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1.
A progressive reduction in muscle fiber conduction velocity is typically observed during fatiguing muscle contraction. Although the exact causes of the conduction velocity decrease have not yet been fully established, increasing evidence suggests that changes in extracellular potassium concentration may be largely responsible. In this study, a mathematical model was developed to examine the effect of extracellular potassium concentration on the muscle fiber action potential and conduction velocity. The model was used to simulate changes in extracellular potassium concentration at a range of temperatures and extracellular potassium accumulation during repetitive stimulation of the muscle fiber at 37 °C. The action potential broadened, and its amplitude and conduction velocity decreased as extracellular potassium concentration increased. The potassium-induced changes in action potential shape and conduction velocity were eliminated when the inward rectifier channels were removed from the model. The results support the hypothesis that accumulation of extracellular potassium ions may be a major contributor to the reduction in muscle fiber conduction velocity and loss of membrane excitability during fatiguing contractions. They additionally suggest that inward rectifier currents play a critical role in potassium-induced membrane depolarization, leading to increased sodium inactivation and resulting in the observed reduction in conduction velocity and membrane excitability.  相似文献   

2.
1. Muscle fibres from goats with myotonia congenita show characteristic responses to stimulation with intracellular currents (Adrian & Bryant, 1974). To test whether the reduced surface chloride conductance can account for these myotonic discharges, we have calculated responses of a model 'muscle fibre' to intracellular current of long duration (greater than 100 msec), assuming that the current is applied at the end of the fibre, that the fibre is of finite length, that a regenerative action potential occurs in the transverse tubular system as well as the surface, and that the potassium current in the wall of the transverse tubular system raises the potassium in the tubular lumen. In the absence of information about the kinetic parameters of the ionic currents in mammalian muscle we have used numerical values from frog muscle (Adrian, Chandler & Hodgkin, 1970). 2. In calculations with a normal surface chloride conductance a long maintained current gives only one action potential. Reduction of the chloride conductance to a half produces repetitive firing during the current; reduction to a tenth produces repetitive firing during and a small number of action potentials after the end of the current. Elimination of the tubular potassium accumulation from the calculation reduces the number but does not eliminate action potentials arising after the end of the applied current. 3. With a tenth of the normal chloride conductance calculated responses show maintained firing following a constant current if the deactivating rate of the sodium channels (betam) is reduced by 25%. As before, eliminating potassium accumulation reduces the number of post-stimulus action potentials, but it does not eliminate them altogether. 4. We conclude that in the absence of a surface chloride conductance tubular potassium accumulation could certainly contribute to the instability of the membrane, but it is clear that potassium accumulation is not the only reason for the instability of myotonic muscle fibres. The kinetics of the sodium channels are important and we do not know that they are the same in normal and myotonic fibres. Nevertheless the presence of a surface chloride conductance does stabilize the response of a fibre to constant current or to repetitive stimulation, and its absence could be a sufficient condition for myotonic behaviour.  相似文献   

