Properties of Action Potentials from Insect Motor Nerve Fibres

1970 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 299-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. G. PEARSON ◽  
R. B. STEIN ◽  
S. K. MALHOTRA

1. The properties of nerve action potentials in small insect motor nerves were studied using extracellular recording electrodes. 2. A length of nerve was lifted out of solution and recordings were made with respect to the solution either from an intact nerve (triphasic recording) or from near a cut end of the nerve (monophasic recording). 3. In a cockroach nerve, the number of spontaneously active fibres was small enough that corresponding nerve fibres could be identified in each preparation by their action potential amplitude and their pattern of activity. Under controlled conditions, the absolute amplitudes of either monophasic or triphasic records were reproducible and could be used to calculate fibre diameter. The calculations were confirmed from histological sections of the nerve. 4. Conduction velocity varied approximately as the 0.78 power of fibre diameter in a cockroach nerve and as 0.7 power of fibre diameter in a locust nerve. These values are considerably larger than the square root relation predicted if membrane properties are independent of fibre diameter. 5. Membrane properties probably vary with fibre diameter since the action potential duration increases dramatically for fibres below 5 µ in diameter. 6. For the cockroach nerve systematic structural differences between fibres of different sizes are also seen with the electron microscope and the relation of these to the functional differences is considered.

2003 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
pp. 657-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert R. Buss ◽  
Charles W. Bourque ◽  
Pierre Drapeau

The physiological and pharmacological properties of the motoneuron membrane and action potential were investigated in larval zebrafish using whole cell patch current-clamp recording techniques. Action potentials were eliminated in tetrodotoxin, repolarized by tetraethylammonium (TEA) and 3,4-diaminopyridine (3,4-AP)-sensitive potassium conductances, and had a cobalt-sensitive, high-threshold calcium component. Depolarizing current injection evoked a brief (approximately 10–30 ms) burst of action potentials that was terminated by strong, outwardly rectifying voltage-activated potassium and calcium-dependent conductances. In the presence of intracellular cesium ions, a prolonged plateau potential often followed brief depolarizations. During larval development (hatching to free-swimming), the resting membrane conductance increased in a population of motoneurons, which tended to reduce the apparent outward rectification of the membrane. The conductances contributing to action potential burst termination are hypothesized to play a role in patterning the synaptically driven motoneuron output in these rapidly swimming fish.


2000 ◽  
Vol 84 (5) ◽  
pp. 2398-2408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan P. Staff ◽  
Hae-Yoon Jung ◽  
Tara Thiagarajan ◽  
Michael Yao ◽  
Nelson Spruston

Action potentials are the end product of synaptic integration, a process influenced by resting and active neuronal membrane properties. Diversity in these properties contributes to specialized mechanisms of synaptic integration and action potential firing, which are likely to be of functional significance within neural circuits. In the hippocampus, the majority of subicular pyramidal neurons fire high-frequency bursts of action potentials, whereas CA1 pyramidal neurons exhibit regular spiking behavior when subjected to direct somatic current injection. Using patch-clamp recordings from morphologically identified neurons in hippocampal slices, we analyzed and compared the resting and active membrane properties of pyramidal neurons in the subiculum and CA1 regions of the hippocampus. In response to direct somatic current injection, three subicular firing types were identified (regular spiking, weak bursting, and strong bursting), while all CA1 neurons were regular spiking. Within subiculum strong bursting neurons were found preferentially further away from the CA1 subregion. Input resistance ( R N), membrane time constant (τm), and depolarizing “sag” in response to hyperpolarizing current pulses were similar in all subicular neurons, while R N and τm were significantly larger in CA1 neurons. The first spike of all subicular neurons exhibited similar action potential properties; CA1 action potentials exhibited faster rising rates, greater amplitudes, and wider half-widths than subicular action potentials. Therefore both the resting and active properties of CA1 pyramidal neurons are distinct from those of subicular neurons, which form a related class of neurons, differing in their propensity to burst. We also found that both regular spiking subicular and CA1 neurons could be transformed into a burst firing mode by application of a low concentration of 4-aminopyridine, suggesting that in both hippocampal subfields, firing properties are regulated by a slowly inactivating, D-type potassium current. The ability of all subicular pyramidal neurons to burst strengthens the notion that they form a single neuronal class, sharing a burst generating mechanism that is stronger in some cells than others.


Author(s):  
Leonard K. Kaczmarek

The intrinsic electrical properties of neurons are extremely varied. For example, the width of action potentials in different neurons varies by more than an order of magnitude. In response to prolonged stimulation, some neurons generate repeated action potential hundreds of times a second, while others fire only a single action potential or adapt very rapidly. These differences result from the expression of different types of ion channels in the plasma membrane. The dominant channels that shape neuronal firing patterns are those that are selective for sodium, calcium, and potassium ions. This chapter provides a brief overview of the biophysical properties of each of these classes of channel, their role in shaping the electrical personality of a neuron, and how interactions of these channels with cytoplasmic factors shape the overall cell biology of a neuron.


