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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 5 May 1999, pp. 2253-2266
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
School of Biomedical Sciences, Gatty Marine Laboratory, University of St. Andrews, Fife KY16 8LB, United Kingdom
Mills, Janette D. and
Robert M. Pitman.
Contribution of Potassium Conductances to a Time-Dependent
Transition in Electrical Properties of a Cockroach Motoneuron
Soma. J. Neurophysiol. 81: 2253-2266, 1999.
Contribution of potassium conductances to a time-dependent
transition in electrical properties of a cockroach motoneuron soma. The cell body of the cockroach (Periplaneta
americana) fast coxal depressor motoneuron (Df)
displays a time-dependent change in excitability. Immediately after
dissection, depolarization evokes plateau potentials, but after several
hours all-or-none action potentials are evoked. Because K channel
blockers have been shown to produce a similar transition in electrical
properties, we have used current-clamp, voltage-clamp and
action-potential-clamp recording to elucidate the contribution of
different classes of K channel to the transition in electrical activity
of the neuron. Apamin had no detectable effect on the neuron, but
charybdotoxin (ChTX) caused a rapid transition from plateau potentials
to spikes in the somatic response of Df to depolarization.
In neurons that already produced spikes when depolarized, ChTX
increased spike amplitude but did not increase their duration nor
decrease the amplitude of their afterhyperpolarization. 4-Aminopyridine
(4-AP) (which selectively blocks transient K currents) did not cause a
transition from plateau potentials to spikes but did enhance oscillations superimposed on plateau potentials. When applied to
neurons that already generated spikes when depolarized, 4-AP could
augment spike amplitude, decrease the latency to the first spike, and
prolong the afterhyperpolarization. Evidence suggests that the
time-dependent transition in electrical properties of this motoneuron
soma may result, at least in part, from a fall in calcium-dependent
potassium current (IK,Ca), consequent on a
gradual reduction in [Ca2+ ]i. Voltage-clamp
experiments demonstrated directly that outward K currents in this
neuron do fall with a time course that could be significant in the
transition of electrical properties. Voltage-clamp experiments also
confirmed the ineffectiveness of apamin and showed that ChTX blocked
most of IK,Ca. Application of Cd2+
(0.5 mM), however, caused a small additional suppression in outward current. Calcium-insensitive outward currents could be divided into
transient (4-AP-sensitive) and sustained components. The action-potential-clamp technique revealed that the ChTX-sensitive current underwent sufficient activation during the depolarizing phase
of plateau potentials to enable it to shunt inward conductances. Although the ChTX-sensitive conductance apparently makes little contribution to spike repolarization, the ChTX-resistant
IK,Ca does make a significant contribution to
this phase of the action potential. The 4-AP-sensitive current began to
develop during the rising phase of both action potentials and plateau
potentials but had little effect on the electrical activity of the
neuron, probably because of its relatively small amplitude.
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