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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 2 August 2002, pp. 861-868
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre, Bamfield, British Columbia V0R 1B0, Canada
Buckingham, Steven D. and
Andrew N. Spencer.
Role of High-Voltage Activated Potassium Currents in
High-Frequency Neuronal Firing: Evidence From a Basal Metazoan. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 861-868, 2002. Certain
neurons of vertebrates are specialized for high-frequency firing.
Interestingly, high-frequency firing is also seen in central neurons in
basal bilateral metazoans. Recently, the role of potassium currents
with rightward-shifted activation curves in producing high-frequency
firing has come under scrutiny. We apply intracellular recording,
patch-clamp techniques, and compartmental modeling to examine the roles
of rightward-shifted potassium currents in repetitive firing and
shaping of action potentials in central neurons of the flatworm,
Notoplana atomata (Phylum Platyhelminthes). The
kinetic properties of potassium and sodium currents were determined from patch-clamp experiments on dissociated brain cells. To predict the
effects of changing the steady-state and kinetic properties of these
potassium currents, these data were incorporated into a computer model
of a 30-µm spherical cell with the levels of current adjusted to
approximate the values recorded in voltage-clamp experiments. The model
was able to support regenerative spikes at high frequencies in response
to injected current. Current-clamp recordings of cultured cells and of
neurons in situ also showed evidence of very-high-frequency firing.
Adjusting the ratio of inactivating to non-inactivating potassium
currents had little effect upon the firing pattern of the cell or its
ability to fire at high frequencies, whereas the presence of the
non-inactivating current was necessary for repetitive firing. Computer
simulations suggested that the rightward shift in voltage sensitivity
confers a raised firing threshold, while rapid channel kinetics
underlie high frequency firing, and the large activation range enhances the coding range of the cell.
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