1993 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 961-975 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. F. Stasheff ◽  
M. Hines ◽  
W. A. Wilson

1. Intracellular and extracellular recording techniques were used to study the increase in ectopic (i.e., nonsomatic) action-potential generation occurring among CA3 pyramidal cells during the kindling-like induction of electrographic seizures (EGSs) in this subpopulation of the hippocampal slice. Kindling-like stimulus trains (60 Hz, 2 s) were delivered to s. radiatum of CA3 at 10-min intervals. As EGSs developed, the frequency of ectopic firing increased markedly (by 10.33 +/- 3.29 spikes/min, mean +/- SE, P << 0.01). Several methods were applied to determine the initiation site for these action potentials within the cell (axons vs. dendrites). 2. Collision tests were conducted between known antidromic and orthodromic action potentials in CA3 cells to determine the critical period, c, for collision. Attempts were then made to collide ectopic spikes with known antidromic action potentials. At intervals less than c, ectopic spikes failed to collide with antidromic ones, in 5 of 10 cases. In these cells, this clearly indicates that the ectopic spikes were themselves of axonal origin. In the remaining five cases, ectopic spikes collided with antidromic action potentials at intervals approximately equal to c, most likely because of interactions within the complex system of recurrent axon collaterals in CA3. 3. Action potentials of CA3 pyramidal cells were simulated with the use of a compartmental computer model, NEURON. These simulations were based on prior models of CA3 pyramidal neurons and of the motoneuron action potential. Simulated action potentials generated in axonal compartments possessed a prominent inflection on their rising phase (IS-SD break), which was difficult to appreciate in those spikes generated in somatic or dendritic compartments. 4. An analysis of action potentials recorded experimentally from CA3 pyramidal cells also showed that antidromic spikes possess a prominent IS-SD break that is not present in orthodromic spikes. In addition to identified antidromic action potentials, ectopic spikes also possess such an inflection. Together with the predictions of computer simulations, this analysis also indicates that ectopic spikes originate in the axons of CA3 cells. 5. Tetrodotoxin (TTX, 50 microM) was locally applied by pressure injection while monitoring ectopic spike activity. Localized application of TTX to regions of the slice that could include the axons but not the dendrites of recorded cells abolished or markedly reduced the frequency of ectopic spikes (n = 5), further confirming the hypothesis that these action potentials arise from CA3 axons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2000 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. 1404-1413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomoshige Koga ◽  
Robert M. Bradley

The properties of afferent sensory neurons supplying taste receptors on the tongue were examined in vitro. Neurons in the geniculate (GG) and petrosal ganglia (PG) supplying the tongue were fluorescently labeled, acutely dissociated, and then analyzed using patch-clamp recording. Measurement of the dissociated neurons revealed that PG neurons were significantly larger than GG neurons. The active and passive membrane properties of these ganglion neurons were examined and compared with each other. There were significant differences between the properties of neurons in the PG and GG ganglia. The mean membrane time constant, spike threshold, action potential half-width, and action potential decay time of GG neurons was significantly less than those of PG neurons. Neurons in the PG had action potentials that had a fast rise and fall time (sharp action potentials) as well as action potentials with a deflection or hump on the falling phase (humped action potentials), whereas action potentials of GG neurons were all sharp. There were also significant differences in the response of PG and GG neurons to the application of acetylcholine (ACh), serotonin (5HT), substance P (SP), and GABA. Whereas PG neurons responded to ACh, 5HT, SP, and GABA, GG neurons only responded to SP and GABA. In addition, the properties of GG neurons were more homogeneous than those of the PG because all the GG neurons had sharp spikes and when responses to neurotransmitters occurred, either all or most of the neurons responded. These differences between neurons of the GG and PG may relate to the type of receptor innervated. PG ganglion neurons innervate a number of receptor types on the posterior tongue and have more heterogeneous properties, while GG neurons predominantly innervate taste buds and have more homogeneous properties.


1987 ◽  
Vol 128 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
L. A. Orr ◽  
E. M. Lieberman

A lightly platinized tungsten (Pt-W) wire electrode, axially inserted into a crayfish giant axon, causes the development of cardiac-like action potentials with durations of up to 4 s. The plateau in membrane potential typically occurs within 10 min of the start of action potential elongation. The effect occurs without passing current through the Pt-W electrode and is temporally related to a dramatic decrease in intracellular pH (pHi). Such an effect cannot be induced by a decrease in pHi produced by equilibrating the axon with HCO3(−)-CO2 solution (pH6), and NH4Cl rebound or direct intracellular injection of PO4(3-) buffer (pH 4 X 5). Action potential elongation is accompanied by a block of delayed rectification and the possibility that inward rectification also develops cannot be ruled out. Plateau generation requires Na+ and Ca2+ inward currents as demonstrated by abolition of the plateau by [Na+]o or [Ca2+]o depletion or treatment with tetrodotoxin (TTX) or verapamil. The block of outward rectification by Pt-W requires external Na+ or Ca2+. Action potential elongation produced by 3,4-diaminopyridine is not sensitive to verapamil and the waveform is different from that produced by Pt-W. The data support the possibility that different classes of excitable membranes have similar channel populations and that the functional differences between them reside in the inhibitory or masking influences that are present in the microenvironments of the various membrane channels.


