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J Neurophysiol 100: 1202-1210, 2008. First published July 9, 2008; doi:10.1152/jn.00994.2007
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Ethanol Effects on Dopaminergic Ventral Tegmental Area Neurons During Block of Ih: Involvement of Barium-Sensitive Potassium Currents

John McDaid, Maureen A. McElvain and Mark S. Brodie

Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Submitted 5 September 2007; accepted in final form 5 July 2008

The dopaminergic neurons of the ventral tegmental area (DA VTA neurons) are important for the rewarding and reinforcing properties of drugs of abuse, including ethanol. Ethanol increases the firing frequency of DA VTA neurons from rats and mice. Because of a recent report on block of ethanol excitation in mouse DA VTA neurons with ZD7288, a selective blocker of the hyperpolarization-activated cationic current Ih, we examined the effect of ZD7288 on ethanol excitation in DA VTA neurons from C57Bl/6J and DBA/2J mice and Fisher 344 rats. Ethanol (80 mM) caused only increases in firing rate in mouse DA VTA neurons in the absence of ZD7288, but in the presence of ZD7288 (30 µM), ethanol produced a more transient excitation followed by a decrease of firing. This same biphasic phenomenon was observed in DA VTA neurons from rats in the presence of ZD7288 only at very high ethanol concentrations (160–240 mM) but not at lower pharmacologically relevant concentrations. The longer latency ethanol-induced inhibition was not observed in DA VTA neurons from mice or rats in the presence of barium (100 µM), which blocks G protein–linked potassium channels (GIRKs) and other inwardly rectifying potassium channels. Ethanol may have a direct effect to increase an inhibitory potassium conductance, but this effect of ethanol can only decrease the firing rate if Ih is blocked.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. S. Brodie, Dept. of Physiology and Biophysics, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago, 835 South Wolcott, Rm. E-202, M/C 901, Chicago, IL 60612-7342 (E-mail: mbrodie{at}uic.edu)




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