The Electrical Properties of a Crustacean Sensory Dendrite

1979 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-27
Author(s):  
MAURIZIO MIROLLI

1. The input properties and the response to stretch of a coxal receptor, the S fibre of the crab Scylla serrata, were studied using two and three intracellular microelectrodes. 2. In the relaxed receptor the transmembrane potential ranged from about −60 to −70 mV, and the input resistance, RT, from 1 to 3 MΩ. The input IV relationship, studied by injecting slow-rising current ramps, was not linear either in the hyperpolarizing or in the depolarizing quadrants. 3. Low values of RT and a linear IV relationship were associated with a large leakage of the microelectrodes. 4. The response to step stretches was complex, consisting of an initial depolarizing transient, Vα, and a steady-state depolarizing plateau, V8. Both Vα and V8 propagated with decrement in the fibre which was about 9 mm long. The spatial decrement of Vα and V8 was equal to that of the response to distally injected current pulses of comparable duration and amplitude. 5. On the basis of the spatial decrement of both Vα and V8 the dendrite can be considered equivalent, for current flowing from its distal to its proximal end, to a semi-infinite cable having a length constant of between 4 and 6 cm. 6. The voltage transients recorded in response to long current pulses reached 84% of their final value in a time (t84%) ranging from 150 to 180 ms in fibres in which RT was 2 Mω or larger. t84% was smaller in fibres having a lower RT. 7. The time course of the transients recorded in response to injected current pulses deviated from the semi-infinite cable model in a manner suggesting the presence of a partial short circuit. For this reason the membrane time constant of the fibre is considered larger (by an undetermined amount) than t84%. 8. The fibre presented less resistance to current flowing from its proximal to its distal end than to current flowing in the opposite direction. For this reason, and also because of the time course of the voltage transient, it is concluded that the distal sensory endings of the fibre have the properties of a leaky end termination, even in the non-stimulated receptors.

1984 ◽  
Vol 246 (2) ◽  
pp. G151-G158 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Knauf ◽  
K. Haag ◽  
R. Lubcke ◽  
E. Berger ◽  
W. Gerok

Current pulses (I) were injected into the lumen of proximal colonic segments in vivo, and the corresponding voltage deflections (delta PD) superimposed on the transcolonic PD were recorded. From the exponential decay of delta PD along the colon axis, the electrical length constant (lambda) was determined. Based on cable analysis the input resistance (= delta PD x = 0/I) and lambda made it possible to calculate the specific resistance (Rm) of the colonic epithelium as 128 +/- 16 omega X cm2. As Rm proved to be an ohmic resistor, the extrapolation from open-circuit PD (8-12 mV, lumen negative) to zero PD was feasible and made the calculation of short-circuit current (= PD/Rm) equal to 70 +/- 16 microA/cm2. In the presence of amiloride short-circuit current decreased to about 50%, whereas with theophylline it increased by about 30%. Substitution of luminal Na+ with choline or Cl- with cyclamate was associated with a marked increase of Rm. The rheogenic component of net Na+ transport was estimated to be only 8%. Electroneutral Na+ absorption functionally coupled with Cl- absorption displayed the characteristic feature of ion transport in the rat proximal colon.


2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
pp. 2951-2962 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabrizio Gabbiani ◽  
Holger G. Krapp

We investigated in vivo the characteristics of spike-frequency adaptation and the intrinsic membrane properties of an identified, looming-sensitive interneuron of the locust optic lobe, the lobula giant movement detector (LGMD). The LGMD had an input resistance of 4–5 MΩ, a membrane time constant of about 8 ms, and exhibited inward rectification and rebound spiking after hyperpolarizing current pulses. Responses to depolarizing current pulses revealed the neuron's intrinsic bursting properties and pronounced spike-frequency adaptation. The characteristics of adaptation, including its time course, the attenuation of the firing rate, the mutual dependency of these two variables, and their dependency on injected current, closely followed the predictions of a model first proposed to describe the adaptation of cat visual cortex pyramidal neurons in vivo. Our results thus validate the model in an entirely different context and suggest that it might be applicable to a wide variety of neurons across species. Spike-frequency adaptation is likely to play an important role in tuning the LGMD and in shaping the variability of its responses to visual looming stimuli.


