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Axonal contribution to subthreshold currents inaplysia bursting pacemaker neurons
Authors:Richard H Kramer
Institution:1. Department of Physiology-Anatomy, University of California, 94720, Berkeley, California, USA
Abstract:The contribution of axonal activity to the ionic currents which generate bursting pacemaker activity was studied by using the two-electrode voltage-clamp technique in Aplysia bursting neuron somata in conjunction with intraaxonal voltage recordings. Depolarizing voltage-clamp pulses applied to bursting cell somata triggered axonal action potentials. The voltage-clamp current recording exhibited transient inward current "notches" corresponding to each of the axonal spikes. The addition of 50 microM tetrodotoxin (TTX) to the bathing medium blocked the fast axonal spikes and current notches, revealing a slower axonal spike which was blocked by the replacement of external Ca2+ with Co2+. The inward current evoked by applying a depolarizing voltage-clamp pulse in the soma is distorted by the occurrence of the axonal Ca2+ spike. Elimination of the axonal spike, by injecting hyperpolarizing current into the axon, changes both the time course and the magnitude of the inward current. The axonal Ca2+ spikes are followed by a series of Ca2+-dependent afterpotentials: a rapid postspike hyperpolarization, a depolarizing afterpotential (DAP) and, finally, a long-lasting postburst hyperpolarization. The long-lasting hyperpolarization is not blocked by 50 mM external tetraethyl ammonium, an effective blocker of Ca2+-activated K+ current IK(Ca)], and does not appear to reverse at EK. Hence, the axonal long-lasting hyperpolarization may not be due to IK(Ca). Somatic voltage-clamp pulses in bursting neurons are followed by a slow inward tail current, which is sometimes coincident with a DAP in the axon. In some cells, the amplitude of the slow inward tail current is greatly reduced if axonal spikes and DAPs are prevented by hyperpolarization of the axon, while, in other cells, elimination of axonal activity has little effect. Therefore, the slow inward tail current is not necessarily an artifact of poor voltage-clamp control over the axonal membrane potential but probably results from the activation of an ionic conductance mechanism located partly in the axon and partly in the soma.
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