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Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (22) ◽  
pp. 6879
Author(s):  
Krystian Kolodziejczak ◽  
Alexander J. Stewart ◽  
Tell Tuttle ◽  
John A. Murphy

Rearrangements of o-tolyl aryl ethers, amines, and sulfides with the Grubbs–Stoltz reagent (Et3SiH + KOtBu) were recently announced, in which the ethers were converted to o-hydroxydiarylmethanes, while the (o-tol)(Ar)NH amines were transformed into dihydroacridines. Radical mechanisms were proposed, based on prior evidence for triethylsilyl radicals in this reagent system. A detailed computational investigation of the rearrangements of the aryl tolyl ethers now instead supports an anionic Truce–Smiles rearrangement, where the initial benzyl anion can be formed by either of two pathways: (i) direct deprotonation of the tolyl methyl group under basic conditions or (ii) electron transfer to an initially formed benzyl radical. By contrast, the rearrangements of o-tolyl aryl amines depend on the nature of the amine. Secondary amines undergo deprotonation of the N-H followed by a radical rearrangement, to form dihydroacridines, while tertiary amines form both dihydroacridines and diarylmethanes through radical and/or anionic pathways. Overall, this study highlights the competition between the reactive intermediates formed by the Et3SiH/KOtBu system.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz Bano-Otalora ◽  
Matthew J Moye ◽  
Timothy Brown ◽  
Robert J Lucas ◽  
Casey O Diekman ◽  
...  

Circadian rhythms in mammals are orchestrated by a central clock within the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN). Our understanding of the electrophysiological basis of SCN activity comes overwhelmingly from a small number of nocturnal rodent species, and the extent to which these are retained in day-active animals remains unclear. Here, we recorded the spontaneous and evoked electrical activity of single SCN neurons in the diurnal rodent Rhabdomys pumilio, and developed cutting-edge data assimilation and mathematical modeling approaches to uncover the underlying ionic mechanisms. As in nocturnal rodents, R. pumilio SCN neurons were more excited during daytime hours. By contrast, the evoked activity of R. pumilio neurons included a prominent suppressive response that is not present in the SCN of nocturnal rodents. Our modeling revealed and subsequent experiments confirmed transient subthreshold A-type potassium channels as the primary determinant of this response, and suggest a key role for this ionic mechanism in optimizing SCN function to accommodate R. pumilio’s diurnal niche.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Shao ◽  
Yunhui Liu ◽  
Dashuang Gao ◽  
Jie Tu ◽  
Fan Yang

Neural firing patterns are critical for specific information coding and transmission, and abnormal firing is implicated in a series of neural pathologies. Recent studies have indicated that enhanced burst firing mediated by T-type voltage-gated calcium channels (T-VGCCs) in specific neuronal subtypes is involved in several mental or neurological disorders such as depression and epilepsy, while suppression of T-VGCCs relieve related symptoms. Burst firing consists of groups of relatively high-frequency spikes separated by quiescence. Neurons in a variety of brain areas, including the thalamus, hypothalamus, cortex, and hippocampus, display burst firing, but the ionic mechanisms that generating burst firing and the related physiological functions vary among regions. In this review, we summarize recent findings on the mechanisms underlying burst firing in various brain areas, as well as the roles of burst firing in several mental and neurological disorders. We also discuss the ion channels and receptors that may regulate burst firing directly or indirectly, with these molecules highlighted as potential intervention targets for the treatment of mental and neurological disorders.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 4761
Author(s):  
Wei Hu ◽  
Robert B. Clark ◽  
Wayne R. Giles ◽  
Erwin Shibata ◽  
Henggui Zhang

Robust, spontaneous pacemaker activity originating in the sinoatrial node (SAN) of the heart is essential for cardiovascular function. Anatomical, electrophysiological, and molecular methods as well as mathematical modeling approaches have quite thoroughly characterized the transmembrane fluxes of Na+, K+ and Ca2+ that produce SAN action potentials (AP) and ‘pacemaker depolarizations’ in a number of different in vitro adult mammalian heart preparations. Possible ionic mechanisms that are responsible for SAN primary pacemaker activity are described in terms of: (i) a Ca2+-regulated mechanism based on a requirement for phasic release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores and activation of an inward current-mediated by Na+/Ca2+ exchange; (ii) time- and voltage-dependent activation of Na+ or Ca2+ currents, as well as a cyclic nucleotide-activated current, If; and/or (iii) a combination of (i) and (ii). Electrophysiological studies of single spontaneously active SAN myocytes in both adult mouse and rabbit hearts consistently reveal significant expression of a rapidly activating time- and voltage-dependent K+ current, often denoted IKr, that is selectively expressed in the leading or primary pacemaker region of the adult mouse SAN. The main goal of the present study was to examine by combined experimental and simulation approaches the functional or physiological roles of this K+ current in the pacemaker activity. Our patch clamp data of mouse SAN myocytes on the effects of a pharmacological blocker, E4031, revealed that a rapidly activating K+ current is essential for action potential (AP) repolarization, and its deactivation during the pacemaker potential contributes a small but significant component to the pacemaker depolarization. Mathematical simulations using a murine SAN AP model confirm that well known biophysical properties of a delayed rectifier K+ current can contribute to its role in generating spontaneous myogenic activity.


