Functional Roles of Kv1 Channels in Neocortical Pyramidal Neurons

2007 ◽  
Vol 97 (3) ◽  
pp. 1931-1940 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Guan ◽  
J. C. F. Lee ◽  
M. H. Higgs ◽  
W. J. Spain ◽  
R. C. Foehring

Pyramidal neurons from layers II/III of somatosensory and motor cortex express multiple Kv1 α-subunits and a current sensitive to block by α-dendrotoxin (α-DTX). We examined functional roles of native Kv1 channels in these cells using current-clamp recordings in brain slices and current- and voltage-clamp recordings in dissociated cells. α-DTX caused a significant negative shift in voltage threshold for action potentials (APs) and reduced rheobase. Correspondingly, a ramp-voltage protocol revealed that the α-DTX–sensitive current activated at subthreshold voltages. AP width at threshold increased with successive APs during repetitive firing. The steady-state threshold width for a given firing rate was similar in control and α-DTX, despite an initially broader AP in α-DTX. AP voltage threshold increased similarly during a train of spikes under control conditions and in the presence of α-DTX. α-DTX had no effect on input resistance or resting membrane potential and modest effects on the amplitude or width of a single AP. Accordingly, experiments using AP waveforms (APWs) as voltage protocols revealed that α-DTX–sensitive current peaked late during the AP repolarization phase. Application of α-DTX increased the rate of firing to intracellular current injection and increased gain (multiplicative effects), but did not alter spike-frequency adaptation. Consistent with these findings, voltage-clamp experiments revealed that the proportion of outward current sensitive to α-DTX was highest during the interval between two APWs, reflecting slow deactivation kinetics at −50 mV. Finally, α-DTX did not alter the selectivity of pyramidal neurons for DC versus time-varying stimuli.

1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 1032-1036 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. R. Pelletier ◽  
J. J. Hablitz

1. Neocortical brain slices were prepared from rats (35–50 days of age) and maintained in vitro. Intracellular recordings were obtained from neurons in cortical layers II/III. The effect of bath application of cyclothiazide (CYZ), a potent blocker of alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionate (AMPA) receptor desensitization, on evoked synaptic activity and passive membrane properties was investigated. 2. Bath application of CYZ did not significantly affect resting membrane potential, input resistance, or repetitive firing. CYZ increased both the amplitude and duration of evoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs). Polysynaptic responses were also augumented. These effects persisted after the blockade of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors with D-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (D-APV). The magnitude of these effects appeared to vary directly with stimulation intensity and presumably, amount of glutamate release. 3. Epileptiform activity was induced by bath application of bicuculline methiodide. The amplitude and duration of evoked paroxysmal discharges were increased by CYZ. Similar results were seen in presence of D-APV. 4. These results indicate that CYZ has significant effects on synaptic transmission. Desensitization of non-NMDA receptors may be an important mechanism for determining the time course of EPSPs and in curtailing epileptiform responses in the rat neocortex.


1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C. Schwindt ◽  
W. J. Spain ◽  
W. E. Crill

1. The function and ionic mechanism of a slow outward current were studied in large layer V neurons of cat sensorimotor cortex using an in vitro slice preparation and single microelectrode voltage clamp. 2. With Ca2+ influx blocked, a slow relaxation ("tail") of outward current followed either (1) repetitive firing evoked for 1 s or (2) a small 1-s depolarizing voltage clamp step that activated the persistent Na+ current of neocortical neurons, INaP. When a depolarization that activated INaP was maintained, an outward current gradually developed and increased in amplitude over a period of tens of seconds to several minutes. An outward tail current of similar duration followed repolarization. The slow outward current was abolished by TTX, indicating it depended on Na+ influx. 3. With Ca2+ influx blocked, the onset of the slow Na+-dependent outward current caused spike frequency adaptation during current-evoked repetitive firing. Following the firing, the decay of the Na+-dependent current caused a slow afterhyperpolarization (sAHP) and a long-lasting reduction of excitability. It also was responsible for habituation of the response to repeated identical current pulses. 4. The Na+-dependent tail current had properties expected of a K+ current. Membrane chord conductance increased during the tail, and tail amplitude was reduced or reversed by membrane potential hyperpolarization and raised extracellular K+ concentration [( K+]0). 5. The current tail was reduced reversibly by the K+ channel blockers TEA (5-10 mM), muscarine (5-20 microM), and norepinephrine (100 microM). These agents also resulted in a larger, more sustained inward current during the preceding step depolarization. Comparison of current time course before and after the application of blocking agents suggested that, in spite of its capability for slow buildup and decay, the onset of the Na+-dependent outward current occurs within 100 ms of an adequate step depolarization. 6. With Ca2+ influx blocked, extracellular application of dantrolene sodium (30 microM) had no clear effect on the current tail or the corresponding sAHP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1993 ◽  
Vol 70 (5) ◽  
pp. 1975-1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Johnson ◽  
R. B. Felder

