Literature DB >> 6875931

Calcium-activated outward current in voltage-clamped hippocampal neurones of the guinea-pig.

D A Brown, W H Griffith.   

Abstract

Slow clamp currents were recorded from CA1 and CA3 pyramidal neurones in slices of guinea-pig hippocampus maintained in vitro, using a single micro-electrode sample-and-hold technique. Depolarizing voltage commands evoked a time- and voltage-dependent outward current which was suppressed by removing external Ca or by adding Cd (0.5 mM) or Mn (5 mM). This Ca-dependent current (Ic) was not reduced by muscarinic agonists (unlike IM) but was greatly reduced by 5-20 mM-tetraethylammonium (TEA). Repolarizing IC tail currents reversed at -73 +/- 5 mV in 3 mM-K solution. The reversal potential became about 30 mV more positive on raising [K]o to 15 mM. No clear change in current amplitude or tail-current reversal potential occurred on adding Cs (2 mM), reducing [Cl]o from 128 to 10 mM, or replacing external Na with Tris. The underlying conductance GC was activated at membrane potentials positive to -45 mV. At -32 mV GC showed an approximately exponential increase with time, with a time constant of approximately 0.6 sec at 26 degrees C. Repolarizing tail currents declined exponentially with time, the time constant becoming shorter with increasing negative post-pulse potentials. When the clamp was switched off at the end of a depolarizing command of sufficient amplitude and duration to activate IC, a membrane hyperpolarization to -73 mV ensued, of similar amplitude and decay time to that following spontaneous action potentials. It is concluded that the clamp current observed in these experiments is probably the Ca-activated K current thought to contribute to the post-activation after-hyperpolarization in hippocampal neurones.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6875931      PMCID: PMC1199107          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.1983.sp014624

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  30 in total

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6.  Intradendritic recordings from hippocampal neurons.

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7.  Effects of calcium and calcium-chelating agents on the inward and outward current in the membrane of mollusc neurones.

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8.  Participation of calcium spikes during intrinsic burst firing in hippocampal neurons.

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10.  Three pharmacologically distinct potassium channels in molluscan neurones.

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  72 in total

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2.  Pre- and postsynaptic K+ and Ca2+ fluxes in area CA1 of the rat hippocampus in vitro: effects of Ni2+, TEA and 4-AP.

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Review 4.  GTP-binding proteins and potassium channels involved in synaptic plasticity and learning.

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5.  A sodium-pump-mediated afterhyperpolarization in pyramidal neurons.

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7.  Ca2+-dependent inactivation of large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BK) channels in rat hippocampal neurones produced by pore block from an associated particle.

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8.  An after-hyperpolarization of medium duration in rat hippocampal pyramidal cells.

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9.  The reversal potential of excitatory amino acid action on granule cells of the rat dentate gyrus.

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10.  Histamine potentiates neuronal excitation by blocking a calcium-dependent potassium conductance.

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