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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00725.2001
Submitted on 28 August 2001
Accepted on 1 July 2002
Department of Biology, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233
Martin, Michelle M.
Changes in Electrophysiological Properties of Lamprey Spinal
Motoneurons During Fictive Swimming. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2463-2476, 2002. Electrophysiological
properties of lamprey spinal motoneurons were measured to determine
whether their cellular properties change as the spinal cord goes from a
quiescent state to the active state of fictive swimming. Intracellular
microelectrode recordings of membrane potential were made from
motoneurons in the isolated spinal cord preparation.
Electrophysiological properties were first characterized in the
quiescent spinal cord, and then fictive swimming was induced by
perfusion with D-glutamate and the measurements were
repeated. During the depolarizing excitatory phase of fictive swimming,
the motoneurons had significantly reduced rheobase and significantly
increased input resistance compared with the quiescent state, with no
significant changes in these parameters during the repolarizing
inhibitory phase of swimming. Spike threshold did not change
significantly during fictive swimming compared with the quiescent
state. During fictive swimming, the slope of the spike frequency versus
injected current (F-I) relationship decreased significantly
as did spike-frequency adaptation and the amplitude of the slow
after-spike hyperpolarization (sAHP). Serotonin is known to be released
endogenously from the spinal cord during fictive swimming and is known
to reduce the amplitude of the sAHP. Therefore the effects of serotonin
on cellular properties were tested in the quiescent spinal cord. It was
found that, in addition to reducing the sAHP amplitude, serotonin also
reduced the slope of the F-I relationship and reduced
spike-frequency adaptation, reproducing the changes observed in these
parameters during fictive swimming. Application of spiperone, a
serotonin antagonist, significantly increased the sAHP amplitude during fictive swimming but had no significant effect on F-I slope
or adaptation. Because serotonin may act in part through reduction of
calcium currents, the effect of calcium-free solution (cobalt substituted for calcium) was tested in the quiescent spinal cord. Similar to fictive swimming and serotonin application, the calcium-free solution significantly reduced the sAHP amplitude, the slope of the
F-I relationship, and spike-frequency adaptation. These
results suggest that there are significant changes in the firing
properties of motoneurons during fictive swimming compared with the
quiescent state, and it is possible that these changes may be
attributed in part to the endogenous release of serotonin acting via
reduction of calcium currents.
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