Literature DB >> 2433414

Currents under voltage clamp of burst-forming neurons of the cardiac ganglion of the lobster (Homarus americanus).

K Tazaki, I M Cooke.   

Abstract

Crustacean cardiac ganglion neuronal somata, although incapable of generating action potentials, produce regenerative, slow (greater than 200 ms) depolarizing potentials reaching -20 mV (from -50 mV) in response to depolarizing stimuli. These potentials initiate a burst of action potentials in the axon and are thus termed driver potentials. The somata of the anterior-most neurons (cells 1 or 2) were isolated by ligaturing for study of their membrane currents with a two-electrode voltage clamp. Inward current is attributed to Ca2+ by reason of dependence of driver potential amplitude on [Ca2+]0, independence of [Na+]0, resistance to tetrodotoxin, and inhibition by Cd (0.2 mM) and Mn (4 mM). Ca-mediated current (ICa) is present at -40 mV. It is optimally activated by a holding potential (Vh) of -50 to -60 mV and by clamps (command potential, Vc) to -10 mV. Time to peak (10-30 ms) and amplitude are strongly voltage dependent. Maximum tail-current amplitudes observed at -70 to -85 mV are ca. 100 nA. Inward tail peaks may not be resolved by our clamp (settling time, 2 ms). Tails relax with a time constant (tau) of approximately equal to 12 ms (at -70 to -85 mV). ICa exhibits inactivation in double pulse regimes. Recovery has a tau of approximately equal to 0.7 s. Tail current analyses indicate an exponential decline (tau approximately equal to 23 ms at -20 mV) toward a maintained amplitude of inward current tails. Analysis of outward currents indicates the presence of three conductance mechanisms having voltage dependences, time courses, and pharmacology similar to those of early outward current (IA), delayed outward current (IK), and outward current (IC) of molluscan neurons. Analysis of tail currents indicates a reversal potential for each of these near -75 mV, indicating that they are K currents. Early outward current, IA, shows a peak at 5 ms followed by rapid decline. Response to a second clamp given within 0.4 s is reduced; recovery is exponential, with a tau of approximately equal to 200 ms (at Vh = -50 mV). The amplitude of IA tested at 0 mV shows activation or deactivation by subthreshold shifts of Vh. The extent and rate of these changes shows voltage dependence (tau approximately equal to 100-500 ms for subthreshold prepulses). At the normal cell resting potential of -50 mV the amplitude of IA is 25% of that tested from -80 mV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1986        PMID: 2433414     DOI: 10.1152/jn.1986.56.6.1739

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


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