Literature DB >> 24806692

Ionic mechanisms of microsecond-scale spike timing in single cells.

Michael R Markham1, Harold H Zakon.   

Abstract

Electric fish image their environments and communicate by generating electric organ discharges through the simultaneous action potentials (APs) of electric organ cells (electrocytes) in the periphery. Steatogenys elegans generates a biphasic electrocyte discharge by the precisely regulated timing and waveform of APs generated from two excitable membranes present in each electrocyte. Current-clamp recordings of electrocyte APs reveal that the posterior membrane fires first, followed ∼30 μs later by an AP on the anterior membrane. This delay was maintained even as the onset of the first AP was advanced >5 ms by increasing stimulus intensity and across multiple spikes during bursts of APs elicited by prolonged stimulation. Simultaneous cell-attached loose-patch recordings of Na(+) currents on each membrane revealed that activation voltage for Na(+) channels on the posterior membrane was 10 mV hyperpolarized compared with Na(+) channels on the anterior membrane, with no differences in activation or inactivation kinetics. Computational simulations of electrocyte APs demonstrated that this difference in Na(+) current activation voltage was sufficient to maintain the proper firing order and the interspike delay. A similar difference in activation threshold has been reported for the Na(+) currents of the axon initial segment compared with somatic Na(+) channels of pyramidal neurons, suggesting convergent evolution of spike initiation and timing mechanisms across different systems of excitable cells.

Entities:  

Keywords:  action potential; electric organ; ion channels

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24806692      PMCID: PMC4012318          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0615-14.2014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


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