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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 3 September 2000, pp. 1558-1572
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York 10595
Leonard, Christopher S.,
Sanjai R. Rao, and
Takafumi Inoue.
Serotonergic Inhibition of Action Potential Evoked Calcium
Transients in NOS-Containing Mesopontine Cholinergic Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 1558-1572, 2000. Nitric
oxide synthase (NOS)-containing mesopontine cholinergic (MPCh) neurons
of the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus (LDT) are hypothesized to drive
the behavioral states of waking and REM sleep through a tonic increase
in firing rate which begins before and is maintained throughout these
states. In principle, increased firing could elevate intracellular
calcium levels and regulate numerous cellular processes including
excitability, gene expression, and the activity of neuronal NOS in a
state-dependent manner. We investigated whether repetitive firing,
evoked by current injection and
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor
activation, produces somatic and proximal dendritic
[Ca2+]i transients and whether these
transients are modulated by serotonin, a transmitter thought to play a
critical role in regulating the state-dependent firing of MPCh neurons.
[Ca2+]i was monitored optically from neurons
filled with Ca2+ indicators in guinea pig brain slices
while measuring membrane potential with sharp microelectrodes or patch
pipettes. Neither hyperpolarizing current steps nor subthreshold
depolarizing steps altered [Ca2+]i. In
contrast, suprathreshold currents caused large and rapid increases in
[Ca2+]i that were related to firing rate. TTX
(1 µM) strongly attenuated this relation. Addition of
tetraethylammonium (TEA, 20 mM), which resulted in Ca2+
spiking on depolarization, restored the change in
[Ca2+]i to pre-TTX levels. Suprathreshold
doses of NMDA also produced increases in
[Ca2+]i that were reduced by up to 60% by
TTX. Application of 5-HT, which hyperpolarized LDT neurons without
detectable changes in [Ca2+]i, suppressed
both current- and NMDA-evoked increases in
[Ca2+]i by reducing the number of evoked
spikes and by inhibiting spike-evoked Ca2+ transients by
~40% in the soma and proximal dendrites. This inhibition was
accompanied by a subtle increase in the spike repolarization rate and a
decrease in spike width, as expected for inhibition of high-threshold
Ca2+ currents in these neurons. NADPH-diaphorase
histochemistry confirmed that recorded cells were NOS-containing. These
findings indicate the prime role of action potentials in elevating
[Ca2+]i in NOS-containing MPCh neurons.
Moreover, they demonstrate that serotonin can inhibit somatic and
proximal dendritic [Ca2+]i increases both
indirectly by reducing firing rate and directly by decreasing the
spike-evoked transients. Functionally, these data suggest that
spike-evoked Ca2+ signals in MPCh neurons should be largest
during REM sleep when serotonin inputs are expected to be lowest even
if equivalent firing rates are reached during waking. Such
Ca2+ signals may function to trigger
Ca2+-dependent processes including cfos
expression and nitric oxide production in a REM-specific manner.
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