3.
T Tokimasa 《Neuroscience》1984,12(3):929-937
Intracellular recordings were made from neurons in bullfrog sympathetic ganglia. Fast B and slow B neurons were identified and selected for the analysis [Dodd and Horn (1983) J. Physiol., Lond. 334, 255-269]. A single soma action potential was followed by a prolonged afterhyperpolarization lasting for several hundred ms up to 2 s. Part of the spike afterhyperpolarization was due to potassium conductance activation triggered by calcium entry during an action potential. Acetylcholine was directly applied onto the soma membrane by iontophoresis. A rapid nicotinic depolarization was followed by a slow muscarinic depolarization. The nicotinic depolarization was followed by a hyperpolarization when the muscarinic depolarization was blocked by scopolamine. This hyperpolarization was several mV in amplitude and from 1 to 10 s in duration. It disappeared when the preceding nicotinic depolarization was blocked by (+)-tubocurarine. A single fast excitatory postsynaptic potential was also followed by a hyperpolarization in the presence of scopolamine. The acetylcholine-induced hyperpolarization was due to potassium conductance activation triggered by calcium entry during the nicotinic depolarization. The present findings show that non-synaptic autoinhibition is operating in sympathetic neurons. In other words, a rapid nicotinic transmission leads to prolonged hyperpolarizations which are not mediated by any transmitters but are mediated by calcium.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Teshima K  Kim SH  Allen CN 《Neuroscience》2003,120(1):65-73
In neurons of the suprachiasmatic nucleus, spike frequency adaptation and membrane afterhyperpolarization occur during a train of action potentials. Extracellular Ca2+ may regulate neuronal excitability by several mechanisms, including activation of small conductance and large conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels. The overall goal of this study was to examine the role of Ca(2+)-activated K+ currents in individual suprachiasmatic nucleus neurons. To this end, we used the nystatin-perforated patch technique to record currents from suprachiasmatic nucleus neurons. Iberiotoxin and tetraethylammonium, antagonists of large conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels, had no effect on the membrane afterhyperpolarization. However, antagonists of small conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels, apamin and d-tubocurarine, reduced the amplitude of the membrane afterhyperpolarization and inhibited the spike frequency adaptation that occurred during a train of action potentials. Although there was no significant difference in membrane AHP between different portions of the circadian day, apamin and d-tubocurarine increased the spontaneous firing frequency of suprachiasmatic nucleus neurons during the daytime. In voltage-clamp mode, membrane depolarization-activated currents were followed by an outward tail current reversing near the K+ equilibrium potential. The tail current decayed with a time constant of 220 ms at +20 mV and 149 ms at -40 mV. Apamin irreversibly and d-tubocurarine reversibly inhibited the tail current. The tail current amplitude was also reduced by the GABAA receptor antagonist, bicuculline methiodide, while picrotoxin (another GABAA receptor antagonist) was without effect. Removal of extracellular Ca2+ or the addition of Cd2+ reversibly inhibited the tail current. These results indicate that apamin- and d-tubocurarine-sensitive small conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels have a modulatory function on the action potential firing frequency as well as the membrane afterhyperpolarization that follows a train of action potentials in suprachiasmatic nucleus neurons. Importantly, our data also indicate that a portion of the effects of bicuculline methiodide on suprachiasmatic nucleus neurons may be mediated by inhibition of small conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels.  相似文献   

6.
1. The electrophysiological properties of alpha-motoneurons in old cats (14-15 yr) were compared with those of adult cats (1-3 yr). These properties were measured utilizing intracellular recording and stimulating techniques. 2. Unaltered in the old cat motoneurons were the membrane potential, action potential amplitude, and slopes of the initial segment (IS) and soma dendritic (SD) spikes, as well as the duration and amplitude of the action potential's afterhyperpolarization. 3. In contrast, the following changes in the electrophysiological properties of lumbar motoneurons were found in the old cats: a decrease in axonal conduction velocity, a shortening of the IS-SD delay, an increase in input resistance, and a decrease in rheobase. 4. In spite of these considerable changes in motoneuron properties in the old cat, normal correlations between different electrophysiological properties were maintained. The following key relationships, among others, were the same in adult and old cat motoneurons: membrane potential polarization versus action potential amplitude, duration of the afterhyperpolarization versus motor axon conduction velocity, and rheobase versus input conductance. 5. A review of the existing literature reveals that neither chronic spinal cord section nor deafferentation (13, 21) in adult animals produce the changes observed in old cats. Thus we consider it unlikely that a loss of synaptic contacts was responsible for the modifications in electrophysiological properties observed in old cat motoneurons. 6. We conclude that during old age there are significant changes in the soma-dendritic portion of cat motoneurons, as indicated by the modifications found in input resistance, rheobase, and IS-SD delay, as well as significant changes in their axons, as indicated by a decrease in conduction velocity.  相似文献   

