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Changes produced in neuronal excitability by subthreshold depolarization as a possible mechanism of interval selective relationships within the central nervous system
Authors:G. A. Vartanyan  A. A. Pirogov  K. V. Konstantinov
Abstract:A neuronal process was identified inLymnaea stagnalis nerve cells which may be viewed as one of the mechanisms underlying the interval selectivity previously described in research into the functional relationships between mammalian brain cells. This process takes the form of regularly-occurring changes in excitability resulting in a high probability (of 0.6–1) of neuronal spike response to what had previously been subthreshold depolarizing current pulses following similar subthreshold (conditioning) pulses at intervals specific to each individual neuron. It was found that the cycle of change in neuronal excitability following threshold depolarization did not arise from temporal summation of electrotonic local or postsynaptic neuronal potentials; it was an endogenous (cytoplasmic) process insensitive to transmitter (acetylcholine) application but altering irreversibly under the effects of bombesin, one of the modulator peptides.I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad; Institute of Experimental Medicine, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologya, Vol. 21, No. 3, pp. 291–299, May–June, 1989.
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