Ca2+ Spikes (ca2+ + spike)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Abnormal Excitability of Hippocampal CA3 Neurons in Noda Epileptic Rat (NER): Alteration of Seizure with Aging

EPILEPSIA, Issue 2000
Ryosuke Hanaya
Purpose: Noda epileptic rat (NER), a mutant found in thc colony of Crj:Wistar rats, spontaneously shows tonic-clonic convulsions approximately once every 30 hours from 8,16 weeks of age. A long-lasting dcpolarization shift accompanied by repetitivc firings are observed in hippocampal CA3 pyramidal neurons of NER with seizures. Using hippocampal slice preparations of NER, the present electrophysiologi- cal study was performed to elucidate whether this abnormal firing in CA3 neurons developed with age and if abnormality of Ca2+ channel was involved. Methods: Hippocampal slices (40Opm) werc prepared from NER and normal Wistar rats (age; 4,29 weeks). A single rectangular pulse stimulus composed of 0.1-ms duration was delivered to the mossy fibers every 5 seconds though a bipolar electrode placed in the granular cell layer of the dentate gyrus. Intracellular recording was made from the CA3 pyramidal cell using a microelectrode containing 3M KCI intracellular recordings. A Ca2+ spike was elicited by applying a depolarizing pulse (InA, 120ms) in the cell through the recording electrode under a blockadc of Na+ and K+ channels using 1 pM tetrodotoxin and I 0mM tctraethylammonium added to the artificial CSF, respectivcly. Nicardipine (I-IOOnM), a Ca2+ channel blocker, was applicd to the bath. Results: Thirty-seven slices from I9 NER and 6 slices from 4 normal Wishe rats were used. There were no obvious changes in the resting membrane potentials of CA3 neurons between NER and Wistar rats tested. When a single stimulus was delivered to the mossy fibers, a long-lasting depolarization shift accompanied by repetitive firings followed by after-hyperpolarization werc also obtained i n hippocampal CA3 neurons of young NER (4,5 weeks of age) before occurrence of any seizurcs, although the depolarization shift in younger NER was shorter than that in NER aged more than 6 weeks. These abnormal firings werc evokcd in 58% and 30% of all CA3 neurons tested in the younger and mature NER (6,1 5 weeks of age), respectively. Furthermore, abnormal firing was not elicited in NER aged after I6 weeks. Agc-matched Wistar rats showed only single action potentials without any depolarization shift with single mossy fiber stimulation. Bath application of nicardipine (IOnM) inhibited this long-lasting depolarization shift and the accompanying repetitive firing followed by afterhypcrpolarization without affecting the first spike induced by mossy fiber stimulations. Furthermore, nicai-dipine (IOnM) inhibited the Ca2+ spikes elicited by applying a depolarizing pulse in the neurons of NER with seizures, although a higher dose (100nM) did not affect those in Wistar rats. Conclusions: These findings indicate that abnormal excitability of the NER CA3 pyramidal neurons is probably due to abnormality in the Ca2+ channcls. The abnorinal excitability was observed in NER at an age when tonic-clonic convulsions were not detected, suggesting that thc hippocampus may probably scrve as an epileptogenic focus in younger NER and the seizure impulses originating i n this area are transinittcd to the new other seizurc foci in mature NER. [source]


Efficient generation of mature cerebellar Purkinje cells from mouse embryonic stem cells

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH, Issue 2 2010
Osamu Tao
Abstract Mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) can generate cerebellar neurons, including Purkinje cells (PCs) and their precursor cells, in a floating culture system called serum-free culture of embryoid body-like aggregates (SFEB) treated with BMP4, Fgf8b, and Wnt3a. Here we successfully established a coculture system that induced the maturation of PCs in ESC-derived Purkinje cell (EDPC) precursors in SFEB, using as a feeder layer a cerebellum dissociation culture prepared from mice at postnatal day (P) 6,8. PC maturation was incomplete or abnormal when the adherent culture did not include feeder cells or when the feeder layer was from neonatal cerebellum. In contrast, EDPCs exhibited the morphology of mature PCs and synaptogenesis with other cerebellar neurons when grown for 4 weeks in coculture system with the postnatal cerebellar feeder. Furthermore, the electrophysiological properties of these EDPCs were compatible with those of native mature PCs in vitro, such as Na+ or Ca2+ spikes elicited by current injections and excitatory or inhibitory postsynaptic currents, which were assessed by whole-cell patch-clamp recordings. Thus, EDPC precursors in SFEB can mature into PCs whose properties are comparable with those of native PCs in vitro. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


A model of thalamocortical relay cells

THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 3 2005
Paul A. Rhodes
It is well established that the main intrinsic electrophysiological properties of thalamocortical relay cells, production of a low threshold burst upon release from hyperpolarized potential and production of a train of single spikes following stimulation from depolarized potentials, can be readily modelled using a single compartment. There is, however, another less well explored intrinsic electrophysiological characteristic of relay cells for which models have not yet accounted: at somatic potentials near spike threshold, relay cells produce a fast ragged high threshold oscillation in somatic voltage. Optical [Ca2+] imaging and pharmacological tests indicate that this oscillation correlates with a high threshold Ca2+ current in the dendrites. Here we present the development of a new compartment model of the thalamic relay cell guided by the simultaneous constraints that it must produce the familiar regular spiking relay mode and low threshold rebound bursts which characterize these cells, as well as the less-studied fast oscillation occurring at near-threshold somatic potentials. We arrive at a model cell which is capable of the production of isolated high threshold Ca2+ spikes in distal branch segments, driven by a rapidly inactivating intermediate threshold Ca2+ channel. Further, the model produces the low threshold spike behaviour of the relay cell without requiring high T-current density in the distal dendritic segments. The results thus support a new picture of the dendritic tree of relay cells which may have implications for the manner in which thalamic relay cells integrate descending input from the cortex. [source]