1979 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-45
Author(s):  
MAURIZIO MIROLLI

1. The response of the coxal receptors of the crab Scylla serrata to step stretches consisted of a partial action potential, Vα, followed by a steady-state depolarization, V8. The input resistance of the fibre was reduced during V8. 2. In the absence of stimulation, the dendrites of the receptors depolarized when external Na+ was substituted with choline or Li+, and when the external K+ concentration was increased or decreased. The dendrites also depolarized when ouabain was added to the saline. 3. The amplitude of both Vα and V8 was dependent on external Na+. In cells which were depolarized by ouabain, the amplitude of V8 increased when the K+ concentration of the saline was reduced. 4. V8 was followed by a small, but long-lasting, after-potential which was depolarizing when the membrane potential was between −70 and −60 mV. In cells depolarized by ouabain or by low K+ saline, the after-potential became hyperpolarizing. 5. When trains of brief stretches (each 5 ms in duration) were used as stimuli, the cells responded with trains of Vα responses. During this tetanic stimulation the cells hyperpolarized; cessation of the stimulus train was followed by a long-lasting hyperpolarization (PTH). 6. PTH was abolished in Li+ saline, in low K+ saline, and in the presence of ouabain. In control or in low K+ saline, PTH was not accompanied by a decrease in the input resistance of the fibres. 7. It is concluded that an electrogenic Na+ pump (or equivalent process) contributes a substantial fraction of the membrane potential of the unstimulated coxal receptors. Pump activity could be increased by Na+-loading the distal part of the cells with trains of Vα responses. By contrast, during the steady-state response to stretch, the pump was not activated.


2004 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 1990-1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Fuentealba ◽  
Sylvain Crochet ◽  
Igor Timofeev ◽  
Mircea Steriade

To study the interactions between thalamic and cortical inputs onto neocortical neurons, we used paired-pulse stimulation (PPS) of thalamic and cortical inputs as well as PPS of two cortical or two thalamic inputs that converged, at different time intervals, onto intracellularly recorded cortical and thalamocortical neurons in anesthetized cats. PPS of homosynaptic cortico-cortical pathways produced facilitation, depression, or no significant effects in cortical pathways, whereas cortical responses to thalamocortical inputs were mostly facilitated at both short and long intervals. By contrast, heterosynaptic interactions between either cortical and thalamic, or thalamic and cortical, inputs generally produced decreases in the peak amplitudes and depolarization area of evoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs), with maximal effect at ∼10 ms and lasting from 60 to 100 ms. All neurons tested with thalamic followed by cortical stimuli showed a decrease in the apparent input resistance ( Rin), the time course of which paralleled that of decreased responses, suggesting that shunting is the factor accounting for EPSP's decrease. Only half of neurons tested with cortical followed by thalamic stimuli displayed changes in Rin. Spike shunting in the thalamus may account for those cases in which decreased synaptic responsiveness of cortical neurons was not associated with decreased Rin because thalamocortical neurons showed decreased firing probability during cortical stimulation. These results suggest a short-lasting but strong shunting between thalamocortical and cortical inputs onto cortical neurons.


Parasitology ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 85 (1) ◽  
pp. 163-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. P. Thompson ◽  
R. A. Pax ◽  
J. L. Bennett

SUMMARYStandard intracellular microelectrode techniques were used to determine the electrical properties of the tegument and sub-tegumental regions in male Schistosoma mansoni. Three distinct compartments of electrical potential were observed. The resting potentials recorded in these compartments of –45·9±2·5 mV (Eteg), –22·0±1·1 mV (E2) and – 4·7±0·3 mV (E3) corroborate those previously reported by Fetterer, Pax & Bennett (1980) and Bricker, Pax & Bennett (1981). Input resistance was measured in each compartment and was found to be 4·5 MΩ (tegument), 9·2 MΩ (E2) and 3·5 MΩ (E3). Time-constants for the tegument, E2 and E3 were 0·24±0·01 msec, 0·25±0·01 msec and 0·13±0·01 msec, respectively. Multiple electrode experiments revealed that the tegument and E2 compartment are electrical syncytia with similar current-spreading capabilities. Low resistance pathways also appear to connect the tegument and E2 region, since electrotonic signals initiated in either of those compartments experience only a 15–25% reduction upon passing into the other. Injecting large (> 200 nA) depolarizing current pulses into the tegument or E2 compartment often resulted in the initiation of active membrane responses. These spikes were highly variable, ranging from 4 to 75 mV in magnitude (occasionally overshooting zero potential by as much as 25 mV) and from 10–40 msec in duration. The responses were not actively propagated along the parasite, and their decay over distance was approximately equal to that predicted on the basis of length constant values obtained from electrotonic signals. The addition of a non-diffusible solute to the recording medium resulted in a significant reduction in the current-spreading capacity of both the tegument and E2 compartment. Coupling ratios between the tegument and E2 compartment were decreased, and the input resistance for both compartments increased, while resting potentials remained constant. Active responses could not be evoked in schistosomes exposed to the hyperosmotic medium.


