Sensory neurons in leech central nervous system: changes in potassium conductance an excitation threshold

1976 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 1184-1192 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. R. Schlue

1. The sensory neurons in the leech central nervous system differ in their accommodation to linearly rising currents. Advantage was taken of these differences to study the ionic mechanism of accommodation in single pairs of N (noxious), P (pressure), and T (touch) cells. 2. Nonlinearities in membrane-potential changes and current-voltage relationships with square-wave and ramp currents are more pronounced in P and T cells than in N cells. The accommodation coefficients increase in conditions that reflect this delayed rectification. When rectification is absent, the accommodation coefficients depart from unity only slightly or not at all. 3. Accommodation coefficients remain unchanged when half of the chloride in the bathing medium is replaced by sulfate. Accommodation coefficients become greater when the extracellular potassium concentration is reduced from 4 to 0 mM, and decrease when the concentration is raised to 8 mM. The membrane potential changes by only a few millivolts. 4. As extracellular potassium concentration is increased, the action potential is lengthened and the maximal rate of fall of the action potential is reduced. With concentrations greater than 4 mM these relationships are linear, but depart from linearity at lower concentrations. The amplitude of the undershoot decreases linearly as the extracellular potassium concentration increases from 4 to 16 mM, and increases non-linearly at concentrations below 4 mM. 5. The rapid accommodation of leech neurons is based primarily on an increased potassium conductance. The possibility is considered that concentration changes like those produced experimentally may occur naturally, affecting integrative processes in the central nervous system.

Author(s):  
J Firth

The normal range of potassium concentration in serum is 3.5 to 5.0 mmol/litre and within cells it is 150 to 160 mmol/litre, the ratio of intracellular to extracellular potassium concentration being a critical determinant of cellular resting membrane potential and thereby of the function of excitable tissues....


1988 ◽  
Vol 254 (3) ◽  
pp. R443-R452
Author(s):  
R. M. Siegel ◽  
R. I. Birks

Sucrose gap recordings were made from vagus nerve in rabbit to examine the mechanisms underlying the generation of the hyperpolarization that follows a burst of evoked action potentials in unmyelinated C fibers. Analysis of the posttetanic hyperpolarization was made by fitting the membrane potential changes with the sum of two exponential components. The posttetanic hyperpolarization consisted of two separable components with time constants of approximately 0.5 and 30 s. The slower exponentially decaying component was dependent on an increase in electrogenic sodium pumping as shown by the effect of ouabain and changes in extracellular chloride. The faster-decaying exponential component was caused by a potassium conductance as shown by the effect of varied extracellular potassium. This potassium conductance appears to be novel as its dynamics vary with the frequency and duration of the burst yet increases in reduced calcium. It is suggested that this slow decaying and modifiable potassium conductance can play a role in modulation of preganglionic and presynaptic action potential conduction.


1980 ◽  
Vol 75 (6) ◽  
pp. 633-654 ◽  
Author(s):  
D E Clapham ◽  
A Shrier ◽  
R L DeHaan

Spheroidal aggregates of embryonic chick ventricle cells were brought into contact and allowed to synchronize their spontaneous beats. Action potentials were recorded with both intracellular and extracellular electrodes. The degree of electrical interaction between the newly apposed aggregates was assessed by measuring the delay or latency (L) between the entrained action potentials, and by determining directly interaggregate coupling resistance (Rc) with injected current pulses. Aggregate size, contact area between the aggregates, and extracellular potassium concentration (Ko+) were important variables regulating the time-course of coupling. When these variables were controlled, L and Rc were found to be linearly related after beat synchrony was achieved. In 4.8 mM Ko+ L/Rc = 3.7 ms/M omega; in 1.3 mM Ko+ L/Rc = 10.1 ms/M omega. We conclude that action potential delay between heart cell aggregates can be related quantitatively to Rc.


1977 ◽  
Vol 40 (6) ◽  
pp. 1281-1291 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. M. Salzberg ◽  
A. Grinvald ◽  
L. B. Cohen ◽  
H. V. Davila ◽  
W. N. Ross

1. Using an optical method for measuring membrane potential, we have been able to monitor action-potential activity simultaneously in 14 neurons of the supraesophageal ganglion of the barnacle. 2. Under favorable conditions, 4-mV synaptic potentials could also be detected optically.


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