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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 5 November 2000, pp. 2572-2581
Copyright ©2000 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. and
Tony G. Waldrop.
Hypoxic Augmentation of Fast-Inactivating and Persistent Sodium
Currents in Rat Caudal Hypothalamic Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 2572-2581, 2000. Previous work from
this laboratory has indicated that TTX-sensitive sodium channels are
involved in the hypoxia-induced inward current response of caudal
hypothalamic neurons. Since this inward current underlies the
depolarization and increased firing frequency observed in these cells
during hypoxia, the present study utilized more detailed biophysical
methods to specifically determine which sodium currents are responsible
for this hypoxic activation. Caudal hypothalamic neurons from
~3-wk-old Sprague-Dawley rats were acutely dissociated and
patch-clamped in the voltage-clamp mode to obtain recordings from
fast-inactivating and persistent (noninactivating) whole cell sodium
currents. Using computer-generated activation and inactivation voltage
protocols, rapidly inactivating sodium currents were analyzed during
normal conditions and during a brief (3-6 min) period of severe
hypoxia. In addition, voltage-ramp and extended-voltage-activation
protocols were used to analyze persistent sodium currents during normal
conditions and during hypoxia. A polarographic oxygen electrode
determined that the level of oxygen in this preparation quickly dropped
to 10 Torr within 2 min of initiation of hypoxia and stabilized at
<0.5 Torr within 4 min. During hypoxia, the peak fast-inactivating
sodium current was significantly increased throughout the entire
activation range, and both the activation and inactivation values
(V1/2) were negatively shifted.
Furthermore both the voltage-ramp and extended-activation protocols
demonstrated a significant increase in the persistent sodium current
during hypoxia when compared with normoxia. These results demonstrate
that both rapidly inactivating and persistent sodium currents are
significantly enhanced by a brief hypoxic stimulus. Furthermore the
hypoxic-induced increase in these currents most likely is the primary
mechanism for the depolarization and increased firing frequency
observed in caudal hypothalamic neurons during hypoxia. Since these
neurons are important in modulating cardiorespiratory activity, the
oxygen responsiveness of these sodium currents may play a significant
role in the centrally mediated cardiorespiratory response to hypoxia.
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