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1.
1. Human neocortical neurons fire repetitively in response to long depolarizing current injections. The slope of the relationship between average firing frequency and injected current (f-I slope) was linear or bilinear in these cells. The mean steady-state f-I slope (average of the last 500 ms of a 1-s firing episode) was 57.8 Hz/nA. The instantaneous firing rate decreased with time during a 1-s constant-current injection (spike frequency adaptation). Also, human neurons exhibited habituation in response to a 1-s current stimulus repeated every 2 s. 2. Afterhyperpolarizations (AHPs) reflect the active ionic conductances after action potentials. We studied AHPs with the use of intracellular recordings and pharmacological manipulations in the in vitro slice preparation to 1) gain insight into the ionic mechanisms underlying the AHPs and 2) elucidate the role that the underlying currents play in the functional behavior of human cortical neurons. 3. We have classified three AHPs in human neocortical neurons on the basis of their time courses: fast, medium, and slow. The amplitude of the AHPs was dependent on stimulus intensity and duration, number and frequency of spikes, and membrane potential. 4. The fast AHP had a reversal potential of -65 mV and was eliminated in extracellular Co2+, tetraethylammonium (TEA) or 4-aminopyridine, and intracellular TEA or CsCl. These manipulations also caused an increase in spike width. 5. The medium AHP had a reversal potential of -90 to -93 mV (22-24 mV hyperpolarized from mean resting potential). This AHP was reduced by Co2+, apamin, tubocurare, muscarine, norepinephrine (NE), and serotonin (5-HT). Pharmacological manipulations suggest that the medium AHP is produced in part by 1) a Ca-dependent K+ current and 2) a time-dependent anomalous rectifier (IH). 6. The slow AHP reversed at -83 to -87 mV (14-18 mV hyperpolarized from mean resting potential). This AHP was diminished by Co2+, muscarine, NE, and 5-HT. The pharmacology of the slow AHP suggests that a Ca-dependent K+ current with slow kinetics contributes to this AHP. 7. The currents involved in the fast AHP are important in spike repolarization, control of interspike interval during repetitive firing, and prevention of burst firing. Currents underlying the medium and slow AHPs influence the interspike interval during repetitive firing and produce spike frequency adaptation and habituation.  相似文献   

2.
The intrinsic firing modes of adult CA1 pyramidal cells vary along a continuum of "burstiness" from regular firing to rhythmic bursting, depending on the ionic composition of the extracellular milieu. Burstiness is low in neurons exposed to a normal extracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](o)), but is markedly enhanced by lowering [Ca(2+)](o), although not by blocking Ca(2+) and Ca(2+)-activated K(+) currents. We show, using intracellular recordings, that burstiness in low [Ca(2+)](o) persists even after truncating the apical dendrites, suggesting that bursts are generated by an interplay of membrane currents at or near the soma. To study the mechanisms of bursting, we have constructed a conductance-based, one-compartment model of CA1 pyramidal neurons. In this neuron model, reduced [Ca(2+)](o) is simulated by negatively shifting the activation curve of the persistent Na(+) current (I(NaP)) as indicated by recent experimental results. The neuron model accounts, with different parameter sets, for the diversity of firing patterns observed experimentally in both zero and normal [Ca(2+)](o). Increasing I(NaP) in the neuron model induces bursting and increases the number of spikes within a burst but is neither necessary nor sufficient for bursting. We show, using fast-slow analysis and bifurcation theory, that the M-type K(+) current (I(M)) allows bursting by shifting neuronal behavior between a silent and a tonically active state provided the kinetics of the spike generating currents are sufficiently, although not extremely, fast. We suggest that bursting in CA1 pyramidal cells can be explained by a single compartment "square bursting" mechanism with one slow variable, the activation of I(M).  相似文献   