7.
Motoneuron afterhyperpolarization (AHP) amplitude and somatic input conductance were monitored during pharmacologically induced, locomotorlike ventral root activity using an isolated neonatal rat spinal cord preparation (transected at the C1 level). Nonspontaneously firing motoneurons were selected for study. Single spikes were evoked at regular intervals by brief depolarizing current pulse injections, while somatic input conductance was monitored by hyperpolarizing current pulses. The induction of rhythmic ventral root activity was associated with tonic depolarization of motoneurons as well as superimposed rhythmically alternating membrane depolarization and hyperpolarization (locomotor drive potentials, LDPs). In 9 of 13 trials (six of eight cells) the peak amplitude of AHPs following current-evoked action potentials was reduced during both the hyperpolarized and the depolarized phases of the LDP, compared with the pre-locomotor condition. The peak AHP amplitude increased during the depolarized phase of the LDP in 4 of 13 trials (three of eight cells); however, in 3 of these 4 trials measurement of the AHP later in the course of its trajectory, using a half decay time (HDt) reference point, demonstrated AHP amplitude reduction during rhythmic activity compared with the prelocomotor condition. In seven of eight motoneurons the induction of rhythmic activity was associated with a decrease in input conductance. The pattern of AHP amplitude and conductance modulation during the two phases of the LDP was consistent for individual trials; however, there was considerable intertrial variation. The results suggest that AHP modulation during locomotor-like activity in this preparation can be mediated independently of supraspinal influences by intrinsic spinal cord mechanisms, and the observed AHP suppression does not appear to be the passive result of an increase in background conductance. The discrepancy between peak and HDt-based AHP amplitude measurements during the depolarized phase of the LDP in some trials may be due to competing effects of passively enhanced potassium currents and a mechanism that actively reduces the calcium-dependent potassium conductance. The possibility that both the AHP amplitude and the input conductance changes observed during locomotor-like activity reflect a regulation of potassium channels is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
1. Intracellular recordings were made from an estimated 500 neurons in the sensorimotor cortex of barbiturate-anesthetized cats. Of those which were antidromically identified from the medullary pyramids, 70 were selected which also exhibited steady repetitive firing to steps of current injected through the recording electrode; 81% were "fast" (conduction velocity greater than 20 m/s) and 19% were "slow". 2. As shown by earlier workers, the spike duration is a function of conduction velocity; a spike duration of 1.0 ms is the dividing line between fast and slow. 3. Of the 57 fast pyramidal tract neurons (PTNS), 14 exhibited double spikes during otherwise rhythmic firing patterns to a step of injected current. These very short interspike intervals (usually 1.5-2.5 ms) were first seen interspersed in a rhythmic discharge (e.g., 50-ms intervals) but, with further increases in current strength, would come to dominate the firing pattern; e.g., double spikes every 40 ms. Further increases in current would typically shorten only the long intervals; e.g., 40-30 ms, but some fast PTNS developed triple spikes, etc. 4. The extra spike appears to arise from a large hump which follows most spikes in fast PTNS; while this humplike "depolarising after-potential" can also be seen in slow PTNS, it is small. Extra spikes were seen only in fast PTNS with large postspike humps; in perhaps half of the fast PTNS, extra spikes probably contributed to "adaptation." 5. Slow PTNS often had frequency-current curves which were not repeatable; a "hysteresis" phenomenon could often be seen, where the proportionality constant relating current to firing rate decreased following high firing rates. 6.The B spike was distinguishable from the A spike in differentiated antidromic spikes in 77% of the slow PTNS, in only 14% of the fast PTNS which later exhibited double spikes during current-induced repetitive firing, and in 53% of the other fast PTNS. 7. The antidromic spike heights of doublet PTNS were not significantly different from those of other repetitively firing PTNS.  相似文献   

9.
Small conductance calcium-activated potassium channels are voltage independent potassium channels which modulate the firing patterns of neurons by activating the slow component of the afterhyperpolarization. The genes encoding a family of small conductance calcium-activated potassium channels have been cloned and up to now three known members have been described and named small conductance calcium-activated potassium channel type 1, small conductance calcium-activated potassium channel type 2 and small conductance calcium-activated potassium channel type 3; the distribution of their messenger RNA in the rat CNS has already been performed but only in a limited detail. The present study represents the first detailed analysis of small conductance calcium-activated potassium channel type 3 mRNA distribution in the adult rat brain and resulted in a strong to moderate expression of signal in medial habenular nucleus, substantia nigra compact part, suprachiasmatic nucleus, ventral tegmental area, lateral septum, dorsal raphe and locus coeruleus. Immunohistological experiments were also performed and confirmed the presence of small conductance calcium-activated potassium channel type 3 protein in medial habenular nucleus, locus coeruleus and dorsal raphe. Given the importance of dorsal raphe, locus coeruleus and substantia nigra/ventral tegmental area for serotonergic, noradrenergic and dopaminergic transmission respectively, our results pose the morphological basis for further studies on the action of small conductance calcium-activated potassium channel type 3 in serotonergic, noradrenergic and dopaminergic transmission.  相似文献   

