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Evidence that potassium channels mediate the effects of serotonin on the ocular circadian pacemaker of Aplysia
Authors:Christopher S Colwell  Stephan Michel  Gene D Block
Institution:(1) NSF Center for Biological Timing, Department of Biology, University of Virginia, 22901 Charlottesville, VA, USA;(2) Mental Retardation Res. Ctr., University of California — Los Angeles, 760 Westwood Plaza, 90024-1759 Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract:Summary The eye of the marine mollusk Aplysia californica contains a photo-entrainable circadian pacemaker that drives an overt circadian rhythm of spontaneous compound action potentials in the optic nerve. Serotonin is known to influence the phase of this ocular rhythm. The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether potassium channels are involved in effects on the ocular circadian rhythm. Our experimental approach was to study the effect of the potassium channel antagonist barium on serotonin-induced phase shifts of this rhythm. The application of barium was found to block serotonininduced phase shifts whereas barium alone did not cause significant phase shifts. The effects of barium were found to be dose dependent. In addition, barium blocked forskolin-induced phase advances but did not interfere with serotonin-induced increases in cAMP content. Finally, barium antagonized serotonin-induced suppression of compound action potential activity. These results are consistent with a model in which the application of serotonin phase shifts the ocular pacemaker by causing a membrane hyperpolarization which is mediated by a cAMP-dependent potassium conductance.Abbreviations ASW artificial seawater - Ba+ + barium - CAP compound action potential - CT circadian time - 5-HT serotonin - TEA tetraethylammonium
Keywords:Aplysia  barium  circadian  potassium channels  serotonin
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