Abstract: | The distribution of different types of ionic channels carrying inward currents was investigated in the somatic membranes of spinal ganglion neurons in rats belonging to three different age groups: at 5–9 days, 45 days, and 3 months. A decrease was found in the number of neuronal membranes operating all four types of inward current channels simultaneously: "fast" (tetrodotoxin-sensitive), "slow" (tetrodotoxin-resistant) sodium currents and low- and high-threshold calcium currents. There were 14.5% of such neurons in the first age group, 5% in the second, and 1% on the third. It was found that this change was related to the disappearance of "slow" (tetrodotoxin-resistant) sodium and high-threshold calcium channels from the membrane. The number of neuronal somatic membranes with only two types of inward current channels ("fast" sodium and high-threshold calcium channels) increased proportionately.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Technology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 18, No. 6, pp. 813–820, November–December, 1986. |