Somatotopic organization of climbing fiber projections from low threshold cutaneous afferents to pars intermedia of cerebellar cortex in the cat

1980 ◽  
Vol 181 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald S. Rushmer ◽  
Marjorie H. Woollacott ◽  
Lee T. Robertson ◽  
Kenneth D. Laxer
1988 ◽  
Vol 139 (1) ◽  
pp. 317-328
Author(s):  
R. N. McBurney ◽  
S. J. Kehl

One of the goals in studying the electrical properties of neurosecretory cells is to relate their electrical activity to the process of secretion. A central question in these studies concerns the role of transmembrane calcium ion flux in the initiation of the secretory event. With regard to the secretory process in pituitary cells, several research groups have addressed this question in vitro using mixed primary anterior pituitary cell cultures or clonal cell lines derived from pituitary tumours. Other workers, including ourselves, have used homogeneous cell cultures derived from the pituitary intermediate lobes of rats to examine the characteristics of voltage-dependent conductances, the contribution of these conductances to action potentials and their role in stimulus-secretion coupling. Pars intermedia (PI) cells often fire spontaneous action potentials whose frequency can be modified by the injection of sustained currents through the recording electrode. In quiescent cells action potentials can also be evoked by the injection of depolarizing current stimuli. At around 20 degrees C these action potentials have a duration of about 5 ms. Although most of the inward current during action potentials is carried by sodium ions, a calcium ion component can be demonstrated under abnormal conditions. Voltage-clamp experiments have revealed that the membrane of these cells contains high-threshold, L-type, Ca2+ channels and low-threshold Ca2+ channels. Since hormone release from PI cells appears not to be dependent on action potential activity but does depend on external calcium ions, it is not clear what role these Ca2+ channels play in stimulus-secretion coupling in cells of the pituitary pars intermedia. One possibility is that the low-threshold Ca2+ channels are more important to the secretory process than the high-threshold channels.


Author(s):  
Peggy Mason

The cerebellum uses sensory feedback and information about intended actions to ensure coordinated and smooth movements despite changing conditions. An analogy between the cerebellum and an orchestral conductor is elaborated. The cerebellum’s involvement in forming and executing motor memories is presented. Cerebellar circuits through the cerebellar cortex and deep nuclei and the dependence of cerebellar learning on climbing fiber input to Purkinje cells are briefly described. Sensory reafference and motor efference copy are defined and their roles in coordinating movement introduced. Cerebellar symptoms including ataxia, dysmetria and dysdiadochokinesia, are discussed and a possible model for dysmetria is considered. The specific inputs to and outputs from the vermis, paravermis, and lateral lobes are detailed in a description of canonical cerebellar loops. Finally, evidence that the cerebellum is involved in modulating nonmotor functions such as language, affect, social cognition, and visceral control is presented for the reader’s consideration.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Abigail Feria Pliego ◽  
Christine M. Pedroarena

ABSTRACTThe Kv1 voltage-gated potassium channels (kv1.1-1.8) display characteristic low-threshold activation ranges what enables their role in regulating diverse aspects of neuronal function, such as the action potential (AP) threshold and waveform, and thereby influence neuronal excitability or synaptic transmission. Kv1 channels are highly expressed in the cerebellar cortex and nuclei and mutations of human Kv1 genes are associated to episodic forms of ataxia (EAT-1). Besides the well-established role of Kv1 channels in regulating the basket-Purkinje cells inhibitory synapses of cerebellar cortex, cerebellar Kv1 channels regulate the principal deep cerebellar nuclear neurons activity (DCNs). DCNs however, include as well different groups of GABAergic cells that project locally to target principal DCNs, or to the inferior-olive or recurrently to the cerebellar cortex, but whether their function is controlled by Kv1 channels remains unclear. Here, using cerebellar slices from the GAD67-GFP line mice to identify putative GABAergic-DCNs and specific Kv1 channel blockers (dendrotoxins-alpha/I/K (DTXs)) we provide evidence that putative GABAergic-DCNs spontaneous and evoked activity is controlled by Kv1 currents. DTXs shifted in the hyperpolarizing direction the voltage threshold of spontaneous APs in GABAergic-DCNs, increased GABAergic-DCNs spontaneous firing rate and decreased these neurons ability to fire repetitively action potentials at high frequency. Moreover, in spontaneously silent putative nucleo-cortical DCNs, DTXs application induced depolarization and tonic firing. These results strongly suggest that Kv1 channels regulate GABAergic-DCNs activity and thereby can control previously unrecognized aspects of cerebellar function.


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