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J Neurophysiol (December 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00365.2002
Submitted on 14 May 2002
Accepted on 13 August 2002
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics and Department of Anesthesia, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z3, Canada
Wan, Xiang and
Ernest Puil.
Pentobarbital Depressant Effects Are Independent of GABA
Receptors in Auditory Thalamic Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 3067-3077, 2002. Pentobarbital, a general anesthetic,
has received extensive study for its ability to potentiate inhibition
at GABAA subtype of receptors for GABA. Using
whole cell current-clamp techniques and bath applications, we
determined the effects of pentobarbital and GABA receptor antagonists
on the membrane properties and tonic or burst firing of medial
geniculate neurons in thalamic slices. Pentobarbital (0.01-200 µM)
induced depressant effects in 50 of 66 neurons (76%). Pentobarbital
hyperpolarized neurons by a mean of 3 mV and decreased the number of
action potentials in tonic firing, evoked by current pulse injection
from near the resting potential. Pentobarbital also decreased burst
firing or low threshold Ca2+-spikes, evoked by
current pulse injection into neurons at potentials hyperpolarized from
rest. The blockade of tonic and burst firing, as well as low threshold
Ca2+-spikes, was surmountable by increasing the
amplitude of input current. The GABAA receptor
antagonists, bicuculline (100 µM) and picrotoxinin (50-100 µM),
did not block the depressant effects of pentobarbital (10 µM). The
GABAB receptor antagonist, saclofen (200 µM),
and GABAC receptor antagonist,
(1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine-4-yl)methylphosphinate (10-50 µM), did
not significantly alter the depressant effects. Pentobarbital produced
excitatory effects (0.1-50 µM) on 11 neurons (17%) but had no
effects on 5 neurons (7%). The excitation consisted of approximately 3 mV depolarization, increased tonic and burst firing and the rate of
rise and amplitude of low threshold Ca2+ spikes.
These effects were associated with a increase in input resistance. In
contrast, the depressant effects of pentobarbital correlated to a
decreased input resistance measured with hyperpolarizing current pulse
injection (IC50 = 7.8 µM). Pentobarbital
reduced Na+-dependent rectification on
depolarization and lowered the slope resistance over a wide voltage
range. Tetrodotoxin eliminated both Na+-dependent
rectification and the pentobarbital-induced decrease in membrane
resistance at depolarized voltages in two-thirds of the neurons. The
pentobarbital-induced decrease in membrane resistance at voltages
hyperpolarized from rest was not evident during co-application with
Cs+, known to block the
hyperpolarization-activated rectifiers. In summary, the pentobarbital
acted at low concentrations to depress thalamocortical neurons. The
depression resulted from decreased rectification on depolarization,
which no longer boosted potentials over threshold, and an increased
conductance that shunted spike generation. The depressant effects of
pentobarbital did not involve known types of GABA receptor interactions.
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