3.
In slow neocortical paroxysmal oscillations, the de- and hyperpolarizing envelopes in neocortical neurons are large compared with slow sleep oscillations. Increased local synchrony of membrane potential oscillations during seizure is reflected in larger electroencephalographic oscillations and the appearance of spike- or polyspike-wave complex recruitment at 2- to 3-Hz frequencies. The oscillatory mechanisms underlying this paroxysmal activity were investigated in computational models of cortical networks. The extracellular K(+) concentration ([K(+)](o)) was continuously computed based on neuronal K(+) currents and K(+) pumps as well as glial buffering. An increase of [K(+)](o) triggered a transition from normal awake-like oscillations to 2- to 3-Hz seizure-like activity. In this mode, the cells fired periodic bursts and nearby neurons oscillated highly synchronously; in some cells depolarization led to spike inactivation lasting 50-100 ms. A [K(+)](o) increase, sufficient to produce oscillations could result from excessive firing (e.g., induced by external stimulation) or inability of K(+) regulatory system (e.g., when glial buffering was blocked). A combination of currents including high-threshold Ca(2+), persistent Na(+) and hyperpolarization-activated depolarizing (I(h)) currents was sufficient to maintain 2- to 3-Hz activity. In a network model that included lateral K(+) diffusion between cells, increase of [K(+)](o) in a small region was generally sufficient to maintain paroxysmal oscillations in the whole network. Slow changes of [K(+)](o) modulated the frequency of bursting and, in some case, led to fast oscillations in the 10- to 15-Hz frequency range, similar to the fast runs observed during seizures in vivo. These results suggest that modifications of the intrinsic currents mediated by increase of [K(+)](o) can explain the range of neocortical paroxysmal oscillations in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
Fast rhythmic bursting (or "chattering") is a firing pattern exhibited by selected neocortical neurons in cats in vivo and in slices of adult ferret and cat brain. Fast rhythmic bursting (FRB) has been recorded in certain superficial and deep principal neurons and in aspiny presumed local circuit neurons; it can be evoked by depolarizing currents or by sensory stimulation and has been proposed to depend on a persistent g(Na) that causes spike depolarizing afterpotentials. We constructed a multicompartment 11-conductance model of a layer 2/3 pyramidal neuron, containing apical dendritic calcium-mediated electrogenesis; the model can switch between rhythmic spiking (RS) and FRB modes of firing, with various parameter changes. FRB in this model is favored by enhancing persistent g(Na) and also by measures that reduce [Ca(2+)](i) or that reduce the conductance of g(K(C)) (a fast voltage- and Ca(2+)-dependent conductance). Axonal excitability plays a critical role in generating fast bursts in the model. In vitro experiments in rat layer 2/3 neurons confirmed (as shown previously by others) that RS firing could be switched to fast rhythmic bursting, either by buffering [Ca(2+)](i) or by enhancing persistent g(Na). In addition, our experiments confirmed the model prediction that reducing g(KC) (with iberiotoxin) would favor FRB. During the bursts, fast prepotentials (spikelets) could occur that did not originate in apical dendrites and that appear to derive from the axon. We suggest that modulator-induced regulation of [Ca(2+)] dynamics or of BK channel conductance, for example via protein kinase A, could play a role in determining the firing pattern of neocortical neurons; specifically, such modulation could play a role in regulating whether neurons respond to strong stimulation with fast rhythmic bursts.  相似文献   