10.
1. Spontaneous discharges that resemble interictal spikes arise in area CA3 b/c of rat hippocampal slices bathed in 8.5 mM [K+]o. Excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) also appear at irregular intervals in these cells. The role of local synaptic excitation in burst initiation was examined with intracellular and extracellular recordings from CA3 pyramidal neurons. 2. Most (70%) EPSPs were small (less than 2 mV in amplitude), suggesting that they were the product of quantal release or were evoked by a single presynaptic action potential in another cell. It is unlikely that most EPSPs were evoked by a presynaptic burst of action potentials. Indeed, intrinsic burst firing was not prominent in CA3 b/c pyramidal cells perfused in 8.5 mM [K+]o. 3. The likelihood of occurrence and the amplitude of EPSPs were higher in the 50-ms interval just before the onset of each burst than during a similar interval 250 ms before the burst. This likely reflects increased firing probability of CA3 neurons as they emerge from the afterhyperpolarization (AHP) and conductance shunt associated with the previous burst. 4. Perfusion with 2 microM 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX), a potent quisqualate receptor antagonist, decreased the frequency of EPSPs in CA3 b/c neurons from 3.6 +/- 0.9 to 0.9 +/- 0.3 (SE) Hz. Likewise, CNQX reversibly reduced the amplitude of evoked EPSPs in CA3 b/c cells. 5. Spontaneous burst firing in 8.5 mM [K+]o was abolished in 11 of 31 slices perfused with 2 microM CNQX.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Conventional intracellular recordings were made from 26 lateral spinal nucleus (LSN) neurons in slices of L6-S1 spinal cord from 10- to 15-day-old rats. At rest, LSN neurons did not fire spontaneous action potentials. With injection of a positive current pulse, action potentials had an amplitude of 72 +/- 7 (SD) mV and duration at half-peak height of 0.75 +/- 0.22 ms. Action potentials were followed by an afterpotential. Most LSN neurons (13/17) exhibited only an afterhyperpolarization (AHP); four neurons exhibited both a fast and a slow AHP separated by an afterdepolarization (ADP). For LSN neurons that exhibited only an AHP, a slow ADP could be identified during bath application of apamin (100 nM). Four of 11 LSN neurons showed a postinhibitory rebound (PIR). Two types of PIR were noted, one with high threshold and low amplitude and the other with low threshold and high amplitude. The PIR with high amplitude was partially blocked in 0 mM Ca2+/high Mg2+ (10 mM) recording solution. Repetitive firing properties were examined in 17 LSN neurons. On the basis of the ratio of the slopes between initial instantaneous firing and steady-state firing frequencies, neurons with low spike frequency adaptation (SFA, 8/17) and high SFA (4/17) were identified. In addition, 2/17 LSN neurons exhibited biphasic repetitive firing patterns, which were composed of a fast SFA, delayed excitation, and low SFA; another two neurons showed only delayed excitation. Plateau potentials also were found in two LSN neurons. Dorsal root stimulation revealed that most LSN neurons (12/13) had polysynaptic postsynaptic potentials (PSP); only one neuron exhibited a monosynaptic PSP. Electrical stimulation of the dorsal root evoked prolonged discharges in low SFA neurons and a short discharge in high SFA neurons. Intrinsic properties were modulated by bath application of substance P (SP). Membrane potentials were depolarized in all eight LSN neurons tested, and membrane resistance was either increased (n = 3) or decreased (n = 2). Both instantaneous firing and steady-state firing were facilitated by SP. In addition, oscillation of membrane potentials were induced in three LSN neurons. These results demonstrate that LSN neurons exhibit a variety of intrinsic properties, which may significantly contribute to sensory processing, including nociceptive processing.  相似文献   