1. Recent studies have demonstrated that the arterial baroreflex is imparied with aging and have implicated central components of the baroreflex arc in this autonomic dysfunction. Neurons in the medial portion of the nucleus tractus solitarius (mNTS) receive a major input from the arterial baroreceptors. The present study was undertaken to characterize the intrinsic membrane properties of mNTS neurons in young rats and to test the hypothesis that these properties are altered with aging. An in vitro brain stem slice preparation was used to record intracellularly from mNTS neurons; passive membrane properties, action potential characteristics, and repetitive firing properties were examined and compared. 2. Neurons in the mNTS of young (3-5 mo old) Fischer-344 rats (F-344; n = 35) had a resting membrane potential of -57 +/- 6.9 mV (mean +/- SD), a membrane time constant of 18 +/- 9.0 ms, and an input resistance of 110 +/- 60 m omega. Action potential amplitude was 81 +/- 7.5 mV with a duration at half-height of 0.83 +/- 0.15 ms. The spontaneous firing rate in 24 cells was 4.3 +/- 2.9 Hz. The amplitude and duration of the action potential afterhyperpolarization (AHP) were 6.6 +/- 3.0 mV and 64 +/- 34 ms, respectively. All neurons expressed spike frequency adaptation, action potential AHP, and posttetanic hyperpolarization. Delayed excitation and postinhibitory rebound were present in 34 and 14% of neurons tested, respectively. Neurons from adult (10-12 mo old) F-344 rats (n = 34) were similar to the young F-344 rats with respect to all of these variables. 3. Neurons from aged (21-24 mo old) F-344 (n = 32) were similar to those from young and adult rats, but there were two potentially important differences: the mean input resistance of the aged neurons was higher (170 +/- 150 M omega), with a larger proportion (46% of aged neurons vs. 20% of young neurons and 21% of adult neurons) having input resistances > 150 M omega; and there was a tendency for a smaller percentage of aged neurons (16% of aged neurons vs. 34% of young neurons and 29% of adult neurons) to express delayed excitation. 4. The potential significance of a high input resistance was tested by comparing the steady-state current-voltage (I-V) relationships and the frequency-current (f-I) relationships among low-resistance (1-100 M omega), medium-resistance (101-200 M omega).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1991 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 365-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. P. Southan ◽  
K. T. Wann

A method for intracellular recording from rat hippocampal brain slices under helium pressure is described. The preparation is mounted on a horizontal mobile platform that is rolled into the pressure chamber and can be viewed at pressure. Remote manipulation of the glass microelectrodes is achieved by a high-resolution electrically driven commercially available system. The slice is superfused continuously from a closed system within the chamber. Temperature is maintained at 37 degrees C and PO2 at 0.5 atm within the pressure chamber. A pressure of 200 ATA can be obtained, although thus far recordings have been made up to only 130 ATA. The experiments demand that a number of sample recordings be made from the same slice at both ambient and high pressure, and tests have proved that, although difficult, this can be achieved. The resting membrane potential, the current-voltage relationship, and the action potential responses to short (8 ms), medium (80 ms), and long (800 ms) depolarizing current pulses have all been measured in CA1 pyramidal neurons.


2008 ◽  
Vol 99 (6) ◽  
pp. 2998-3008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne-Marie M. Oswald ◽  
Alex D. Reyes

We investigated the development of L2/3 pyramidal cell (PC) circuitry in juvenile mice from postnatal day 10 (P10) to P29. Using whole cell recordings in an in vitro thalamocortical slice preparation, we examined the connection architecture and intrinsic and synaptic properties of PCs. The excitatory connections between PCs were highly localized: the probability of connection between PCs declined with intersomatic distance from 0.18 to about 0.05 over 150 μm, but did not vary with age. However, the mean and variance of the intrinsic and synaptic properties of PCs changed dramatically between P10 and P29. The input resistance, membrane time constant, and resting membrane potential decreased, leading to reduced neural excitability in older animals. Likewise, there were age-dependent decreases in the amplitude and decay time of the excitatory postsynaptic potentials as well as short-term synaptic depression. Both the intrinsic and synaptic properties underwent a transitional period between P10 and P18 prior to reaching steady state at P19–P29. We show that these properties combine to produce age-related differential synaptic responses to low- and high-frequency synaptic input that may contribute to differences in auditory processing during development.