5.
1. Cellular properties were studied before and after bath application of the dihydropyridine L-type calcium channel antagonist nimodipine in aging and young rabbit hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells in vitro. Various concentrations of nimodipine, ranging from 10 nM to 10 microM, were tested to investigate age- and concentration-dependent effects on cellular excitability. Drug studies were performed on a population of neurons at similar holding potentials to equate voltage-dependent effects. The properties studied under current-clamp conditions included steady-state current-voltage relations (I-V), the amplitude and integrated area of the postburst afterhyperpolarization (AHP), accommodation to a prolonged depolarizing current pulse (spike frequency adaptation), and single action-potential waveform characteristics following synaptic activation. 2. Numerous aging-related differences in cellular properties were noted. Aging hippocampal CA1 neurons exhibited significantly larger postburst AHPs (both the amplitude and the integrated area were enhanced). Aging CA1 neurons also exhibited more hyperpolarized resting membrane potentials with a concomitant decrease in input resistance. When cells were grouped to equate resting potentials, no differences in input resistance were noted, but the AHPs were still significantly larger in aging neurons. Aging CA1 neurons also fired fewer action potentials during a prolonged depolarizing current injection than young CA1 neurons. 3. Nimodipine decreased both the peak amplitude and the integrated area of the AHP in an age- and concentration-dependent manner. At concentrations as low as 100 nM, nimodipine significantly reduced the AHP in aging CA1 neurons. In young CA1 neurons, nimodipine decreased the AHP only at 10 microM. No effects on input resistance or action-potential characteristics were seen. 4. Nimodipine increased excitability in an age- and concentration-dependent manner by decreasing spike frequency accommodation (increasing the number of action potentials during prolonged depolarizing current injection). In aging CA1 neurons, this effect was significant at concentrations as low as 10 nM. In young CA1 neurons, nimodipine decreased accommodation only at higher concentrations (> or = 1.0 microM). 5. We conclude that aging CA1 neurons were less excitable than young neurons. In aging hippocampus, nimodipine restores excitability, as measured by size of the AHP and degree of accommodation, to levels closely resembling those of young adult CA1 neurons. These actions of nimodipine on aging CA1 hippocampal neurons may partly underlie the drug's notable ability to improve associative learning in aging rabbits and other mammals. Reversal of inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) by chloride ion and/or current injections into six motoneurons revealed the presence of inhibition during the period between phrenic bursts during fictive vomiting and also during the final phase of expulsion when phrenic discharge ceased by abdominal discharge continued. 3. Fictive coughing, evoked by repetitive electrical stimulation of superior laryngeal nerve afferents, was characterized by a large phrenic discharge followed immediately by a large abdominal nerve discharge. During fictive coughing, phrenic motoneurons retained their ramplike depolarizations throughout phrenic discharge; however, the amplitude of depolarization was greater than during inspiration. During the subsequent abdominal nerve discharge, the phrenic membrane potential usually underwent an initial rapid, transient hyperpolarization followed by a gradual repolarization associated with increased synaptic noise.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
1. We have developed a 19-compartment cable model of a guinea pig CA3 pyramidal neuron. Each compartment is allowed to contain six active ionic conductances: gNa, gCa, gK(DR) (where DR stands for delayed rectifier), gK(A), gK(AHP), and gK(C). THe conductance gCa is of the high-voltage activated type. The model kinetics for the first five of these conductances incorporate voltage-clamp data obtained from isolated hippocampal pyramidal neurons. The kinetics of gK(C) are based on data from bullfrog sympathetic neurons. The time constant for decay of submembrane calcium derives from optical imaging of Ca signals in Purkinje cell dendrites. 2. To construct the model from available voltage-clamp data, we first reproduced current-clamp records from a model isolated neuron (soma plus proximal dendrites). We next assumed that ionic channel kinetics in the dendrites were the same as in the soma. In accord with dendritic recordings and calcium-imaging data, we also assumed that significant gCa occurs in dendrites. We then attached sections of basilar and apical dendritic cable. By trial and error, we found a distribution (not necessarily unique) of ionic conductance densities that was consistent with current-clamp records from the soma and dendrites of whole neurons and from isolated apical dendrites. 3. The resulting model reproduces the Ca(2+)-dependent spike depolarizing afterpotential (DAP) recorded after a stimulus subthreshold for burst elicitation. 4. The model also reproduces the behavior of CA3 pyramidal neurons injected with increasing somatic depolarizing currents: low-frequency (0.3-1.0 Hz) rhythmic bursting for small currents, with burst frequency increasing with current magnitude; then more irregular bursts followed by afterhyperpolarizations (AHPs) interspersed with brief bursts without AHPs; and finally, rhythmic action potentials without bursts. 5. The model predicts the existence of still another firing pattern during tonic depolarizing dendritic stimulation: brief bursts at less than 1 to approximately 12 Hz, a pattern not observed during somatic stimulation. These bursts correspond to rhythmic dendritic calcium spikes. 6. The model CA3 pyramidal neuron can be made to resemble functionally a CA1 pyramidal neuron by increasing gK(DR) and decreasing dendritic gCa and gK(C). Specifically, after these alterations, tonic depolarization of the soma leads to adapting repetitive firing, whereas stimulation of the distal dendrites leads to bursting. 7. A critical set of parameters concerns the regulation of the pool of intracellular [Ca2+] that interacts with membrane channels (gK(C) and gK(AHP)), particularly in the dendrites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Potassium channels play an important role in controlling neuronal firing and synaptic interactions. Na(+)-activated K(+) (K(Na)) channels have been shown to exist in neurons in different regions of the CNS, but their physiological function has been difficult to assess. In this study, we have examined if neurons in the spinal cord possess K(Na) currents. We used whole cell recordings from isolated spinal cord neurons in lamprey. These neurons display two different K(Na) currents. The first was transient and activated by the Na(+) influx during the action potentials, and it was abolished when Na(+) channels were blocked by tetrodotoxin. The second K(Na) current was sustained and persisted in tetrodotoxin. Both K(Na) currents were abolished when Na(+) was substituted with choline or N-methyl-D-glucamine, indicating that they are indeed dependent on Na(+) influx into neurons. When Na(+) was substituted with Li(+), the amplitude of the inward current was unchanged, whereas the transient K(Na) current was reduced but not abolished. This suggests that the transient K(Na) current is partially activated by Li(+). These two K(Na) currents have different roles in controlling the action potential waveform. The transient K(Na) appears to act as a negative feedback mechanism sensing the Na(+) influx underlying the action potential and may thus be critical for setting the amplitude and duration of the action potential. The sustained K(Na) current has a slow kinetic of activation and may underlie the slow Ca(2+)-independent afterhyperpolarization mediated by repetitive firing in lamprey spinal cord neurons.  相似文献   