12.
We assessed the sequence of nerve impulses that maximize force output from individual human thenar motor units. When these motor units were stimulated intraneurally by a variable sequence of seven pulses, the pattern of pulses that elicited maximum force always started with a short (5-15 ms) interpulse interval termed a "doublet. " The twitch force summation caused by this "doublet" elicited, on average, 48 +/- 13% (SD) of the maximum tetanic force. The peak amplitude of "doublet" forces was 3.5 times that of the initial twitches, and twitch potentiation appeared to have little influence on twitch force summation elicited by the "doublets." For some units, the second optimal interpulse interval was also short. Peak forces elicited by the third to sixth interpulse intervals did not change substantially when the last interpulse interval was varied between 5 to 55 ms, so maximum force could not be attributed to any unique interpulse interval. Each successive pulse contributed a smaller force increment. When five to seven pulses were delivered in an optimal sequence, the evoked force was close to that recorded during maximal tetanic stimulation. In contrast, maximal force-time integral was evoked with one short interpulse interval (5-15 ms) then substantially longer interpulse intervals (>100 ms). Maximum force and force-time integrals were therefore elicited by different patterns of stimuli. We conclude that a brief initial interpulse interval (5-15 ms) is required to elicit maximum "doublet" force from human thenar motor units and that near-maximal tetanic forces can be elicited by only five or six additional post-"doublet" pulses if appropriately spaced in time. However, the rate at which these post-"doublet" stimuli must be provided is fairly uncritical. In contrast, maximum post-"doublet" force-time integrals were obtained at intervals corresponding to motoneuronal firing rates of approximately 7 Hz, rates close to that typically used to recruit motor units and to maintain weak voluntary contractions.  相似文献   

13.
The subthalamic nucleus (STN) is considered to be one of the driving forces in the basal ganglia circuit. The STN is innervated by serotonergic afferents from the raphe nucleus and expresses a variety of 5-HT receptor subtypes. We investigated the effects of 5-HT and 5-HT receptor subtype agonists and antagonists on the firing properties of STN neurons in rat brain slices. We used cell-attached, perforated-patch, and whole cell recording techniques to detect changes in firing frequency and pattern and electrical membrane properties. Due to the depolarization of membrane potential caused by reduced potassium conductance, 5-HT (10 microM) increased the firing frequency of STN neurons without changing their firing pattern. Cadmium failed to occlude the effect of 5-HT on firing frequency. 5-HT had no effect on afterhyperpolarization current. These results indicated that the 5-HT action was not mediated by high-voltage-activated calcium channel currents and calcium-dependent potassium currents. 5-HT had no effect on hyperpolarization-activated cation current (I(H)) amplitude and voltage-dependence of I(H) activation, suggesting that I(H) was not involved in 5-HT-induced excitation. The increased firing by 5-HT was mimicked by 5-HT(2/4) receptor agonist alpha-methyl-5-HT and was partially mimicked by 5-HT2 receptor agonist DOI or 5-HT4 receptor agonist cisapride. The 5-HT action was partially reversed by 5-HT4 receptor antagonist SB 23597-190, 5-HT2 receptor antagonist ketanserin, and 5-HT2C receptor antagonist RS 102221. Our data indicate that 5-HT has significant ability to modulate membrane excitability in STN neurons; modulation is accomplished by decreasing potassium conductance by activating 5-HT4 and 5-HT2C receptors.  相似文献   

14.
1. Intracellular recordings were made in 427 phrenic motoneurons from kittens (in four stages of postnatal development, ranging from 2 to 14 wk) and in 72 motoneurons from adult cats. These experiments were performed to determine how the pattern of spontaneous discharge changes in phrenic motoneurons during development and how these changes might be influenced by alterations in the electrophysiological properties of these neurons. 2. The mean axonal conduction velocity increased significantly (P less than 0.0001) throughout this period of development, with the most rapid increase occurring between weeks 2 and 5 (18.5 +/- 5.4 and 32.4 +/- 5.6 m/s, respectively, mean +/- SD). 3. There was no change in the magnitude of the membrane potential, antidromic action potential, or positive overshoot; whereas there was a decrease in the half-width of the action potential from 2 (652 +/- 184 ms) to 14 (525 +/- 116 ms) wk postnatal. 4. The mean duration of the afterhyperpolarization (AHPdur) decreased from 69 +/- 20 ms at 2 wk to 60 +/- 16 ms by 9 wk, then increased to 66 +/- 18 ms by 14 wk of age and to 75 +/- 21 ms in the adult. The mean amplitude of the afterhyperpolarization (AHPamp) in the 2-wk-old group (4.9 +/- 1.8 mV) was larger than that at weeks 5 (3.9 +/- 1.7 mV) and 9 (3.9 +/- 1.6 mV), whereas the mean AHPamp of the adult (3.1 +/- 1.2 mV) was significantly smaller than the mean of any younger group. A significant negative correlation was found between AHPdur and axonal conduction velocity in all age groups studied, including the adult.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Intra-axonal recordings were performed in ventral roots of rats in vitro to study the conduction velocity and firing threshold properties of motoneuron axons. Mean values ± SD were 30.5±5.6 m/s for conduction velocity and 11.6±4.5 mV for the depolarization from the resting potential required to reach firing threshold (threshold depolarization). Conduction velocity varied inversely and significantly with threshold depolarization (P=0.0002 by linear regression). This relationship was evident even after accounting for variation in conduction velocity associated with action potential amplitude, injected current amplitude, or body weight. Conduction velocity also varied inversely with the time to action potential onset during just-threshold current pulse injection. These data suggest that the time course of depolarization leading to action potential initiation contributes to the speed of conduction in motoneuron axons. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

