| Literature DB >> 25729354 |
Natalia Gorelova1, Jeremy K Seamans1.
Abstract
The persistent Na(+) current (I(Nap)) is believed to be an important target ofEntities:
Keywords: D1/D5 receptors; Na+ channels; dopamine; persistent Na+ current; prefrontal cortex; single channel recordings
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25729354 PMCID: PMC4325928 DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2015.00004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neural Circuits ISSN: 1662-5110 Impact factor: 3.492
Figure 1Characteristics of Na Schematic of the recording arrangement. Cell-attached patch-clamp recordings were made from the soma, the proximal dendrite (PD) or the proximal axon (PA), within 15 um of the soma. (B) Example traces from a cell-attached recording of Na+ channel openings in the PD evoked by a +60 mV voltage step from a holding potential −20 mV below the presumed resting membrane potential of −80 mV (illustrated in the bottom schematic). Openings varied widely in duration. In some cases prolonged bursts were recorded that lasted hundreds of ms. (C) Group plot of the slope conductances derived from all recordings from the PD (top), soma (middle) or PA (bottom). The x-axis gives the transmembrane potential to which the patch was stepped (starting from a holding potential −40 mV hyperpolarized from rest) and the y-axis gives the average amplitude of all single openings >2 ms in duration evoked by the step. Each blue dot is data from a single patch and the red line is the regression fit (with 95% confidence intervals) to the dots. The extrapolated slope conductance and reversal potentials are provided in the insets. (D) An example PD patch recording in which prolonged burst events were sufficiently frequent so as to allow for an investigation of the current throughout a voltage ramp. Channel openings began at an approximate transmembrane potential of −45 mV and decreased in amplitude as the driving force collapsed. The extrapolated slope conductance and reversal potential are given in the inset. The voltage ramp protocol is given in the bottom schematic and involved holding the patch −40 mV below rest and sweeping the voltage to 80 mV above rest. The resting transmembrane potential, obtained after break in, is given by the dotted gray line.
Figure 2Quantitative analysis of the late Na. The late channel openings were counted starting 20 ms after the beginning of the depolarizing step. Each panel provides the average group data from PD patches (red diamonds), somatic patches (blue squares) or PA patches (green triangles). The SEM is given by the corresponding colored lines. (A) The number of late Na+ channel openings (per channel, per sweep) (N) (B) dwell time or (C) open probability (Po) of late Na+ channel openings for each region as a function of transmembrane voltage.
Figure 3Properties of ensemble Na Representative recordings (top) from a PD patch showing the ensemble Na+ currents evoked by various amplitude voltage steps from a holding potential −20 mV hyperpolarized from rest. Each line is an average of >60 individual traces. The transmembrane potential is given by the gray dotted line in the bottom schematic. (B) The I-V plot of the patch shown in (A). In this graph the x-axis is the transmembrane voltage to which the patch was stepped and the y-axis is the peak single channel current. (C) Plots of normalized peak conductances as a function of steps to various transmembrane potentials for groups of patches from the PD (blue), soma (purple) and PA (green). Each dot represents the normalized conductance for a single patch. The lines are Boltzmann fits.
Figure 4Testing the effects of SKF81297 on membrane potential based on an analysis of K. To get a surrogate measure of transmembrane voltage in cell-attached mode, the reversal potential for delayed rectifier K+ channel openings was used. For these experiments, the patch solutions were altered by removing K+ channel blockers and matching the [K+] in the patch pipette to the intracellular concentration, yielding a reversal potential near 0 mV. Voltage ramps started at the resting membrane potential and moved to +120 mV depolarized from rest (bottom schematic). The resting membrane potential for the presented cell was −80 mV. Multiple continuous openings were evoked. These openings started as outward but flipped to inward as the patch was depolarized. The reversal occurred at a transmembrane potential of −3.45 mV (top). Following the bath application of SKF81297 (3–5 µM), the reversal occurred at a transmembrane potential of −3.43 mV (bottom). Black and red lines are single sweeps. Sweeps with channel openings across a wide range of voltages were chosen. The background current was subtracted.