1992 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 1307-1320 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. R. Llinas ◽  
A. Alonso

1. The electrophysiological properties of the tuberomammillary and lateral mammillary neurons in the guinea pig mammillary body were studied using an in vitro brain slice preparation. 2. Tuberomammillary (n = 79) neurons were recorded mainly ventral to the lateral mammillary body as well as ventromedially to the fornix within the rostral part of the medial mammillary nucleus. Intracellular staining with horseradish peroxidase (n = 9) and Lucifer yellow (n = 3) revealed that these cells have several thick, long, spiny dendrites emerging from large (20-35 microns) fusiform somata. 3. Most tuberomammillary neurons (66%) fired spontaneously at a relatively low frequency (0.5-10 Hz) at the resting membrane potential. The action potentials were broad (2.3 ms) with a prominent Ca(2+)-dependent shoulder on the falling phase. Deep (17.8 mV), long-lasting spike afterhyperpolarizations were largely Ca(2+)-independent. 4. All tuberomammillary neurons recorded displayed pronounced delayed firing when the cells were activated from a potential negative to the resting level. The cells also displayed a delayed return to the baseline at the break of hyperpolarizing pulses applied from a membrane potential level close to firing threshold. Analysis of the voltage- and time dependence of this delayed rectification suggested the presence of a transient outward current similar to the A current (IA). These were not completely blocked by high concentrations of 4-aminopyridine, whereas the delayed onset of firing was always abolished when voltage-dependent Ca2+ conductances were blocked by superfusion with Cd2+. 5. Tuberomammillary neurons also displayed inward rectification in the hyperpolarizing and, primarily, depolarizing range. Block of voltage-gated Na(+)-dependent conductances with tetrodotoxin (TTX) selectively abolished inward rectification in the depolarizing range, indicating the presence of a persistent low-threshold sodium-dependent conductance (gNap). In fact, persistent TTX-sensitive, plateau potentials were always elicited following Ca2+ block with Cd2+ when K+ currents were reduced by superfusion with tetraethylammonium. 6. The gNap in tuberomammillary neurons may subserve the pacemaker current underlying the spontaneous firing of these cells. The large-amplitude spike afterhyperpolarization of these neurons sets the availability of the transient outward rectifier, which, in conjunction with the pacemaker current, establishes the rate at which membrane potential approaches spike threshold. 7. Repetitive firing elicited by direct depolarization enhanced the spike shoulder of tuberomammillary neurons. Spike trains were followed by a Ca(2+)-dependent, apamine-sensitive, slow afterhyperpolarization. 8. Lateral mammillary neurons were morphologically and electrophysiologically different from tuberomammillary neurons. All lateral mammillary neurons neurons recorded (n = 44) were silent at rest (-60 mV).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2012 ◽  
Vol 107 (8) ◽  
pp. 2083-2095 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean H. White ◽  
C. Devin Brisson ◽  
R. David Andrew

As an immediate consequence of stroke onset, failure of the Na+-K+-ATPase pump evokes a propagating anoxic depolarization (AD) across gray matter. Acute neuronal swelling and dendritic beading arise within seconds in the future ischemic core, imaged as changes in light transmittance (ΔLT). AD is itself not a target for drug-based reduction of stroke injury because it is generated in the 1st min of stroke onset. Peri-infarct depolarizations (PIDs) are milder AD-like events that recur during the hours following AD and contribute to infarct expansion. Inhibiting PIDs with drugs could limit expansion. Two types of drugs, “caines” and σ1-receptor ligands, have been found to inhibit AD onset (and may also oppose PID initiation), yet their underlying actions have not been examined. Imaging ΔLT in the CA1 region simultaneously with whole cell current-clamp recording from CA1 pyramidal neurons reveal that the elevated LT front and onset of the AD are coincident. Either dibucaine or carbetapentane pretreatment significantly delays AD onset without affecting resting membrane potential or neuronal input resistance. Dibucaine decreases excitability by raising spike threshold and decreasing action potential (AP) frequency, whereas carbetapentane eliminates the fast afterhyperpolarization while accentuating the slow afterhyperpolarization to reduce AP frequency. Orthodromic and antidromic APs are eliminated by dibucaine within 15 min but not by carbetapentane. Thus both drugs reduce cortical excitability at the level of the single pyramidal neuron but through strikingly different mechanisms. In vivo, both drugs would likely inhibit recurring PIDs in the expanding penumbra and so potentially could reduce developing neuronal damage over many hours poststroke when PIDs occur.


