Literature DB >> 9952407

Sustained and accelerating activity at two discrete sites generate epileptiform discharges in slices of piriform cortex.

R Demir1, L B Haberly, M B Jackson.   

Abstract

When near-threshold electrical stimulation is used to evoke epileptiform discharges in brain slices, a latent period of up to 150 msec elapses before the discharge begins. During this period most neurons are silent, and abnormal electrical activity is difficult to detect with microelectrodes. A fundamental question about epileptiform activity concerns how synchronous discharges arise abruptly in a relatively quiescent slice. This issue was addressed here by using voltage imaging techniques to study epileptiform discharges in rat piriform cortex slices. These experiments revealed two distinct forms of electrical activity during the latent period. (1) A steeply increasing depolarization, referred to here as onset activity, has been described previously and occurs at the site of discharge onset. (2) A sustained depolarization that precedes onset activity, referred to here as plateau activity, has not been described previously. Plateau and onset activity occurred in different subregions of the endopiriform nucleus (a region of high seizure susceptibility). When cobalt or kynurenic acid was applied focally to inhibit electrical activity at the site of plateau activity, discharges were blocked. However, application of these agents to other nearby sites (except the site of onset) failed to block discharges. Plateau activity represents a novel form of electrical activity that precedes and is necessary for epileptiform discharges. Discharges thus are generated in a sequential process by two spatially distinct neuronal circuits. The first circuit amplifies and sustains activity initiated by the stimulus, and the second generates the actual discharge in response to an excitatory drive from the first.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 9952407      PMCID: PMC6786016     

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


  27 in total

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8.  Role of synaptic excitation in the generation of bursting-induced epileptiform potentials in the endopiriform nucleus and piriform cortex.

Authors:  W H Hoffman; L B Haberly
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9.  Deep neurons in piriform cortex. I. Morphology and synaptically evoked responses including a unique high-amplitude paired shock facilitation.

Authors:  G F Tseng; L B Haberly
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10.  Voltage imaging of epileptiform activity in slices from rat piriform cortex: onset and propagation.

Authors:  R Demir; L B Haberly; M B Jackson
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  1998-11       Impact factor: 2.714

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  11 in total

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3.  Sustained plateau activity precedes and can generate ictal-like discharges in low-Cl(-) medium in slices from rat piriform cortex.

Authors:  R Demir; L B Haberly; M B Jackson
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1999-12-15       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  On the ictogenic properties of the piriform cortex in vitro.

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7.  Properties of doublecortin-(DCX)-expressing cells in the piriform cortex compared to the neurogenic dentate gyrus of adult mice.

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Review 8.  The piriform, perirhinal, and entorhinal cortex in seizure generation.

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9.  Gain control of γ frequency activation by a novel feed forward disinhibitory loop: implications for normal and epileptic neural activity.

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10.  Identification of a neuropeptide S responsive circuitry shaping amygdala activity via the endopiriform nucleus.

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