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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 4 April 1999, pp. 1949-1959
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, Neuroscience Program, and College of Medicine, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Horn, Eric M.,
Glenn H. Dillon,
Yi-Ping Fan, and
Tony G. Waldrop.
Developmental aspects and mechanisms of rat caudal hypothalamic
neuronal responses to hypoxia. Previous reports from this laboratory have shown that a high percentage of neurons in the caudal
hypothalamus are stimulated by hypoxia both in vivo and in vitro. This
stimulation is in the form of an increase in firing frequency and
significant membrane depolarization. The goal of the present study was
to determine if this hypoxia-induced excitation is influenced by
development. In addition, we sought to determine the mechanism by which
hypoxia stimulates caudal hypothalamic neurons. Caudal hypothalamic
neurons from neonatal (4-16 days) or juvenile (20-40 days) rats were
patch-clamped, and the whole cell voltage and current responses to
moderate (10% O2) or severe (0% O2) hypoxia
were recorded in the brain slice preparation. Analysis of tissue oxygen
levels demonstrated no significant difference in the levels of tissue
oxygen in brain slices between the different age groups. A
significantly larger input resistance, time constant and half-time to
spike height was observed for neonatal neurons compared with juvenile
neurons. Both moderate and severe hypoxia elicited a net inward current
in a significantly larger percentage of caudal hypothalamic neurons
from rats aged 20-40 days (juvenile) as compared with rats aged 4-16
days (neonatal). In contrast, there was no difference in the magnitude
of the inward current response to moderate or severe hypoxia between
the two age groups. Those cells that were stimulated by hypoxia
demonstrated a significant decrease in input resistance during hypoxic
stimulation that was not observed in those cells unaffected by hypoxia.
A subset of neurons were tested independent of age for the ability to
maintain the inward current response to hypoxia during synaptic
blockade (11.4 mM Mg2+/0.2 mM Ca2+). Most of
the neurons tested (88.9%) maintained a hypoxic excitation during
synaptic blockade, and this inward current response was unaffected by
addition of 2 mM cobalt chloride to the bathing medium. In contrast,
perfusion with the Na+ channel blocker, tetrodotoxin (1-2
µM) or Na+ replacement with
N-methyl-D-glucamine (NMDG) significantly
reduced the inward current response to hypoxia. Furthermore, the input resistance decrease observed during hypoxia was attenuated
significantly during perfusion with NMDG. These results indicate the
excitation elicited by hypoxia in hypothalamic neurons is age
dependent. In addition, the inward current response of caudal
hypothalamic neurons is not dependent on synaptic input but results
from a sodium-dependent conductance.
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