1998 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 1230-1238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Schweitzer ◽  
Samuel G. Madamba ◽  
George R. Siggins

Schweitzer, Paul, Samuel G. Madamba, and George R. Siggins. Somatostatin increases a voltage-insensitive K+ conductance in rat CA1 hippocampal neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 1230–1238, 1998. Somatostatin (SST) is a neuropeptide involved in several central processes. In hippocampus, SST hyperpolarizes CA1 pyramidal neurons and augments the K+ M current ( I M). However, the limited involvement of I M at resting potential in these cells suggests that the peptide also may modulate another channel to hyperpolarize hippocampal pyramidal neurons (HPNs). We studied the effect of SST on noninactivating conductances of rat CA1 HPNs in a slice preparation. Using MK886, a specific inhibitor of the enzymatic pathway that leads to the augmentation of I M by SST, we have uncovered and characterized a second conductance activated by the peptide. SST did not affect I M when applied with MK886 or the amplitudes of the slow Ca2+-dependent K+ afterhyperpolarization-current and the cationic Q current but still caused an outward current, indicating that SST acts upon another conductance. In the presence of MK886, SST elicited an outward current that reversed around −100 mV and that displayed a linear current-voltage relationship. Reversal potentials obtained in different external K+ concentrations are consistent with a conductance carried solely by K+ ions. The slope of the current-voltage relationship increased proportionately with the extracellular K+ concentration and remained linear. This suggests that SST opens a voltage-insensitive leak current ( I K(L)) in HPNs not an inwardly rectifying K+ current as reported in other neuron types. A low concentration of extracellular Ba2+ (150 μM) only slightly decreased the SST-induced effect in a voltage-independent manner, whereas a high concentration of Ba2+ (2 mM) completely blocked it. Extracellular Cs+ (2 mM) did not affect the outward SST current but inhibited the inward component. We conclude that SST inhibits HPNs by activating two different K+ conductances: the voltage-insensitive I K(L) and the voltage-dependent I M. The hyperpolarizing effect of SST at resting membrane potential appears to be mainly carried by I K(L), whereas I M dominates at slightly depolarized potentials.


2000 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. 2040-2046 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrice Congar ◽  
Jean-Luc Gaïarsa ◽  
Théodora Popovici ◽  
Yezekiel Ben-Ari ◽  
Valérie Crépel

The effects of ischemia were examined on CA3 pyramidal neurons recorded in hippocampal slices 2–4 mo after a global forebrain insult. With intracellular recordings, CA3 post-ischemic neurons had a more depolarized resting membrane potential but no change of the input resistance, spike threshold and amplitude, fast and slow afterhyperpolarization (AHP) or ADP, and firing properties in response to depolarizing pulses. With both field and whole-cell recordings, synaptic responses were similar in control and post-ischemic neurons. Although there were no spontaneous network-driven discharges, the post-ischemic synaptic network had a smaller threshold to generate evoked and spontaneous synchronized burst discharges. Thus lower concentrations of convulsive agents (kainate, high K+) triggered all-or-none network-driven synaptic events in post-ischemic neurons more readily than in control ones. Also, paired-pulse protocol generates, in post-ischemics but not controls, synchronized field burst discharges when interpulse intervals ranged from 60 to 100 ms. In conclusion, 2–4 mo after the insult, the post-ischemic CA3 pyramidal cells are permanently depolarized and have a reduced threshold to generate synchronized bursts. This may explain some neuropathological and behavioral consequences of ischemia as epileptic syndromes observed several months to several years after the ischemic insult.


2000 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. 2799-2809 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darrell A. Henze ◽  
Guillermo R. González-Burgos ◽  
Nathaniel N. Urban ◽  
David A. Lewis ◽  
German Barrionuevo

Dopaminergic modulation of neuronal networks in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) is believed to play an important role in information processing during working memory tasks in both humans and nonhuman primates. To understand the basic cellular mechanisms that underlie these actions of dopamine (DA), we have investigated the influence of DA on the cellular properties of layer 3 pyramidal cells in area 46 of the macaque monkey PFC. Intracellular voltage recordings were obtained with sharp and whole cell patch-clamp electrodes in a PFC brain-slice preparation. All of the recorded neurons in layer 3 ( n = 86) exhibited regular spiking firing properties consistent with those of pyramidal neurons. We found that DA had no significant effects on resting membrane potential or input resistance of these cells. However DA, at concentrations as low as 0.5 μM, increased the excitability of PFC cells in response to depolarizing current steps injected at the soma. Enhanced excitability was associated with a hyperpolarizing shift in action potential threshold and a decreased first interspike interval. These effects required activation of D1-like but not D2-like receptors since they were inhibited by the D1 receptor antagonist SCH23390 (3 μM) but not significantly altered by the D2 antagonist sulpiride (2.5 μM). These results show, for the first time, that DA modulates the activity of layer 3 pyramidal neurons in area 46 of monkey dorsolateral PFC in vitro. Furthermore the results suggest that, by means of these effects alone, DA modulation would generally enhance the response of PFC pyramidal neurons to excitatory currents that reach the action potential initiation site.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document