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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 5 November 2000, pp. 2330-2339
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Neuroscience and 2Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260; and 3Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97201
Cameron, William E.,
Pedro A. Núñez-Abades,
Ilan A. Kerman, and
Tracy
M. Hodgson.
Role of Potassium Conductances in Determining Input Resistance of
Developing Brain Stem Motoneurons. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 2330-2339, 2000. The role of potassium
conductances in determining input resistance was studied in 166 genioglossal (GG) motoneurons using sharp electrode recording in brain
stem slices of the rats aged 5-7 days, 13-15 days, and 19-24 days
postnatal (P). A high magnesium (Mg2+;
6 mM) perfusate was used to block calcium-mediated synaptic release
while intracellular or extracellular cesium (Cs+)
and/or extracellular tetraethylammonium (TEA) or barium
(Ba2+) were used to block potassium conductances.
In all cases, the addition of TEA to the high
Mg2+ perfusate generated a larger increase in
both input resistance (Rn) and the
first membrane time constant (
0) than did high
Mg2+ alone indicating a substantial nonsynaptic
contribution to input resistance. With intracellular injection of
Cs+, GG motoneurons with lower resistance (<40
M
), on the average, showed a larger percent increase in
Rn than cells with higher resistance
(>40 M
). There was also a significant increase in the effect of
internal Cs+ on
Rn and
0 with
age. The largest percent increase (67%) in the
0 due to intracellular
Cs+ occurred at P13-15, a
developmental stage characterized by a large reduction in specific
membrane resistance. Addition of external Cs+
blocked conductances (further increasing
Rn and
0)
beyond those blocked by the TEA perfusate. Substitution of external
calcium with 2 mM barium chloride produced a significant increase in
both Rn and
0
at all ages studied. The addition of either intracellular Cs+ or extracellular Ba2+
created a depolarization shift of the membrane potential. The amount of
injected current required to maintain the membrane potential was
negatively correlated with the control
Rn of the cell at most ages. Thus low
resistance cells had, on the average, more Cs+-
and Ba2+-sensitive channels than their high
resistance counterparts. There was also a disproportionately larger
percent increase in
0 as compared with
Rn for both internal
Cs+ and external Ba2+.
Based on a model by Redman and colleagues, it might be
suggested that the majority of these potassium conductances underlying
membrane resistance are initially located in the distal dendrites but
become more uniformly distributed over the motoneuron surface in the oldest animals.
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