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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 6 December 1999, pp. 3339-3346
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Pharmacology and Division of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030
Xiong, Zhi-Qi and
Janet L. Stringer.
Cesium Induces Spontaneous Epileptiform Activity Without Changing
Extracellular Potassium Regulation in Rat Hippocampus. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 3339-3346, 1999. Cesium
has been widely used to study the roles of the
hyperpolarization-activated (Ih) and inwardly rectifying
potassium (KIR) channels in many neuronal and nonneuronal
cell types. Recently, extracellular application of cesium has been
shown to produce epileptiform activity in brain slices, but the
mechanisms for this are not known. It has been proposed that cesium
blocks the KIR in glia, resulting in an abnormal
accumulation of potassium in the extracellular space and inducing
epileptiform activity. This hypothesis has been tested in hippocampal
slices and cultured hippocampal neurons using potassium-sensitive
microelectrodes. In the present study, application of cesium produced
spontaneous epileptiform discharges at physiological extracellular
potassium concentration ([K+]o) in the CA1
and CA3 regions of hippocampal slices. This epileptiform activity was
not mimicked by increasing the [K+]o. The
epileptiform discharges induced by cesium were not blocked by the
N-methyl-D- aspartate (NMDA) receptor
antagonist AP-5, but were blocked by the non-NMDA receptor antagonist
CNQX. In the dentate gyrus, cesium induced the appearance of
spontaneous nonsynaptic field bursts in 0 added calcium and 3 mM
potassium. Moreover, cesium increased the frequency of field bursts
already present. In contrast, ZD-7288, a specific Ih
blocker, did not cause spontaneous epileptiform activity in CA1 and
CA3, nor did it affect the field bursts in the dentate gyrus,
suggesting that cesium induced epileptiform activity is not directly
related to blockade of the Ih. When potassium-sensitive
microelectrodes were used to measure [K+]o,
there was no significant increase in [K+]o in
CA1 and CA3 after cesium application. In the dentate gyrus, cesium did
not change the baseline level of [K+]o or the
rate of [K+]o clearance after the field
bursts. In cultured hippocampal neurons, which have a large and
relatively unrestricted extracellular space, cesium also produced
cellular burst activity without significantly changing the resting
membrane potential, which might indicate an increase in
[K+]o. Our results suggest that cesium causes
epileptiform activity by a mechanism unrelated to an alteration in
[K+]o regulation.
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