Sequence-based reagentPtges external antisense PCR primer
(mPGES1)
This paperGGAGCGAAGGCGTGGGTT
Sequence-based reagentPtges internal sense PCR primer
(mPGES1)
This paperAGATGAGGCTGCGGAAGAAG
Sequence-based reagentPtges internal antisense PCR primer
(mPGES1)
This paperCACGAAGCCGAGGAAGAGGA
Sequence-based reagentPtges2 external sense PCR primer
(mPGES1)
This paperCGACTTCCACTCCCTGCC
Sequence-based reagentPtges2 external antisense PCR primer
(mPGES2)
This paperCATCTCCTCCGTCCTGGCTT
Sequence-based reagentPtges2 internal sense PCR primer
(mPGES2)
This paperGAGGTGAATCCCGTGAGAAGG
Sequence-based reagentPtges2 internal antisense PCR primer
(mPGES2)
This paperTTCCTTCCCGCCATACATCT
Sequence-based reagentPtges3 external sense PCR primer
(cPGES)
This paperTCCAAGCATAAAAGAACAGACAGA
Sequence-based reagentPtges3 external antisense PCR primer
(cPGES)
This paperTGGCATCTTTTCATCATCACTGTC
Sequence-based reagentPtges3 internal sense PCR primer
(cPGES)
This paperTAACAAAGGAAAGGGCAAAGC
Sequence-based reagentPtges3 internal antisense PCR primer
(cPGES)
This paperCATCATCTGCTCCATCTACTTCTG
Sequence-based reagentPrxl2b external sense PCR primer
(PM-PGFS)
This paperAGGAGTTTCTGGATGGTGGTTAC
Sequence-based reagentPrxl2b external antisense PCR primer
(PM-PGFS)
This paperCACCTCCCACACACCTCTTCAT
Sequence-based reagentPrxl2b internal sense PCR primer
(PM-PGFS)
This paperACCTGTTCGTGATGTAGCCTCC
Sequence-based reagentPrxl2b internal antisense PCR primer
(PM-PGFS)
This paperCTGGGGTGGCTTGCTGGA
Sequence-based reagentAkr1b1 external sense PCR primer
(Akr1b3)
This paperCAGAATGAGAAGGAGGTGGGA
Sequence-based reagentAkr1b1 external antisense PCR primer
(Akr1b3)
This paperTTGAAGTTGGAGACACCGATTG
Sequence-based reagentAkr1b1 internal sense PCR primer
(Akr1b3)
This paperCAAGGAGCAGGTGGTGAAGC
Sequence-based reagentAkr1b1 internal antisense PCR primer
(Akr1b3)
This paperCATAGCCGTCCAAGTGTCCA
Sequence-based reagentCbr1 external sense PCR primer
(CBR1)
This paperAACCCGCAGAGCATTCGC
Sequence-based reagentCbr1 external antisense PCR primer
(CBR1)
This paperGCCAACCTTCTTCCGCAT
Sequence-based reagentCbr1 internal sense PCR primer
(CBR1)
This paperCAATGACGACACCCCCTTCC
Sequence-based reagentCbr1 internal antisense PCR primer
(CBR1)
This paperCTCCTCTGTGATGGTCTCGCTT
Chemical compound, drugRhod-2Cayman chemical20777
Chemical compound, drug9,11-dideoxy-9α,11α-methanoepoxy prostaglandin F2αEnzoBML-PG023
Chemical compound, drugTetrodotoxinLatoxanL8503
Chemical compound, drugD-(-)–2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acidHello BioHB0225
Chemical compound, drug6,7-dinitroquinoxaline-2,3-dioneHello BioHB0262
Chemical compound, drugLY367385Hello BioHB0398
Chemical compound, drug2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)pyridineHello BioHB0426
Chemical compound, drugIndomethacinSigma-AldrichI7378
Chemical compound, drugSC-560Sigma-AldrichS2064
Chemical compound, drugNS-398EnzoBML-EI261
Chemical compound, drugONO-8130Tocris5406
Chemical compound, drugL-798,106Cayman chemical11129
Chemical compound, drugAL8810Cayman chemical16735
Chemical compound, drugPGE2Hello BioHB3460
Chemical compound, drugSulprostoneCayman chemical14765
Chemical compound, drugBIBP3226Tocris2707
Chemical compound, drugHET0016MerckSML2416
Chemical compound, drugpaxillineTocris2006
Chemical compound, drugDithiothreitolVWR443852 A
Chemical compound, drugPrimer "random"Roche11034731001
Chemical compound, drugdNTPsGE Healthcare Life Sciences28-4065-52
Chemical compound, drugMineral OilSigma-AldrichM5904
Chemical compound, drugRNasin Ribonuclease InhibitorsPromegaN2511
Chemical compound, drugSuperScript II Reverse TranscriptaseInvitrogen18064014
Chemical compound, drugTaq DNA PolymeraseQiagen201205
Software, algorithmPclamp v 10.2Molecular DevicesRRID:SCR_011323
Software, algorithmMatlab v 2018bMathWorksRRID:SCR_001622
Software, algorithmGraphPad Prism v 7GraphPadRRID:SCR_002798
Software, algorithmImagingWorkbench v 6.1INDEC Systems
Software, algorithmFIJIPMID:22743772; Schindelin et al., 2012RRID:SCR_002285
Software, algorithmR v 4.3.0R Core TeamRRID:SCR_001905
OtherVibratomeLeicaVT1000S RRID:SCR_016495
OtherUpright microscopeOlympusBX51WI
OtherDual port moduleOlympusWI-DPMC
Other60 x ObjectiveOlympusLUMPlan Fl /IR 60 x/0.90 W
Other40 x ObjetiveOlympusLUMPlan Fl /IR 40 x/0.80 W
OthersCMOS cameraHamamatsuORCA-Flash4.0
OtherAxopatch 200BMolecular DevicesRRID:SCR_018866
OtherDigidata 1440 AMolecular DevicesRRID:SCR_021038
OtherS900 stimulatorDagan corporation
OtherpE-2CoolLED
OtherExcitation filterSemrockHC 392/474/554/635
OtherDichroic mirrorSemrockBS 409/493/573/652
OtherEmission filterSemrockHC 432/515/595/730
Other780 nm Collimated LEDThorlabsM780L3-C1
OtherDodt Gradient ContrastLuigs and Neumann200–100 200 0155
OtherBeam splitterSemrock725 DCSPXR
OtherAnalogic CCD cameraSonyXC ST-70 CE

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  1. Benjamin Le Gac
  2. Marine Tournissac
  3. Esther Belzic
  4. Sandrine Picaud
  5. Isabelle Dusart
  6. Hédi Soula
  7. Dongdong Li
  8. Serge Charpak
  9. Bruno Cauli
(2025)
Elevated pyramidal cell firing orchestrates arteriolar vasoconstriction through COX-2-derived prostaglandin E2 signaling
eLife 13:RP102424.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.102424.3