Author(s):  
Jasmin Ballout ◽  
Martin Diener

AbstractPropionate, a metabolite from the microbial fermentation of carbohydrates, evokes a release of epithelial acetylcholine in rat caecum resulting in an increase of short-circuit current (Isc) in Ussing chamber experiments. The present experiments were performed in order to characterize the ionic mechanisms underlying this response which has been thought to be due to Cl− secretion. As there are regional differences within the caecal epithelium, the experiments were conducted at oral and aboral rat corpus caeci. In both caecal segments, the propionate-induced Isc (IProp) was inhibited by > 85%, when the experiments were performed either in nominally Cl−- or nominally HCO3−-free buffer. In the case of Cl−, the dependency was restricted to the presence of Cl− in the serosal bath. Bumetanide, a blocker of the Na+-K+-2Cl−-cotransporter, only numerically reduced IProp suggesting that a large part of this current must be carried by an ion other than Cl−. In the aboral caecum, IProp was significantly inhibited by mucosally administered stilbene derivatives (SITS, DIDS, DNDS), which block anion exchangers. Serosal Na+-free buffer reduced IProp significantly in the oral (and numerically also in aboral) corpus caeci. RT-PCR experiments revealed the expression of several forms of Na+-dependent HCO3−-cotransporters in caecum, which might underlie the observed Na+ dependency. These results suggest that propionate sensing in caecum is coupled to HCO3– secretion, which functionally would stabilize luminal pH when the microbial fermentation leads to an increase in the concentration of short-chain fatty acids in the caecal lumen.


2021 ◽  
pp. 449-467
Author(s):  
Stuart Firestein ◽  
Frank Werblin

Author(s):  
Hui Sun

The vagal afferent nerves innervate the visceral organs and convey sensory information from the internal environment to the central nervous system. A better understanding of the mechanisms controlling the activation of vagal afferent neurons bears physiological and pathological significance. Although it is generally believed that the magnitude and the rising rate of membrane depolarization are both critical for the action potential generation, no direct or quantitative evidence has been documented so far for the sensitivity of vagal afferent neuron activation to the rate of depolarization and for its underlying ionic mechanisms. Here, by measuring the response of mouse nodose neurons to the suprathreshold current stimuli of varying rising rates, the slowest depolarization capable of evoking action potentials, the rate-of-depolarization threshold (dV/dtthreshold), was determined and found to be ~20 fold higher in the A-fiber neurons compared to the C-fiber neurons classified based on the capsaicin responsiveness and characteristics of action potential waveforms. Moreover, although the dV/dtthreshold varied substantially among individual neurons it was not different in any one neuron in response to different intensities of current stimuli. Finally, inhibition of low-threshold activated D-type potassium current (IK.D) by α-dendrotoxin or low concentration of 4-aminopyrydine nearly abrogated the sensitivity of action potential generation to the depolarization rate. Thus, the depolarization rate is an important independent factor contributing to the control of action potential discharge, which is particularly effective in the vagal afferent A-fiber neurons. The IK.D channel may regulate the excitability of vagal sensory neurons by setting the dV/dtthreshold for action potential discharge.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugues Berry ◽  
Stéphane Genet

AbstractThe neurons of the deep cerebellar nuclei (DCNn) represent the main functional link between the cerebellar cortex and the rest of the central nervous system. Therefore, understanding the electrophysiological properties of DCNn is of fundamental importance to understand the overall functioning of the cerebellum. Experimental data suggest that DCNn can reversibly switch between two states: the firing of spikes (F state) and a stable depolarized state (SD state). We introduce a new biophysical model of the DCNn membrane electro-responsiveness to investigate how the interplay between the documented conductances identified in DCNn give rise to these states. In the model, the F state emerges as an isola of limit cycles, i.e. a closed loop of periodic solutions disconnected from the branch of SD fixed points. This bifurcation structure endows the model with the ability to reproduce the $\text{F}\to \text{SD}$ F → SD transition triggered by hyperpolarizing current pulses. The model also reproduces the $\text{F}\to \text{SD}$ F → SD transition induced by blocking Ca currents and ascribes this transition to the blocking of the high-threshold Ca current. The model suggests that intracellular current injections can trigger fully reversible $\text{F}\leftrightarrow \text{SD}$ F ↔ SD transitions. Investigation of low-dimension reduced models suggests that the voltage-dependent Na current is prominent for these dynamical features. Finally, simulations of the model suggest that physiological synaptic inputs may trigger $\text{F}\leftrightarrow \text{SD}$ F ↔ SD transitions. These transitions could explain the puzzling observation of positively correlated activities of connected Purkinje cells and DCNn despite the former inhibit the latter.


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