Long-Term Alteration of S-Type Potassium Current and Passive Membrane Properties in Aplysia Sensory Neurons Following Axotomy

2002 ◽  
Vol 87 (5) ◽  
pp. 2408-2420 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark A. Ungless ◽  
Xavier Gasull ◽  
Edgar T. Walters

In many neurons, axotomy triggers long-lasting alterations in excitability as well as regenerative growth. We have investigated mechanisms contributing to the expression of axotomy-induced, long-term hyperexcitability (LTH) of mechanosensory neurons in Aplysia californica. Electrophysiological tests were applied to pleural sensory neurons 5–10 days after unilateral crush of pedal nerves. Two-electrode current-clamp experiments revealed that compared with uninjured sensory neurons on the contralateral side of the body, axotomized sensory neurons consistently displayed alterations of passive membrane properties: notably, increases in input resistance ( R in), membrane time constant (τ), and apparent input capacitance. In some cells, axotomy also depolarized the resting membrane potential (RMP). Axotomized sensory neurons showed a lower incidence of voltage relaxation (“sag”) during prolonged hyperpolarizing pulses and greater depolarizations during long (2 s) but not brief (20 ms) pulses. In addition to a reduction in spike accommodation, axotomized sensory neurons displayed a dramatic decrease in current (rheobase) required to reach spike threshold during long depolarizations. The increase in τ was associated with prolongation of responses to brief current pulses and with a large increase in the latency to spike at rheobase. Two-electrode voltage-clamp revealed an axotomy-induced decrease in a current with two components: a leakage current component and a slowly activating, noninactivating outward current component. Neither component was blocked by agents known to block other K+ currents in these neurons. In contrast to the instantaneous leakage current seen with hyperpolarizing and depolarizing steps, the late component of the axotomy-sensitive outward current showed a relatively steep voltage dependence with pulses to V m > −40 mV. These features match those of the S-type (“serotonin-sensitive”) K+ current, I K,S. The close resemblance of I K,S to a background current mediated by TREK-1 (KCNK2) channels in mammals, raises interesting questions about alterations of this family of channels during axotomy-induced LTH in both Aplysia and mammals. The increase in apparent C in may be a consequence of the extensive sprouting that has been observed in axotomized sensory neurons near their somata, and the decrease in I K,S probably helps to compensate for the decrease in excitability that would otherwise occur as new growth causes both cell volume and C in to increase. In peripheral regions of the sensory neuron, a decrease in I K,S might enhance the safety factor for conduction across regenerating segments that are highly susceptible to conduction block.

1998 ◽  
Vol 80 (5) ◽  
pp. 2781-2784 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikko Juusola ◽  
Andrew S. French

Juusola, Mikko and Andrew S. French. Adaptation properties of two types of sensory neurons in a spider mechanoreceptor organ. J. Neurophysiol. 80: 2781–2784, 1998. The VS-3 slit-sense organs of the tropical wandering spider Cupiennius salei contain two types of mechanosensory neurons with similar morphology but different adaptation properties. We measured the changes in membrane potential produced by mechanical stimulation and by electric current stimulation in a large number of neurons of both types. No significant differences were found between the passive membrane properties of the two groups, but there were significant differences in the extent and time course of receptor potential adaptation between the two types of neurons. These data, combined with the responses to suprathreshold electrical stimuli, indicate that adaptational differences exist at several stages in these neurons but that active membrane conductances dominate the overall behavior. The passive membrane measurements also indicate that effective voltage clamp of the receptor current at the tips of the sensory dendrites is possible in these neurons.


Nature ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 292 (5822) ◽  
pp. 451-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Johnston ◽  
Dominic Man-Kit Lam

1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 778-784 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Zhang ◽  
J. R. Goldsmith ◽  
J. H. Byrne

1. An in vitro analogue of long-term sensitization training was used to gain insights into the mechanisms and time course of the memory for long-term sensitization in Aplysia. The analogue, consisting of four blocks of shocks, was delivered to peripheral nerves of the isolated pleural-pedal ganglia, which contain the sensory neurons and motor neurons that mediate the tail withdrawal reflex. 2. Long-term facilitation of the connections between the sensory neurons and motor neurons was produced by the conjoint stimulation of two peripheral nerves, P8 and P9. Long-term facilitation, however, was not observed after conjoint stimulation of three nerves, P7, P8, and P9. 3. The preparation was viable and stable (no changes in the amplitudes of excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) and membrane properties in controls) for at least 48 h. Moreover, the long-term facilitation persisted for at least 48 h. 4. We observed no significant long-term changes in the resting membrane potentials of the sensory and motor neurons or in the input resistance of the motor neurons 24 and 48 h after the conjoint stimulation of nerves P8 and P9. Thus changes in these biophysical properties do not appear to contribute to the expression of long-term facilitation. 5. The finding that conjoint stimulation of three nerves, P7, P8, and P9, produced no long-term facilitation raised the possibility that stimulation of nerve P7 alone might produce long-term inhibition that opposes the facilitatory effects induced by conjoint stimulation of nerves P8 and P9. Stimulation of nerve P7 alone, however, had no long-term inhibitory effect on the EPSPs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


1992 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 508-529 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Spruston ◽  
D. Johnston

1. Perforated patch-clamp recordings were made from the three major classes of hippocampal neurons in conventional in vitro slices prepared from adult guinea pigs. This technique provided experimental estimates of passive membrane properties (input resistance, RN, and membrane time constant, tau m) determined in the absence of the leak conductance associated with microelectrode impalement or the washout of cytoplasmic constituents associated with conventional whole-cell recordings. 2. To facilitate comparison of our data with previous results and to determine the passive membrane properties under conditions as physiological as possible, recordings were made at the resting potential, in physiological saline, and without any added blockers of voltage-dependent conductances. 3. Membrane-potential responses to current steps were analyzed, and four criteria were used to identify voltage responses that were the least affected by activation of voltage-dependent conductances. tau m was estimated from the slowest component (tau 0) of multiexponential fits of responses deemed passive by these criteria. RN was estimated from the slope of the linear region in the hyperpolarizing direction of the voltage-current relation. 4. It was not possible to measure purely passive membrane properties that were completely independent of membrane potential in any of the three classes of hippocampal neurons. Changing the membrane potential by constant current injection resulted in changes in RN and tau 0; subthreshold depolarization produced an increase, and hyperpolarization a decrease, in both RN and tau 0 for all three classes of hippocampal neurons. 5. Each of the three classes of hippocampal neurons also displayed a depolarizing "sag" during larger hyperpolarizing voltage transients. To evaluate the effect of the conductances underlying this sag on passive membrane properties, 2-5 mM Cs+ was added to the physiological saline. Extracellular Cs+ effectively blocked the sag in all three classes of hippocampal neurons, but the effect of Cs+ on RN, tau 0, and the voltage dependence of these parameters was unique for each class of neurons. 6. CA1 pyramidal neurons had an RN of 104 +/- 10 (SE) M omega and tau 0 of 28 +/- 2 ms at a resting potential of -64 +/- 2 mV (n = 12). RN and tau 0 were larger at more depolarized potentials in these neurons, but the addition of Cs+ to the physiological saline reversed this voltage dependence. 7. CA3 pyramidal neurons had an RN of 135 +/- 8 M omega and tau 0 of 66 +/- 4 ms at a resting potential of -64 +/- 1 mV (n = 14).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


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