Literature DB >> 12649310

Ionic mechanisms mediating oscillatory membrane potentials in wide-field retinal amacrine cells.

Jozsef Vigh1, Eduardo Solessio, Catherine W Morgans, Eric M Lasater.   

Abstract

Particular types of amacrine cells of the vertebrate retina show oscillatory membrane potentials (OMPs) in response to light stimulation. Historically it has been thought the oscillations arose as a result of circuit properties. In a previous study we found that in some amacrine cells, the ability to oscillate was an intrinsic property of the cell. Here we characterized the ionic mechanisms responsible for the oscillations in wide-field amacrine cells (WFACs) in an effort to better understand the functional properties of the cell. The OMPs were found to be calcium (Ca2+) dependent; blocking voltage-gated Ca2+ channels eliminated the oscillations, whereas elevating extracellular Ca2+ enhanced them. Strong intracellular Ca2+ buffering (10 mM EGTA or bis-(o-aminophenoxy)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid) eliminated any attenuation in the OMPs as well as a Ca2+-dependent inactivation of the voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. Pharmacological and immunohistochemical characterization revealed that WFACs express L- and N-type voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels. Block of the L-type channels eliminated the OMPs, but omega-conotoxin GVIA did not, suggesting a different function for the N-type channels. The L-type channels in WFACs are functionally coupled to a set of calcium-dependent potassium (K(Ca)) channels to mediate OMPs. The initiation of OMPs depended on penitrem-A-sensitive (BK) K(Ca) channels, whereas their duration is under apamin-sensitive (SK) K(Ca) channel control. The Ca2+ current is essential to evoke the OMPs and triggering the K(Ca) currents, which here act as resonant currents, enhances the resonance as an amplifying current, influences the filtering characteristics of the cell membrane, and attenuates the OMPs via CDI of the L-type Ca2+ channel.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12649310     DOI: 10.1152/jn.00092.2003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  16 in total

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4.  The role of BKCa channels in electrical signal encoding in the mammalian auditory periphery.

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7.  A high frequency resonance in the responses of retinal ganglion cells to rapidly modulated stimuli: a computer model.

Authors:  J A Miller; K S Denning; J S George; D W Marshak; G T Kenyon
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8.  Cellular origin of spontaneous ganglion cell spike activity in animal models of retinitis pigmentosa.

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9.  Differential effects of charybdotoxin on the activity of retinal ganglion cells in the dark- and light-adapted mouse retina.

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10.  Membrane resonance in bursting pacemaker neurons of an oscillatory network is correlated with network frequency.

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2009-05-20       Impact factor: 6.167

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