scholarly journals Responses of the sustained inward current to autonomic agonists in guinea-pig sino-atrial node pacemaker cells

2005 ◽  
Vol 144 (5) ◽  
pp. 660-668 ◽  
Author(s):  
Futoshi Toyoda ◽  
Wei-Guang Ding ◽  
Hiroshi Matsuura
Author(s):  
Francesca Cacciani ◽  
Massimiliano Zaniboni

The main cellular determinants of cardiac automaticity are the hyperpolarization-activated cationic current If, and the electrogenic Na+/Ca2+ exchanger which generates an inward current after each action potential (AP). Our goal was to evaluate their relative role in pacemaking, by means of application of Ivabradine (IVA) (specific If blocker) and Ryanodine (RYA) (known to abolish calcium transient) on enzimatically isolated guinea-pig pacemaker cells. Spontaneous APs were recorded in patch-clamp whole cell configuration at 36°C from 7 cells perfused with the following sequence of solutions: physiological normal tyrode (NT), IVA 3 mM, NT and RYA 3 mM. Cycle length (CL, ms) and diastolic depolarization rate (DDR, V/s) were also calculated. Both blockers displayed similar effects, increasing CL (by 27 and 30%, respectively), and decreasing DDR (by 34 and 42%) with respect to NT exposure. These results suggest that both mechanisms are involved into pacemaking mechanism at a similar degree.


2010 ◽  
Vol 238 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 69-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oksana Dyachok ◽  
Pavel Zhabyeyev ◽  
Terence F. McDonald

1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 768-777 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine L. Perkins

It has been proposed that the depolarizing phase of the biphasic synaptic GABA response could be mediated by HCO3 − passing through GABAA channels after dissipation of the transmembrane Cl− gradient due to intracellular Cl− accumulation. To test this hypothesis, giant GABA-mediated postsynaptic currents (GPSCs) were recorded from pyramidal cells in slices of adult guinea pig hippocampus in the presence of 4-aminopyridine. GPSCs consisted of an early outward current (GABAA component) followed by a late inward current (GABAD component). Spontaneous outward inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) occurred during the GABADcomponent of the GPSC. GPSCs that were evoked 1–12 s after the preceding GPSC (short interval, siGPSCs) showed no GABADcomponent even though in many cells the amplitude of the siGPSC was greater than the amplitude of the GABAA component of the preceding spontaneous GPSC. In addition, the siGPSC evoked during the GABAD component of a spontaneous GPSC was an outward current. To test whether the siGPSC lacked a GABADcomponent because it was generated predominantly at the soma, where less of an increase in [Cl−]i would occur, picrotoxin was applied to the soma of the pyramidal cell. To the contrary, this focal application of picrotoxin caused less of a reduction in the amplitude of the siGPSC than in the amplitude of the GABAA component of the GPSC. Furthermore when a GPSC and siGPSC were evoked 10 s apart using identical stimuli, the area under the outward current curve was sometimes greater for the siGPSC than for the GPSC, and yet the siGPSC had no inward component. This result indicates that even when the location of Cl− entry was the same, more Cl− could enter the cell during the siGPSC than during the outward component of the GPSC and yet not lead to an inward current. In addition, when the second of two identical stimuli was applied during the inward GABAD component of the first evoked GPSC, the GABAA response it generated was always outward, demonstrating that the equilibrium potential for GABAA responses did not become more positive than the holding potential during a GPSC. Finally, evoking GPSCs at a hyperpolarized potential revealed that the siGPSC actually lacked a GABAD conductance. These results disprove the Cl− accumulation hypothesis of the synaptic depolarizing GABA response and suggest the possibility that a separate channel type may mediate the GABAD component of the GPSC.


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