Literature DB >> 6187902

Coupling between neurons of the developing rat neocortex.

B W Connors, L S Benardo, D A Prince.   

Abstract

We have estimated the prevalence of coupling between neurons of the rat neocortex during postnatal development. Single intracellular injections of the fluorescent dye Lucifer Yellow CH resulted in dye coupling among 70% of neurons from 1 to 4 days of age. Dye coupling dropped to 30 to 40% by 10 to 18 days and occurred in 20% of injected adult neurons. The number of neurons per dye-coupled aggregate also decreased. Whereas three to seven coupled neurons were common in cortex of 1 to 4 days, aggregates of more than two neurons were exceptionally rare in adults. The frequency of dye coupling did not vary systematically with cortical depth at any age. When chemical synaptic activity was blocked, most 4-day neurons exhibited short latency antidromically evoked depolarizations which were relatively insensitive to repetitive activation and membrane polarization. These depolarizations may represent electrotonically conducted spikes from coupled neurons. No such potentials were found in adult neurons. The results suggest that neuronal coupling is extensive in immature rat neocortex, but that coupling declines at a time just before the numbers of chemical synapses increase most rapidly.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6187902      PMCID: PMC6564457     

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


  55 in total

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4.  Potentiation of L-type calcium channels reveals nonsynaptic mechanisms that correlate spontaneous activity in the developing mammalian retina.

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Review 5.  Novel neuronal and astrocytic mechanisms in thalamocortical loop dynamics.

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6.  Electrical and chemical synapses between relay neurons in developing thalamus.

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7.  Spontaneous, synchronous electrical activity in neonatal mouse cortical neurones.

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8.  C-erbB2/neu transfection induces gap junctional communication incompetence in glial cells.

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10.  Carbenoxolone blockade of neuronal network activity in culture is not mediated by an action on gap junctions.

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