8.
Calcium-activated potassium conductances regulate neuronal excitability, but their role in epileptogenesis remains elusive. We investigated in rat CA3 pyramidal neurons the contribution of the Ca(2+)-activated K(+)-mediated afterhyperpolarizations (AHPs) in the genesis and regulation of epileptiform activity induced in vitro by 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) in Mg(2+)-free Ringer. Recurring spike bursts terminated by prolonged AHPs were generated. Burst synchronization between CA3 pyramidal neurons in paired recordings typified this interictal-like activity. A downregulation of the medium afterhyperpolarization (mAHP) paralleled the emergence of the interictal-like activity. When the mAHP was reduced or enhanced by apamin and EBIO bursts induced by 4-AP were increased or blocked, respectively. Inhibition of the slow afterhyperpolarization (sAHP) with carbachol, t-ACPD, or isoproterenol increased bursting frequency and disrupted burst regularity and synchronization between pyramidal neuron pairs. In contrast, enhancing the sAHP by intracellular dialysis with KMeSO(4) reduced burst frequency. Block of GABA(A-B) inhibitions did not modify the abnormal activity. We describe novel cellular mechanisms where 1) the inhibition of the mAHP plays an essential role in the genesis and regulation of the bursting activity by reducing negative feedback, 2) the sAHP sets the interburst interval by decreasing excitability, and 3) bursting was synchronized by excitatory synaptic interactions that increased in advance and during bursts and decreased throughout the subsequent sAHP. These cellular mechanisms are active in the CA3 region, where epileptiform activity is initiated, and cooperatively regulate the timing of the synchronized rhythmic interictal-like network activity.  相似文献   

9.
We have investigated the bursting activity of Retzius neurons in the central nervous system of the leech Hirudo medicinalis as induced in Cl(-)-free saline by measuring membrane potential, membrane current and the intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i), using fura-2 or Oregon-Green488-Bapta-1. The Retzius neurons changed their low tonic firing to rhythmical bursting activity when the extracellular Cl- concentration ([Cl-]o) was lowered to 1 mM or less. In Cl(-)-free saline (Cl- exchanged by gluconate), bursting was accompanied by a rise in intracellular Ca2+ in both cell body and axon, which oscillated in synchrony with the bursts. The Ca2+ transients depended on the amplitude and duration of the depolarization underlying the burst, and were presumably due to Ca2+ influx through voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels. In Ca(2+)-free, EGTA-buffered saline or in the presence of Ca2+ channel blockers verapamil (1 mM) or diltiazem (500 microM) the depolarizations underlying the bursts in Cl(-)-free saline were enhanced in amplitude and duration. Bursting was not affected by depleting the intracellular Ca2+ stores with cyclopiazonic acid. The depolarization in Cl(-)- and Ca(2+)-free saline did not evoke intracellular Ca2+ changes. The burst-underlying membrane depolarization induced by Cl- removal was found to be due to a Na(+)-dependent persistent inward current and could be inhibited by saxitoxin (25-50 microM). The results suggest that a persistent Na+ current is generated in Cl(-)-free saline and induces the depolarization underlying rhythmic activity, and that presumably Ca(2+)-induced K+ currents modulate the bursting behaviour.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of donepezil on voltage-dependent Ca2+-and low-threshold K+-current were studied on isolated molluscan neurons using two-electrode voltage clamp technique. Donepezil reduced the amplitude of voltage-dependent Ca2+-current (IC50=7.9 μM) and shifted the current-voltage relationships toward hyperpolarization. Donepezil in low concentration (5 μM) increased, while in higher concentrations (≥10 μM) decreased the low-threshold K+-current. __________ Translated from Byulleten’ Eksperimental’noi Biologii i Meditsiny, Vol. 142, No. 10, pp. 364–368, October, 2006  相似文献   