1997 ◽  
Vol 272 (4) ◽  
pp. C1169-C1177 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Jin ◽  
U. Hopfer

The involvement of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) as messenger for the regulation of Na+-K+-ATPase activity was investigated in a renal cell line recently developed by immortalization of early proximal tubule primary cultures from the Wistar-Kyoto rat strain. Na+-K+-ATPase was measured as short-circuit current (Isc) in intact monolayers after permeabilization of the apical plasma membrane with amphotericin B. With symmetrical solutions, Isc quantitatively reflects Na+-K+-ATPase activity as judged by ouabain inhibition and dependence on Na+ and K+. Extracellular ATP (50% effective concentration = 0.32 mM) on the apical side produced acute inhibition of Na+-K+-ATPase-generated Isc of up to 50%. The inhibition peaked within 1 min and lasted approximately 5 min. The potency order was ATP > ADP >> beta,gamma-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate = UTP, consistent with a P2y receptor. Extracellular ATP also stimulated a transient increase in [Ca2+]i. This increase had a similar time course as the inhibition of ATPase and reached a peak change of approximately 120 nM. However, the elevation of [Ca2+]i is not required in the purinergic inhibition of the Na+-K+-ATPase, since, first, increases in [Ca2+]i produced with a Ca2+ ionophore (ionomycin) failed to mimic the purinergic inhibition and, second, 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)-ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, which abolished the [Ca2+]i elevation, failed to block the purinergic inhibition.


1996 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 855-866 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. L. Stark ◽  
A. R. Mercer ◽  
N. J. Emptage ◽  
T. J. Carew

1. Modulation of mechanoafferent sensory neurons (SNs) by the neutrotransmitter serotonin (5HT) plays a significant role in behavioral sensitization of several withdrawal reflexes in Aplysia. The modulatory effects of 5HT on these SNs include increased excitability, increased input resistance, action potential broadening, and increased synaptic transmission. Based on a previously described dissociation of some of these modulatory effects, revealed with the 5HT-receptor antagonist, cyproheptadine, we investigated whether a similar dissociation could be found by systematically varying the concentration of the endogenous agonist, 5HT. 2. We first applied a range of 5HT concentrations to isolated pleural/pedal ganglia (containing tail SNs and tail motor neurons, respectively), and measured the magnitude of 5HT-induced modulation of spike broadening and increased excitability. The resulting dose-response curve showed that both forms of modulation increase monotonically as a function of 5HT concentration, but that excitability has a lower threshold for modulation by 5HT than does spike duration. 3. We further characterized the modulatory effects of 5HT on Aplysia SNs by comparing the time course of onset of modulation by 5HT and the time course of recovery after washout. Independent of 5HT concentration, modulation of excitability increases rapidly in the presence of 5HT and recovers rapidly (< 3 min) after washout. Similarly, input resistance increases and recovers rapidly, mirroring the profile of increased excitability. However, modulation of spike duration exhibits two profiles, dependent on 5HT concentration. Low concentrations of 5HT (0.5 and 1 microM) induce a rapid-onset and transient-recovery form of spike broadening, which resembles the kinetics of increased excitability and increased input resistance. Higher concentrations of 5HT (2.5 and 5 microM) induce a more slowly developing and prolonged-recovery form of spike broadening (> 9 min). At these higher concentrations, the recovery profile for prolonged spike broadening is significantly different from those observed for both increased excitability and increased input resistance. 4. We next compared the relationship between spike broadening and short-term synaptic facilitation. We found that significant facilitation of synaptic transmission requires a high 5HT concentration, which is comparable with that required to induce prolonged spike broadening. Similarly, the recovery profiles for spike broadening and synaptic facilitation are strikingly similar, recovering in parallel. 5. Our experiments show that the modulatory effects of 5HT in the tail SNs can be dissociated both by their sensitivity to different concentrations of 5HT and by their kinetics of serotonergic modulation. Based on these results, together with extensive evidence from other laboratories, we propose that the short-term modulatory effects of 5HT fall into two distinct functional classes. The first class, which includes excitability, input resistance, and transient spike broadening, has a low threshold for 5HT modulation and recovers rapidly. The second class, which includes prolonged spike broadening and short-term synaptic facilitation, has a higher threshold for modulation and recovers more slowly. It now will be of interest to determine the functional contribution of each of these classes to different aspects of sensitization.