16.
We sought to determine whether decreased neuromuscular use in the form of hindlimb unweighting (HU) would affect the properties of innervating motoneurones. Hindlimb weight-bearing was removed in rats for a period of 2 weeks via hindlimb suspension by the tail. Following this the electrophysiological properties of tibial motoneurones were recorded under anaesthesia in situ . After HU, motoneurones had significantly ( P < 0.05) elevated rheobase currents, lower antidromic spike amplitudes, lower afterhyperpolarization (AHP) amplitudes, faster membrane time constants, lower cell capacitances, and depolarized spike thresholds. Frequency–current ( f – I ) relationships were shifted significantly to the right (i.e. more current required to obtain a given firing frequency), although there was no change in f – I slopes. 'Slow' motoneurones (AHP half-decay times, > 20 ms) were unchanged in proportions in HU compared to weight-bearing rats. Slow motoneurones had significantly lower minimum firing frequencies and minimum currents necessary for rhythmic firing than 'fast' motoneurones in weight-bearing rats; these differences were lost in HU rats, where slow motoneurones resembled fast motoneurones in these properties. In a five-compartment motoneurone model with ion conductances incorporated to resemble firing behaviour in vivo , most of the changes in passive and rhythmic firing properties could be reproduced by reducing sodium conductance by 25% and 15% in the initial segment and soma, respectively, or by increasing potassium conductance by 55% and 42%, respectively. This supports previous conclusions that changes in chronic neuromuscular activity, either an increase or decrease, may result in physiological adaptations in motoneurones due to chronic changes in ion conductances.  相似文献   

17.
R T Matthews  W L Lee 《Neuroscience》1991,42(2):451-462
Firing patterns, action potential characteristics and some active membrane properties of guinea-pig medial septum/diagonal band neurons were studied in an in vitro slice preparation. A comparison was made between several types of cells classified according to either extracellularly recorded (n = 130) or intracellularly recorded (n = 30) electrophysiological characteristics. Using multi-barrel extracellular electrodes, three principal cell types were distinguished: slow rhythmic firing cells (29%), fast rhythmic firing cells (65%) and burst-firing cells (6%). Most slow firing cells could also be distinguished from other cell types by their relatively longer action potential duration and a characteristic cadmium-sensitive "hump" in the repolarization phase of the action potential. These characteristics of slow firing cells matched well with the characteristics of cholinergic, slow afterhyperpolarization cells previously identified with intracellular recordings. The action potential shape, firing rate and firing pattern characteristics of about 60% of extracellularly recorded fast rhythmic firing cells matched those of previously identified non-cholinergic fast afterhyperpolarization cells. The remaining extracellularly recorded, rhythmic firing cells (about 10% of slow firing and 40% of fast firing cells) had a mixture of characteristics which precluded unequivocal classification as to cholinergic or non-cholinergic cell type. Using intracellular recording, the bee venom toxin, apamin, was shown to attenuate the characteristic post spike slow afterhyperpolarization of cholinergic cells and greatly enhanced their firing rate to depolarizing pulses. Apamin often attenuated a smaller and more transient afterhyperpolarization found in identified non-cholinergic cells, but firing rate was increased only slightly. Extracellular recordings from slow and fast rhythmic firing cells in the presence of apamin showed that excitability of slow firing cells was enhanced significantly more than fast firing cells. The apamin data support the hypothesis that extracellularly recorded slow firing cells are cholinergic. We conclude that extracellularly recorded medial septum/diagonal band cells characterized by broad action potentials, slow rhythmic firing under microiontophoresed glutamate and a signature "hump" in the falling phase of the action potential are cholinergic cells. Extracellularly recorded fast rhythmic firing cells with a narrow action potential and no "hump" in the action potential are likely to be non-cholinergic cells. This extracellular electrophysiological "fingerprint" for cholinergic medial septum/diagonal band cells in vitro may now be extended to studies in vivo where controversy remains as to the neurochemical identity of basal forebrain cells involved in control of hippocampal slow rhythmic activity.  相似文献   