11.
The pulsatile release of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) is driven by the intrinsic activity of GnRH neurons, which is characterized by bursts of action potentials correlated with oscillatory increases in intracellular Ca(2+). The role of K(+) channels in this spontaneous activity was studied by examining the effects of commonly used K(+) channel blockers on K(+) currents, spontaneous action currents, and spontaneous Ca(2+) signaling. Whole-cell recordings of voltage-gated outward K(+) currents in GT1-1 neurons revealed at least two different components of the current. These included a rapidly activating transient component and a more slowly activating, sustained component. The transient component could be eliminated by a depolarizing prepulse or by bath application of 1.5 mM 4-aminopyridine (4-AP). The sustained component was partially blocked by 2 mM tetraethylammonium (TEA). GT1-1 cells also express inwardly rectifying K(+) currents (I(K(IR))) that were activated by hyperpolarization in the presence of elevated extracellular K(+). These currents were blocked by 100 microM Ba(2+) and unaffected by 2 mM TEA or 1.5 mM 4-AP. TEA and Ba(2+) had distinct effects on the pattern of action current bursts and the resulting Ca(2+) oscillations. TEA increased action current burst duration and increased the amplitude of Ca(2+) oscillations. Ba(2+) caused an increase in the frequency of action current bursts and Ca(2+) oscillations. These results indicate that specific subtypes of K(+) channels in GT1-1 cells can have distinct roles in the amplitude modulation or frequency modulation of Ca(2+) signaling. K(+) current modulation of electrical activity and Ca(2+) signaling may be important in the generation of the patterns of cellular activity responsible for the pulsatile release of GnRH.  相似文献   

12.
Bertrand PP 《Neuroscience》2004,128(1):51-63
Sensory neurons intrinsic to the wall of the intestine receive input from stimuli in the lumen. These stimuli interact with the mucosal epithelium causing release of sensory mediators that depolarize the sensory nerve terminals. The depolarization and the subsequent pattern of action potential (AP) discharge controls the type and magnitude of the reflex evoked. The characteristics of this AP discharge were investigated in 60 intrinsic sensory neurons from the myenteric plexus of the guinea-pig ileum. Intracellular electrophysiological recordings were made from neurons near intact mucosa during electrical stimulation of the mucosa and/or neuronal soma. Most neurons (87%) responded to mucosal stimulation with a burst of 3.8+/-0.3 APs (average instantaneous frequency, fINT 39+/-4 Hz). In 38%, a somatically evoked AP triggered a similar burst of 2.9+/-0.3 APs (fINT 52+/-6 Hz) while in 50% of neurons, there was ongoing spontaneous bursting (3.8+/-0.2 APs, fINT 48+/-6 Hz). APs in all of these bursts had an inflection on the rising phase and they persisted during somatic hyperpolarization indicating they were generated in a distal process rather than the soma. Collision experiments confirmed this and suggested that bursts originated near the mucosal sensory nerve terminals. A reduction in membrane excitability reduced the number of APs in a burst suggesting a brief depolarizing event, such as a voltage- or ligand-gated ion channel, was responsible. Bursting behavior in the intrinsic sensory neurons is common for mucosal stimuli and may involve a novel transmitter acting at the sensory nerve terminal. Further, some bursting involves positive feedback between the nerve terminals and other elements in the epithelium. This is a novel and potentially important component of intestinal sensory transduction.  相似文献   

