Literature DB >> 9819261

Inactivation of macroscopic late Na+ current and characteristics of unitary late Na+ currents in sensory neurons.

M D Baker1, H Bostock.   

Abstract

Na+ currents in adult rat large dorsal root ganglion neurons were recorded during long duration voltage-clamp steps by patch clamping whole cells and outside-out membrane patches. Na+ current present >60 ms after the onset of a depolarizing pulse (late Na+ current) underwent partial inactivation; it behaved as the sum of three kinetically distinct components, each of which was blocked by nanomolar concentrations of tetrodotoxin. Inactivation of one component (late-1) of the whole cell current reached equilibrium during the first 60 ms; repolarizing to -40 or -50 mV from potentials of -30 mV or more positive gave rise to a characteristic increase in current (tau >/= 5 ms), attributed to removal of inactivation. A second component (late-2) underwent slower inactivation (tau > 80 ms) at potentials more positive than -80 mV, and steady-state inactivation appeared complete at -30 mV. In small membrane patches, bursts of brief openings (gamma = 13-18 pS) were usually recorded. The distribution of burst durations indicated that two populations of channel were present with inactivation rates corresponding to late-1 and late-2 macroscopic currents. The persistent Na+ current in the whole cell that extended to potentials more positive than -30 mV appeared to correspond to sporadic, brief openings that were recorded in patches (mean open time approximately 0.1 ms) over a wide potential range. None of the three types of gating described corresponded to activation/inactivation gating overlap of fast transient currents.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9819261     DOI: 10.1152/jn.1998.80.5.2538

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


  10 in total

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4.  Ischaemic changes in refractoriness of human cutaneous afferents under threshold-clamp conditions.

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6.  Bursting activity in myelinated sensory neurons plays a key role in pain behavior induced by localized inflammation of the rat sensory ganglion.

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8.  Single-channel properties of human NaV1.1 and mechanism of channel dysfunction in SCN1A-associated epilepsy.

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9.  Breakdown of accommodation in nerve: a possible role for persistent sodium current.

Authors:  Kristian Hennings; Lars Arendt-Nielsen; Ole K Andersen
Journal:  Theor Biol Med Model       Date:  2005-04-12       Impact factor: 2.432

10.  Neurotrophic effects of GM1 ganglioside, NGF, and FGF2 on canine dorsal root ganglia neurons in vitro.

Authors:  S Schwarz; A Lehmbecker; W Tongtako; K Hahn; Y Wang; F Felmy; I Zdora; G Brogden; K Branitzki-Heinemann; M von Köckritz-Blickwede; W Baumgärtner; I Gerhauser
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-03-25       Impact factor: 4.379

  10 in total

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