| Literature DB >> 11897846 |
Hidekazu Tsutsui1, Yoshitaka Oka.
Abstract
It has been previously shown that the "large cell" in the corpus glomerulosum (CG) of a teleost brain has a low-pass temporal filtering property. It fires a single spike only in response to temporally sparse synaptic inputs and thus extracts temporal aspects of afferent activities. To explore the ionic mechanisms underlying this property, we quantitatively studied voltage-gated Na(+) channels of the large cell in the CG slice preparation of the marine filefish by means of whole-cell patch clamp recordings in the voltage-clamp mode. Recorded Na(+) current was well described using the Hodgkin-Huxley "m(3)h" model. It was revealed that the Na(+) channels have a novel feature: remarkably slow recovery from inactivation. In other words, the time constant for the "h" gate was extremely large (approximately 100 ms at -80 to -50 mV). In order to test whether the analysed Na(+) current serves as a mechanism for filtering, the behaviour of the membrane model incorporating the Na(+) channel was simulated using a computer program called NEURON. In response to current injections, the membrane model displayed low-pass filtering and firing properties similar to those reported in real cells. The present results suggest that slow removal of Na(+) channel inactivation serves as a crucial mechanism for the low-pass temporal filtering property of the large cell. The simulation study also suggested that velocity and/or amplitude of a spike propagating though an axon expressing Na(+) channels of this type could potentially be modulated depending on the preceding activities of the cells.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 11897846 PMCID: PMC2290175 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2001.013061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol ISSN: 0022-3751 Impact factor: 5.182