Simulations of Intrinsically Bursting Neocortical Pyramidal Neurons

1994 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 1086-1110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul A. Rhodes ◽  
Charles M. Gray

Neocortical layer 5 intrinsically bursting (IB) pyramidal neurons were simulated using compartment model methods. Morphological data as well as target neurophysiological responses were taken from a series of published studies on the same set of rat visual cortex pyramidal neurons (Mason, A. and Larkman, A. J., 1990. J. Neurosci. 9,1440-1447; Larkman, A. J. 1991. J. Comp. Neurol. 306, 307-319). A dendritic distribution of ion channels was found that reproduced the range of in vitro responses of layer 5 IB pyramidal neurons, including the transition from repetitive bursting to the burst/tonic spiking mode seen in these neurons as input magnitude increases. In light of available data, the simulation results suggest that in these neurons bursts are driven by an inward flow of current during a high threshold Ca2+ spike extending throughout both the basal and apical dendritic branches.

1997 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 187-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter C. Schwindt ◽  
Wayne E. Crill

Schwindt, Peter C. and Wayne E. Crill. Modification of current transmitted from apical dendrite to soma by blockade of voltage- and Ca2+-dependent conductances in rat neocortical pyramidal neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 187–198, 1997. The axial current transmitted to the soma during the long-lasting iontophoresis of glutamate at a distal site on the apical dendrite was measured by somatic voltage clamp of rat neocortical pyramidal neurons. Evidence for voltage- and Ca2+-gated channels in the apical dendrite was sought by examining the modification of this transmitted current resulting from the alteration of membrane potential and the application of channel-blocking agents. After N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor blockade, iontophoresis of glutamate on the soma evoked a current whose amplitude decreased linearly with depolarization to an extrapolated reversal potential near 0 mV. Under the same conditions, glutamate iontophoresis on the apical dendrite 241–537 μm from the soma resulted in a transmitted axial current that increased with depolarization over the same range of membrane potential (about −90 to −40 mV). Current transmitted from dendrite to soma was thus amplified during depolarization from resting potential (about −70 mV) and attenuated during hyperpolarization. After Ca2+ influx was blocked to eliminate Ca2+-dependent K+ currents, application of 10 mM tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA) altered the amplitude and voltage dependence of the transmitted current in a manner consistent with the reduction of dendritic voltage-gated K+ current. We conclude that dendritic, TEA-sensitive, voltage-gated K+ channels can be activated by tonic dendritic depolarization. The most prominent effects of blocking Ca2+ influx resembled those elicited by TEA application, suggesting that these effects were caused predominantly by blockade of a dendritic Ca2+-dependent K+ current. When cells were impaled with microelectrodes containing ethylene glycol-bis(β-amino-ethyl ether)- N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid to prevent a rise in intracellular Ca2+ concentration, blockade of Ca2+ influx altered the tonic transmitted current in different manner consistent with the blockade of a inward dendritic current carried by high-threshold-activated Ca2+ channels. We conclude that the primary effect of Ca2+ influx during tonic dendritic depolarization is the activation of a dendritic Ca2+-dependent K+ current. The hyperpolarizing attenuation of transmitted current was unaffected by blocking all known voltage-gated inward currents except the hyperpolarization-activated cation current ( I h). Extracellular Cs+ (3 mM) reversibly abolished both the hyperpolarizing attenuation of transmitted current and I h measured at the soma. We conclude that activation of I h by hyperpolarization of the proximal apical dendrite would cause less axial current to arrive at the soma from a distal site than in a passive dendrite. Several functional implications of dendritic K+ and I h channels are discussed.


Author(s):  
Javier Nogueira ◽  
María E. Castelló ◽  
Carolina Lescano ◽  
Ángel A. Caputi

Early sensory relays circuits in the vertebrate medulla often adopt a cerebellum-like organization specialized for comparing primary afferent inputs with central expectations. These circuits usually have a dual output, carried by center ON and center OFF neurons responding in opposite ways to the same stimulus at the center of their receptive fields. Here we show in the electrosensory lateral line lobe of Gymnotiform weakly electric fish that basilar pyramidal neurons, representing ‘ON’ cells, and non-basilar pyramidal neurons, representing ‘OFF’ cells, have different intrinsic electrophysiological properties. We used classical anatomical techniques and electrophysiological in vitro recordings to compare these neurons. Basilar neurons are silent at rest, have a high threshold to intracellular stimulation, delayed responses to steady state depolarization and low pass responsiveness to membrane voltage variations. They respond to low intensity depolarizing stimuli with large, isolated spikes. As stimulus intensity increases the spikes are followed by a depolarizing after-potential from which phase-locked spikes often arise. Non-basilar neurons show a pacemaker-like spiking activity, smoothly modulated in frequency by slow variations of stimulus intensity. Spike frequency adaptation provides a memory of their recent firing, facilitating non-basilar response to stimulus transients. Considering anatomical and functional dimensions we conclude that basilar and non-basilar pyramidal neurons are clear-cut, different anatomo-functional phenotypes. We propose that, in addition to their role in contrast processing, basilar pyramidal neurons encode sustained global stimuli as those elicited by large or distant objects while non-basilar pyramidal neurons respond to transient stimuli due to movement textured nearby objects.