13.
High frequency (>or= 100 Hz) bursts of action potentials (APs) generated by neocortical neurons are thought to increase information content and, through back-propagation, to influence synaptic integration and efficacy in distal dendritic compartments. It was recently shown in acute slice experiments that intrinsic bursting properties differ between neocortical L2/3 and L5B (thick tufted) neurons. In L2/3 neurons for instance, dendritic APs were brief and generated only one additional AP after the initial somatic AP. In L5B neurons, dendritic plateau potentials facilitated the generation of trains of three or more APs. We recently showed in vivo that spiking frequencies are very different for L2/3 and L5B thick tufted neurons under anaesthesia. Here, we addressed the question whether in vivo the bursting properties are different for these two cell types. We recorded from L2/3 and L5B thick tufted neurons of rat primary somatosensory (barrel) cortex under anaesthetized and awake conditions and found that AP activity is dominated by single APs. In addition, we found that in the anaesthetized animal also bursts of two APs were observed in L2/3 neurons but the relative occurrence of these bursts was low. In L5B thick tufted neurons, bursts consisting of up to six APs were recorded and their relative occurrence was significantly higher. Frequencies within bursts were also significantly higher in L5B thick tufted neurons than in L2/3 neurons. In awake (head-restrained) animals, average spike frequencies of L2/3 and L5B thick tufted neurons were surprisingly similar to spike rates under anaesthesia. However, bursting behaviour in L2/3 neurons was comparable to L5B thick tufted neurons. Thus, the distribution of interspike intervals was changed in L2/3 neurons without affecting the average spiking rate. We observed bursts consisting of up to five APs in both cell types and both probability of bursts and AP frequency within bursts were similar for L2/3 and L5B thick tufted neurons. Our analysis shows that most cortical APs occur as single APs, although a minor fraction of APs in L2/3 and L5B thick tufted neurons are part of high frequency bursts (15%). This AP bursting is dependent on the behavioural state of the animal in a cell-type dependent manner.  相似文献   

14.
A network of oscillatory bursting neurons with excitatory coupling is hypothesized to define the primary kernel for respiratory rhythm generation in the pre-B?tzinger complex (pre-B?tC) in mammals. Two minimal models of these neurons are proposed. In model 1, bursting arises via fast activation and slow inactivation of a persistent Na+ current INaP-h. In model 2, bursting arises via a fast-activating persistent Na+ current INaP and slow activation of a K+ current IKS. In both models, action potentials are generated via fast Na+ and K+ currents. The two models have few differences in parameters to facilitate a rigorous comparison of the two different burst-generating mechanisms. Both models are consistent with many of the dynamic features of electrophysiological recordings from pre-B?tC oscillatory bursting neurons in vitro, including voltage-dependent activity modes (silence, bursting, and beating), a voltage-dependent burst frequency that can vary from 0.05 to >1 Hz, and a decaying spike frequency during bursting. These results are robust and persist across a wide range of parameter values for both models. However, the dynamics of model 1 are more consistent with experimental data in that the burst duration decreases as the baseline membrane potential is depolarized and the model has a relatively flat membrane potential trajectory during the interburst interval. We propose several experimental tests to demonstrate the validity of either model and to differentiate between the two mechanisms.  相似文献   

15.
Chen YH  Tsai MC 《Neuroscience》2000,96(1):237-248
The roles of the ionic currents in the firing of potential bursts elicited by d-amphetamine in central snail neurons were studied in the identified RP4 neuron of the African snail, Achatina fulica Ferussac, using the two-electrode voltage-clamp method. Oscillations of membrane potential bursts were elicited by d-amphetamine. The action potential bursts elicited by d-amphetamine decreased following intracellular injection of either EDTA or magnesium, or extracellular application of lanthanum. Voltage-clamped studies revealed that d-amphetamine decreased the fast Na(+), Ca(2+) and transient outward K(+) currents of the RP4 neuron. It also decreased the steady-state K(+) current and elicited a negative slope resistance in the steady-state I-V curve between -50 and -10 mV. The amplitude of negative slope resistance was decreased if either Na(+)-free saline or Co(2+)-substituted Ca(2+)-free saline was perfused. d-Amphetamine did not increase the amplitude of the slowly inactivating Ca(2+) current or the persistent Na(+) currents of RP4 neuron. Tetraethylammonium, a blocker of the delayed outward K(+) current, elicited action potential bursts and negative slope resistance in the RP4 neuron, while 4-aminopyridine, an inhibitor of transient outward K(+) current (I(A)), did not.These results demonstrate that the delayed outward K(+) current and the negative slope resistance in steady-state I-V curve elicited by d-amphetamine may be responsible for the action potential bursts in central snail neurons elicited by d-amphetamine.  相似文献   