1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 769-779 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Uchimura ◽  
H. Higashi ◽  
S. Nishi

1. The membrane properties and synaptic responses of guinea pig nucleus accumbens neurons in vitro were studied with intracellular recording methods. 2. The population of neurons could be divided into groups of low (20-60 M omega, average 46.5 M omega) and high (60-180 M omega, average 96.5 M omega) input resistance. The resting membrane potential in both groups was approximately -70 mV. 3. Other membrane properties were quite similar in both groups. Inward rectification occurred at potentials more negative than -80 mV; this was blocked by Cs+ (2 mM). Membrane potential oscillations were observed at potentials between -65 and -55 mV; these were blocked by tetrodotoxin (TTX, 0.5 microM). Outward rectification occurred at potentials less negative than -45 mV; this was depressed by tetraethylammonium (TEA, 10 mM). 4. Action potentials elicited by small depolarizing current pulses (2-5 ms, 0.3-0.5 nA) were approximately 95 mV in amplitude and 1.0 ms in duration. The afterhyperpolarization following each action potential was less than 30 ms in duration, and no accommodation of action-potential discharge was seen at frequencies up to 40 Hz. The action potentials were reversibly blocked by TTX (0.3 microM). In addition, TTX-insensitive, Ca2+-dependent spikes were evoked by passing larger and more prolonged current pulses (greater than 40 ms, greater than 0.5 nA) across the membrane. 5. Focal electrical stimulation of the slice surface with low intensity (1 ms, less than 10 V) elicited excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in neurons of both high- and low-resistance groups. The reversal potential (+10.2 mV) for the EPSPs was close to the reversal potential (+7.7 mV) of the responses to glutamate applied in the superfusing solution. The N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor antagonists, D-alpha-aminoadipic acid (1 mM) and DL-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (DL-APV, 250 microM), reversibly depressed the EPSP; the glutamate uptake inhibitor, L-aspartic acid-beta-hydroxamate (50 microM), or removal of Mg2+ from the superfusate, augmented the EPSP. 6. When the intensity of the focal stimulus was increased (1 ms, greater than or equal to 10 V), a second larger depolarizing response (duration, 800 ms to 2 s) could be evoked in addition to the smoothly graded EPSP. This was seen only in cells of the high-resistance group (90-130 M omega).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth R. Tovar ◽  
Daniel C. Bridges ◽  
Bian Wu ◽  
Connor Randall ◽  
Morgane Audouard ◽  
...  

AbstractThe small caliber of central nervous system (CNS) axons makes routine study of axonal physiology relatively difficult. However, while recording extracellular action potentials from neurons cultured on planer multi-electrode arrays (MEAs) we found activity among groups of electrodes consistent with action potential propagation in single neurons. Action potential propagation was evident as widespread, repetitive cooccurrence of extracellular action potentials (eAPs) among groups of electrodes. These eAPs occurred with invariant sequences and inter-electrode latencies that were consistent with reported measures of action potential propagation in unmyelinated axons. Within co-active electrode groups, the inter-electrode eAP latencies were temperature sensitive, as expected for action potential propagation. Our data are consistent with these signals primarily reflecting axonal action potential propagation, from axons with a high density of voltage-gated sodium channels. Repeated codetection of eAPs by multiple electrodes confirmed these eAPs are from individual neurons and averaging these eAPs revealed sub-threshold events at other electrodes. The sequence of electrodes at which eAPs co-occur uniquely identifies these neurons, allowing us to monitor spiking of single identified neurons within neuronal ensembles. We recorded dynamic changes in single axon physiology such as simultaneous increases and decreases in excitability in different portions of single axonal arbors over several hours. Over several weeks, we measured changes in inter-electrode propagation latencies and ongoing changes in excitability in different regions of single axonal arbors. We recorded action potential propagation signals in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons which could thus be used to study axonal physiology in human disease models.Significance StatementStudying the physiology of central nervous system axons is limited by the technical challenges of recording from axons with pairs of patch or extracellular electrodes at two places along single axons. We studied action potential propagation in single axonal arbors with extracellular recording with multi-electrode arrays. These recordings were non-invasive and were done from several sites of small caliber axons and branches. Unlike conventional extracellular recording, we unambiguously identified and labelled the neuronal source of propagating action potentials. We manipulated and quantified action potential propagation and found a surprisingly high density of axonal voltage-gated sodium channels. Our experiments also demonstrate that the excitability of different portions of axonal arbors can be independently regulated on time scales from hours to weeks.


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