2000 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. 3310-3322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jilda S. Nettleton ◽  
William J. Spain

It has been hypothesized that voltage-sensitive conductances present on the dendrites of neurons can influence summation of excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) and hence affect how neurons compile information. Greater than linear summation of EPSPs has been postulated to facilitate coincidence detection by cortical neurons. This study examined whether the summation of subthreshold AMPA-mediated EPSPs generated on layer V neocortical pyramidal neurons in vitro was linear and if any nonlinearities could be attributed to dendritic conductances. Evoked EPSPs (1–12 mV) were recorded somatically by means of intracellular sharp electrodes in the presence of 100 μM amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP-5) and 3 μM bicuculline. Two independent EPSPs were evoked by a stimulating electrode in layer I and another in layers III–V. The areas of stimulation were isolated from each other by a horizontal cut below layer I. By subtracting the algebraic sum of the individual EPSPs from the evoked response when both EPSPs were evoked simultaneously, we determined that they summed linearly to supralinearly. Supralinear summation was more likely when the soma was hyperpolarized by DC current injection. Summation was predominantly linear when postsynaptic conductances (i.e., Na+ and Ca2+) were blocked with intracellular QX-314. The supralinear summation of EPSPs (without QX-314) decreased as the time between inputs was increased from 0 to 30 ms. To determine the role of dendrites in nonlinear summation, we substituted a current pulse (simulated EPSP) delivered at the soma for either or both of the evoked EPSPs. Simulated EPSPs combined with either an evoked EPSP or another simulated EPSP showed significantly less supralinear summation than two evoked EPSPs, indicating that the dendritic conductances were largely responsible for the observed supralinear summation.


1998 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 1450-1460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denis Paré ◽  
Eric Shink ◽  
Hélène Gaudreau ◽  
Alain Destexhe ◽  
Eric J. Lang

Paré, Denis, Eric Shink, Hélène Gaudreau, Alain Destexhe, and Eric J. Lang. Impact of spontaneous synaptic activity on the resting properties of cat neocortical pyramidal neurons in vivo. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 1450–1460, 1998. The frequency of spontaneous synaptic events in vitro is probably lower than in vivo because of the reduced synaptic connectivity present in cortical slices and the lower temperature used during in vitro experiments. Because this reduction in background synaptic activity could modify the integrative properties of cortical neurons, we compared the impact of spontaneous synaptic events on the resting properties of intracellularly recorded pyramidal neurons in vivo and in vitro by blocking synaptic transmission with tetrodotoxin (TTX). The amount of synaptic activity was much lower in brain slices (at 34°C), as the standard deviation of the intracellular signal was 10–17 times lower in vitro than in vivo. Input resistances ( R ins) measured in vivo during relatively quiescent epochs (“control R ins”) could be reduced by up to 70% during periods of intense spontaneous activity. Further, the control R ins were increased by ∼30–70% after TTX application in vivo, approaching in vitro values. In contrast, TTX produced negligible R in changes in vitro (∼4%). These results indicate that, compared with the in vitro situation, the background synaptic activity present in intact networks dramatically reduces the electrical compactness of cortical neurons and modifies their integrative properties. The impact of the spontaneous synaptic bombardment should be taken into account when extrapolating in vitro findings to the intact brain.


2015 ◽  
Vol 113 (7) ◽  
pp. 2195-2209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tristan Hedrick ◽  
Jack Waters

The neuromodulator acetylcholine (ACh) shapes neocortical function during sensory perception, motor control, arousal, attention, learning, and memory. Here we investigate the mechanisms by which ACh affects neocortical pyramidal neurons in adult mice. Stimulation of cholinergic axons activated muscarinic and nicotinic ACh receptors on pyramidal neurons in all cortical layers and in multiple cortical areas. Nicotinic receptor activation evoked short-latency, depolarizing postsynaptic potentials (PSPs) in many pyramidal neurons. Nicotinic receptor-mediated PSPs promoted spiking of pyramidal neurons. The duration of the increase in spiking was membrane potential dependent, with nicotinic receptor activation triggering persistent spiking lasting many seconds in neurons close to threshold. Persistent spiking was blocked by intracellular BAPTA, indicating that nicotinic ACh receptor activation evoked persistent spiking via a long-lasting calcium-activated depolarizing current. We compared nicotinic PSPs in primary motor cortex (M1), prefrontal cortex (PFC), and visual cortex. The laminar pattern of nicotinic excitation was not uniform but was broadly similar across areas, with stronger modulation in deep than superficial layers. Superimposed on this broad pattern were local differences, with nicotinic PSPs being particularly large and common in layer 5 of M1 but not layer 5 of PFC or primary visual cortex (V1). Hence, in addition to modulating the excitability of pyramidal neurons in all layers via muscarinic receptors, synaptically released ACh preferentially increases the activity of deep-layer neocortical pyramidal neurons via nicotinic receptors, thereby adding laminar selectivity to the widespread enhancement of excitability mediated by muscarinic ACh receptors.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 668
Author(s):  
Concetta Altamura ◽  
Maria Raffaella Greco ◽  
Maria Rosaria Carratù ◽  
Rosa Angela Cardone ◽  
Jean-François Desaphy

Ovarian cancer (OC) is the deadliest gynecologic cancer, due to late diagnosis, development of platinum resistance, and inadequate alternative therapy. It has been demonstrated that membrane ion channels play important roles in cancer processes, including cell proliferation, apoptosis, motility, and invasion. Here, we review the contribution of ion channels in the development and progression of OC, evaluating their potential in clinical management. Increased expression of voltage-gated and epithelial sodium channels has been detected in OC cells and tissues and shown to be involved in cancer proliferation and invasion. Potassium and calcium channels have been found to play a critical role in the control of cell cycle and in the resistance to apoptosis, promoting tumor growth and recurrence. Overexpression of chloride and transient receptor potential channels was found both in vitro and in vivo, supporting their contribution to OC. Furthermore, ion channels have been shown to influence the sensitivity of OC cells to neoplastic drugs, suggesting a critical role in chemotherapy resistance. The study of ion channels expression and function in OC can improve our understanding of pathophysiology and pave the way for identifying ion channels as potential targets for tumor diagnosis and treatment.


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