16.
Pyramidal neurons in the piriform cortex from olfactory-discrimination-trained rats have reduced postburst afterhyperpolarization (AHP), for 3 days after learning, and are thus more excitable during this period. Such AHP reduction is caused by decreased conductance of one or more of the calcium-dependent potassium currents, I(AHP) and sI(AHP), that mediate the medium and slow AHPs. In this study, we examined which potassium current is reduced by learning and how the effect of noradrenalin (NE) on neuronal excitability is modified by such reduction. The small conductance (SK) channels inhibitor, apamin, that selectively blocks I(A)(HP), reduced the AHP in neurons from trained, na?ve, and pseudotrained rats to a similar extent, thus maintaining the difference in AHP amplitude between neurons from trained rats and controls. In addition, the protein expression level of the SK1, SK2, and SK3 channels was also similar in all groups. NE, which was shown to enhance I(AHP) while suppressing (S)I(AHP), reduced the AHP in neurons from controls but enhanced the AHP in neurons from trained rats. Our data show that learning-induced enhancement of neuronal excitability is not the result of reduction in the I(AHP) current. Thus it is probably mediated by reduction in conductance of the other calcium-dependent potassium current, sI(AHP). Consequently, the effect of NE on neuronal excitability is reversed. We propose that the change in the effect of NE after learning may act to counterbalance learning-induced hyperexcitability and preserve the piriform cortex ability to subserve olfactory learning.  相似文献   

17.
Nedergaard S 《Neuroscience》2004,125(4):841-852
The discharge properties of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra are influenced by slow adaptive responses, which have not been fully identified. The present study describes, in a slice preparation from the rat, a complex afterhyperpolarization (AHP), elicited by action potential trains. The AHP could be subdivided into a fast component (AHP(f)), which was generated near action potential threshold, relaxed within approximately 1 s, and had highest amplitude when evoked by short-lasting (0.1 s) depolarizations, and a slow component (AHP(s)), which lasted several seconds, was evoked from subthreshold potentials, and required prolonged depolarizing stimuli (>0.1 s). A large proportion of the AHP(f) was sensitive to (i) 0.1 microM apamin, (ii) the Ca(2+) antagonists, Cd(2+) (0.2 mM) and Ni(2+) (0.3 mM), (iii) low (0.2 mM) extracellular Ca(2+) concentration, and (iv), Ca(2+) chelation with intracellular EGTA. The AHP(s) was resistant to the above treatments, and it was insensitive to 25 microM dantrolene or prolonged exposure to 1 microM thapsigargin. The reversal potential of the AHP(s) (-97 mV) was close to the K(+) equilibrium potential. It was significantly inhibited by 5 mM 4-aminopyridine, 5 microM haloperidol, 10 microM terfenadine, or high extracellular Mg(2+) (10 mM), but not by 30 mM tetraethylammonium chloride, 50 microM carbachol, 0.5 microM glipizide, 2 microM (-)sulpiride, 100 microM N-allyl-normetazocine, or 100 microM pentazocine. Haloperidol reduced the post-stimulus inhibitory period seen during spontaneous discharge, but had no detectable effect on spike frequency adaptation. It is concluded that the SK-type Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels underlies a major component of the AHP(f), whereas the AHP(s) is Ca(2+)-independent and relies, in part, on a voltage-dependent K(+) current with properties resembling the ether-a-go-go-related gene K(+) channel. The latter component exerts a slow, spike-independent, inhibitory influence on repetitive discharge and contributes to the prolonged decrease in excitability following sustained depolarizing stimuli.  相似文献   

