Home About us Contact | |||
Synaptic Stimulation (synaptic + stimulation)
Selected AbstractsSynaptic stimulation of nicotinic receptors in rat sympathetic ganglia is followed by slow activation of postsynaptic potassium or chloride conductancesEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 8 2000Oscar Sacchi Abstract Two slow currents have been described in rat sympathetic neurons during and after tetanization of the whole preganglionic input. Both effects are mediated by nicotinic receptors activated by native acetylcholine (ACh). A first current, indicated as IAHPsyn, is calcium dependent and voltage independent, and is consistent with an IAHP -type potassium current sustained by calcium ions accompanying the nicotinic synaptic current. The conductance activated by a standard synaptic train was ,,3.6 nS per neuron; it was detected in isolation in 14 out of a 52-neuron sample. A novel current, IADPsyn, was described in 42/52 of the sample as a post-tetanic inward current, which increased in amplitude with increasing membrane potential negativity and exhibited a null-point close to the holding potential and the cell momentary chloride equilibrium potential. IADPsyn developed during synaptic stimulation and decayed thereafter according to a single exponential (mean ,,= 148.5 ms) in 18 neurons or according to a two-exponential time course (, = 51.8 and 364.9 ms, respectively) in 19 different neurons. The mean peak conductance activated was ,,20 nS per neuron. IADPsyn was calcium independent, it was affected by internal and external chloride concentration, but was insensitive to specific blockers (anthracene-9-carboxylic acid, 9AC) of the chloride channels open in the resting neuron. It is suggested that gADPsyn represents a specific chloride conductance activatable by intense nicotinic stimulation; in some neurons it is even associated with single excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSCs). Both IAHP and IADPsyn are apparently devoted to reduce neuronal excitability during and after intense synaptic stimulation. [source] Long-term synaptic depression in the adult entorhinal cortex in vivoHIPPOCAMPUS, Issue 7 2003Raby Bouras Abstract The piriform cortex provides a major input to the entorhinal cortex. Mechanisms of long-term depression (LTD) of synaptic transmission in this pathway may affect olfactory and mnemonic processing. We have investigated stimulation parameters for the induction of homosynaptic LTD and depotentiation in this pathway using evoked synaptic field potential recordings in the awake rat. In this study, 15 min of 1-Hz stimulation induced a transient (<5 min) depression of evoked responses but did not induce LTD or depotentiation. To determine whether inhibitory and/or facilitatory mechanisms contribute to LTD induction, repetitive delivery of pairs of stimulation pulses was also assessed. Repetitive paired-pulse stimulation with a 10-ms interval between pulses, which activates inhibitory mechanisms during the second response, did not reliably induce LTD. However, repetitive paired-pulse stimulation using a 30-ms interval, which evokes marked paired-pulse facilitation, resulted in synaptic depression that lasted ,1 day, and which was reversible by tetanization. The selective induction of LTD by stimulation that evokes paired-pulse facilitation suggests that strong synaptic activation is required for LTD induction. The N -methyl- D -aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist MK-801 (0.1 mg/kg) blocked the induction of LTD, indicating that NMDA receptor activation is required for LTD induction in this pathway. These results indicate that LTD in piriform cortex inputs to the entorhinal cortex in the awake rat is effectively induced by strong repetitive synaptic stimulation, and that this form of LTD is dependent on activation of NMDA receptors. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Action potential initiation and propagation in hippocampal mossy fibre axonsTHE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 7 2008Christoph Schmidt-Hieber Dentate gyrus granule cells transmit action potentials (APs) along their unmyelinated mossy fibre axons to the CA3 region. Although the initiation and propagation of APs are fundamental steps during neural computation, little is known about the site of AP initiation and the speed of propagation in mossy fibre axons. To address these questions, we performed simultaneous somatic and axonal whole-cell recordings from granule cells in acute hippocampal slices of adult mice at ,23°C. Injection of short current pulses or synaptic stimulation evoked axonal and somatic APs with similar amplitudes. By contrast, the time course was significantly different, as axonal APs had a higher maximal rate of rise (464 ± 30 V s,1 in the axon versus 297 ± 12 V s,1 in the soma, mean ±s.e.m.). Furthermore, analysis of latencies between the axonal and somatic signals showed that APs were initiated in the proximal axon at ,20,30 ,m distance from the soma, and propagated orthodromically with a velocity of 0.24 m s,1. Qualitatively similar results were obtained at a recording temperature of ,34°C. Modelling of AP propagation in detailed cable models of granule cells suggested that a ,4 times higher Na+ channel density (,1000 pS ,m,2) in the axon might account for both the higher rate of rise of axonal APs and the robust AP initiation in the proximal mossy fibre axon. This may be of critical importance to separate dendritic integration of thousands of synaptic inputs from the generation and transmission of a common AP output. [source] |