Figure 5The effects of the D1/D5 agonist on the ensemble Na Representative traces showing the ensemble current evoked by the voltage step shown in the bottom schematic under control conditions (left, blue) and following bath application of SKF81297 (3 µM) (right, red). The resting membrane potential for this patch recorded after break-in is given by the dotted line in the bottom schematic. (B) Change in the average ensemble Na+ current amplitude evoked by a 50 mV voltage step above rest in single patches by SKF81297. Each dot represents the averaged ensemble Na+ current amplitude recorded for a single patch. Patches were stepped to a single voltage under control conditions and following bath application of SKF81297 (3 µM). * represents significance at p < 0.05. (C) Plots of the normalized peak conductances as a function of steps to various transmembrane potentials for PD, somatic and PA patches. Each dot represents the normalized peak conductance for a single patch. Lines represent Boltzmann fits under control conditions (blue) and in SKF81297 (red). Average half activation is given in the insets.
Figure 6The effect of a D1/D5 agonist on Na Traces from a representative PD patch where isolated Na+ channel openings were evoked by 70 mV voltage steps from −100 mV to −30 mV (see bottom schematic). The resting potential is given by the dotted line in the bottom schematic. Control traces are shown at the left and traces from the same patch following bath application of SKF81297(3 µM) are given at the right. (B) Quantification of the effects of the D1/D5 agonist on the late openings of Na+ channels recorded from the PD: the number of late openings (per channel, per 80 ms) (left), the open probability (middle) or the average dwell time (right). The late channel openings were counted starting 20 ms after the beginning of the depolarizing step. Each pair of connected dots is from a single patch. (C) Same as (B) but for patches recorded from the soma. (D) Same as (B) but for patches recorded from the PA. ***represents significance at p < 0.001, **represents significance at p < 0.01 and *represents significance at p < 0.05.
Figure 7The D1/D5 receptor antagonist blocks the effect of the D1/D5 agonist on the late Na. Quantification of the effects of the D1/D5 agonist (3 µM SKF81297) in the presence of the D1/D5 receptor antagonist (3 µM SCH23390) on the average number of late openings (per channel, per sweep) (left), the open probability (middle) and the average dwell time (right) of single Na+ channels recorded from the PD during a 70 mV depolarizing step. Patches were held 20 mV more negative than resting membrane potential. Each pair of connected dots represents data from the same patch.
Analysis of various burst properties affected by the D1/D5 receptor agonist.
| PD | Soma | PA | All | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | % | % | |||||
| Single events | 19 | 0.09 | 12 | 0.32 | 22.3 | 0.05 | 17.5 | 0.02 |
| Bursts | 97 | 0.00009 | 19.6 | 0.31 | 7 | 0.22 | 43.8 | 0.02 |
| Event count/burst | 10.8 | 0.09 | 14 | 0.003 | 7.6 | 0.048 | 11 | 0.002 |
| Events occurring in bursts | 98.7 | 0.0002 | 66 | 0.056 | 16.4 | 0.14 | 65.2 | 0.0006 |
For each region, the left column is the percent change from baseline and the right column is the p-value as determined by paired sample t-tests. The degrees of freedom are 9 for the dendrite, 8 for the soma and 6 for the axon. Alpha levels were determined by Holm-Bonferroni correction.
Figure 8The effects of the D1/D5 receptor agonist on prolonged burst openings. Prolonged burst openings were openings of Na+ channels that lasted >40 ms. Such bursts were recorded when the patch was stepped from −20 mV below rest to 50 mV above rest under control conditions (open bars). Although the frequencies were highest in the PA under baseline conditions, SKF81297 (3 µM) increased the probability that they would occur in the soma and PD but not in the PA. ***represents significance at p < 0.001, *represents significance at p < 0.01.