18.
Electrical properties of the spinal motoneurons of Rana temporaria and R. esculenta were investigated in the in situ spinal cord at 20-22 degrees C by means of intracellular recording and current injection. Input resistance values depended on the method of measurement in a given cell but were generally inversely related to axon conduction velocity. The membrane-potential response to a subthreshold current pulse was composed of at least two exponentials with mean time constants of 2.5 and 20 ms. The membrance potential reached by the peak of a spike depended on the mode of spike initiation and membrane potential. Preceding a suprathreshold depolarization by a hyperpolarizing pulse could delay and eliminate spike initiation, similar to effects reported in certain invertebrate neurons. Antidromic invasion frequently failed in motoneurons of normal resting potential. Antidromic spike components (m,IS, SD) were similar to those of cat motoneurons. The delayed depolarization and the long afterhyperpolarization following an antidromic spike had many properties in common with the analogous afterpotentials of cat motoneurons. The reversal potential of the short afterhyperpolarization occurring immediately after the spike varied with resting potential and could not be used to determine potassium equilibrium potential. Sustained rhythmic firing could be evoked by continuous synaptic drive or long pulses of injected current. The plot of firing rate versus current strength had a substantial linear region. Both steady firing and adaptation properties varied markedly with motoneuron input resistance.  相似文献   

19.
Slow changes in potassium permeability in skeletal muscle   总被引:19,自引:5,他引:19  
1. Voltage clamp experiments on sartorius muscle fibres at 3 degrees C showed that the potassium current is divisible into three components, namely:(a) Current in the delayed rectifier channel, which reached a maximum in about 0.1 sec at -30 mV, and declined with a time constant of about 4 msec when the fibre was repolarized to -100 mV; this component had an approximately linear instantaneous current-voltage relation and an equilibrium potential E(1) at 10-15 mV positive to the resting potential.(b) A slow component which reached a maximum in about 3 sec at -30 mV, and declined with a time constant of about 0.5 sec when the fibre was repolarized to -100 mV; this component had an approximately linear instantaneous current-voltage relation and a mean equilibrium potential E(2) at -83 mV in fibres where E(1) averaged -75 mV.(c) Current in the inward rectifier channel which decreased with a time constant of about 0.25 sec when the fibre was hyperpolarized to -150 mV. This component had an equilibrium potential close to the resting potential and an instantaneous current-voltage relation which was that of an inward rectifier.2. The general characteristics of the late after-potential in muscles in hypertonic solutions at 3 degrees C are consistent with those of the slow conductance change. The sign of the late after-potentials was reversed by depolarizing below -80 mV.3. The decline of current during a maintained hyperpolarization cannot be attributed solely to a decrease in tubular potassium concentration, since there may be a large decrease in current without much alteration of equilibrium potential. The negative slope conductance often seen at -150 mV is also difficult to reconcile with the tubular depletion hypothesis.4. Replacement of 10 mM-K by 10 mM-Rb abolished inward rectification but had less effect on the fast and slow components of the potassium conductance.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the contribution of large conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channels to spontaneous activity of cerebellar Purkinje neurons in mice and rats. In Purkinje neurons which fire tonically, block of BK channels increased the firing rate and caused the neurons to fire irregularly. In Purkinje neurons which exhibited a trimodal pattern of activity, present primarily in mature animals, block of BK channels had little effect on firing rate or regularity but shortened the single cycle duration of the trimodal pattern. The contribution of BK channels to the action potential waveform was also examined. BK channels contributed a brief afterhyperpolarization (AHP) of approximately 3 mV which followed each action potential, but made little contribution to action potential repolarization. The amplitude of the BK-dependent AHP did not change with age although there was an increase in the total AHP. The difference in the contribution of BK channels to the firing rate among the two populations of Purkinje neurons was the consequence of the decrease in the fractional contribution of BK channels to the AHP. We also found that block of BK channels increases intracellular calcium concentration during spontaneous firing. Thus, although BK channels do not affect action potential repolarization, they nevertheless control calcium entry with each action potential by contributing to the AHP.  相似文献   

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