1956 ◽  
Vol 186 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian F. Hoffman ◽  
E. E. Suckling

The effects of changes in the extracellular concentrations of Ca, K and Mg on the transmembrane resting and action potentials of single fibers of the auricle, ventricle and specialized conducting system of the dog heart have been studied by means of intracellular microelectrodes. With respect to Ca, the three tissues exhibit quite different sensitivities. Changes in concentration of this ion alter the time course of the action potential recorded from auricle and ventricle but have little effect on the action potential configuration of the Purkinje fiber. In the latter tissue, on the other hand, pacemaker activity is most strongly enhanced by Ca depletion and excitability is lost at Ca concentrations permitting normal propagation in papillary muscle. The effect of K on the resting transmembrane potential is dependent on the simultaneous Ca concentration. The interrelationship is such that the depolarizing effect of high K is decreased by elevated Ca and the depolarization produced by low K is diminished by low levels of Ca. Changes in the concentration of Mg have little effect on the transmembrane potentials of cardiac muscle unless the level of Ca is low. Under this condition a simultaneous decrease in Mg gives rise to a marked prolongation of the action potential duration of both auricle and ventricle. Some evidence for the basic similarity of the processes underlying repolarization in these three tissues is presented and it is thought the normally encountered differences in their action potentials may be related to the sensitivity of each tissue to extracellular Ca.


1993 ◽  
Vol 70 (5) ◽  
pp. 1874-1884 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Morita ◽  
G. David ◽  
J. N. Barrett ◽  
E. F. Barrett

1. The hyperpolarization that follows tetanic stimulation was recorded intra-axonally from the internodal region of intramuscular myelinated motor axons. 2. The peak amplitude of the posttetanic hyperpolarization (PTH) that followed stimulation at 20-100 Hz for < or = 35 s increased with increasing train duration, reaching a maximum of 22 mV. PTH decayed over a time course that increased from tens to hundreds of seconds with increasing train duration. For a given frequency of stimulation the time integral of PTH was proportional to the number of stimuli in the train, averaging 3-4 mV.s per action potential. 3. Ouabain (0.1-1 mM) and cyanide (1 mM) depolarized the resting potential and abolished PTH. Tetanic stimulation in ouabain was followed by a slowly decaying depolarization (probably due to extra-axonal K+ accumulation) whose magnitude and duration increased as the duration of the train increased. 4. Axonal input resistance showed no consistent change during PTH in normal solution but increased during PTH in the presence of 3 mM Cs+ (which blocks axonal inward rectifier currents). 5. PTH was abolished when bath Na+ was replaced by Li+ or choline. PTH persisted after removal of bath Ca2+ and addition of 2 mM Mn2+. 6. Removal of bath K+ abolished the PTH recorded after brief stimulus trains and greatly reduced the duration of PTH recorded after longer stimulus trains. 7. A brief application of 10 mM K+, which normally depolarizes axons, produced a ouabain-sensitive hyperpolarization in axons bathed in K(+)-free solution. 8. These observations suggest that in these myelinated axons PTH is produced mainly by activation of an electrogenic Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, rather than by changes in K+ permeability or transmembrane [K+] gradients. This conclusion is supported by calculations showing agreement between estimates of Na+ efflux/impulse based on PTH measurements and estimates of Na+ influx/impulse based on nodal voltage-clamp measurements. Pump activity also appears to contribute to the resting potential. 9. The stimulus intensity required to initiate a propagating action potential increased during PTH but decreased during the posttetanic depolarization recorded in ouabain. Thus changes in axonal excitability after tetanic stimulation correlate with changes in the posttetanic membrane potential. 10. Action potentials that propagated during PTH had a larger peak amplitude and were followed by a larger and longer depolarizing afterpotential than action potentials elicited at the resting potential. This enhancement of the depolarizing afterpotential is consistent with previous reports of an increased superexcitable period after action potentials evoked during PTH.


1992 ◽  
Vol 263 (4) ◽  
pp. R827-R833 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. C. Cox

The larval frog skin has a very high electrical resistance and a corresponding low rate of transepithelial ion transport. Amiloride, a blocker of sodium transport in adult skin, transiently stimulates rather than inhibits short-circuit current (Isc) across larval skin. The time course and concentration response to amiloride and the effects of calcium channel blockers on Isc were studied with larval frog skin mounted in modified Ussing chambers. The amiloride (1 mM) transient was markedly blunted if the skin was previously exposed to low amiloride (0.01-0.1 mM) concentrations. The calcium channel blockers verapamil, nitrendipine, diltiazem, W-7, and lanthanum all blocked the amiloride transient. Diltiazem itself caused a rapid transient in Isc, indicating that it may be a partial agonist. These data suggest that the amiloride-stimulated cation channels rapidly desensitize in a manner similar to the acetylcholine receptor. The decline in Isc after amiloride stimulation could be caused by amiloride block of the open channel. Blockade of amiloride stimulation by well-known calcium channel blockers suggests that these larval cation channels may have some characteristics in common with calcium channels.


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