18.
We identified a new form of activity-dependent modulation of the afterhyperpolarization (AHP) in tactile (T) sensory neurons of the leech Hirudo medicinalis. Repetitive intracellular stimulation with 30 trains of depolarizing impulses at 15-s inter-stimulus interval (ISI) led to an increase of the AHP amplitude (~60% of the control). The enhancement of AHP lasted for >/=15 min. The AHP increase was also elicited when a T neuron was activated by repetitive stimulation of its receptive field. The ISI was a critical parameter for the induction and maintenance of AHP enhancement. ISI duration had to fit within a time window with the upper limit of 20 s to make the training effective to induce an enhancement of the AHP amplitude. After recovery from potentiation, AHP amplitude could be enhanced once again by delivering another training session. The increase of AHP amplitude persisted in high Mg(2+) saline, suggesting an intrinsic cellular mechanism for its induction. Previous investigations reported that AHP of leech T neurons was mainly due to the activity of the Na(+)/K(+) ATPase and to a Ca(2+)-dependent K(+) current (I(K/Ca)). In addition, it has been demonstrated that serotonin (5HT) reduces AHP amplitude through the inhibition of the Na(+)/K(+) ATPase. By blocking the I(K/Ca) with pharmacological agents, such as cadmium and apamin, we still observed an increase of the AHP amplitude after repetitive stimulation, whereas 5HT application completely inhibited the AHP increment. These data indicate that the Na(+)/K(+) ATPase is involved in the induction and maintenance of the AHP increase after repetitive stimulation. Moreover, the AHP increase was affected by the level of serotonin in the CNS. Finally, the increase of the AHP amplitude produced a lasting depression of the synaptic connection between two T neurons, suggesting that this activity-dependent phenomenon might be involved in short-term plasticity associated with learning processes.  相似文献   

19.
Nociceptive dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons can be classified into nonpeptidergic IB(4)(+) and peptidergic IB(4)(-) subtypes, which terminate in different layers in dorsal horn and transmit pain along different ascending pathways, and display different firing properties. Voltage-gated, tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-R) Na(v)1.8 channels are expressed in both IB(4)(+) and IB(4)(-) cells and produce most of the current underlying the depolarizing phase of action potential (AP). Slow inactivation of TTX-R channels has been shown to regulate repetitive DRG neuron firing behavior. We show in this study that use-dependent reduction of Na(v)1.8 current in IB(4)(+) neurons is significantly stronger than that in IB(4)(-) neurons, although voltage dependency of activation and steady-state inactivation are not different. The time constant for entry of Na(v)1.8 into slow inactivation in IB(4)(+) neurons is significantly faster and more Na(v)1.8 enter the slow inactivation state than in IB(4)(-) neurons. In addition, recovery from slow inactivation of Na(v)1.8 in IB(4)(+) neurons is slower than that in IB(4)(-) neurons. Using current-clamp recording, we demonstrate a significantly higher current threshold for generation of APs and a longer latency to onset of firing in IB(4)(+), compared with those of IB(4)(-) neurons. In response to a ramp stimulus, IB(4)(+) neurons produce fewer APs and display stronger adaptation, with a faster decline of AP peak than IB(4)(-) neurons. Our data suggest that differential use-dependent reduction of Na(v)1.8 current in these two DRG subpopulations, which results from their different rate of entry into and recovery from the slow inactivation state, contributes to functional differences between these two neuronal populations.  相似文献   

20.
Intracellular recordings were performed in human neocortical neurons in 'in vitro' slices of brain samples excised during surgical treatment of epilepsy. In 14 of 38 neurons obtained from cortex exhibiting interictal spiking, bursts of action potentials arising from a synaptic depolarizing potential could be elicited by extracellular focal stimulation of adequate strength. The N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (APV) was capable of reducing and eventually blocking these bursts without affecting the repetitive firing evoked by depolarizing intracellular pulses or the membrane input resistance. These data suggest a role played by NMDA receptors in the bursting activity displayed by human neurons from spiking cortical areas and demonstrate a potential use of NMDA antagonists as antiepileptic drugs.  相似文献   

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