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J Neurophysiol (July 14, 2004). doi:10.1152/jn.00178.2004
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Submitted on February 24, 2004
Accepted on July 8, 2004

Enhanced Excitability Compensates for High Pressure Induced Depression of Cortical Inputs to the Hippocampus

Adolfo E. Talpalar and Yoram Grossman*

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ramig{at}bgumail.bgu.ac.il.

High pressure (>1.0 MPa) induces the high pressure neurological syndrome (HPNS) characterized by increased excitability of the central nervous system and cognitive impairments involving memory disorders. The perforant path transfer of cortical information to the hippocampal formation is important for memory acquisition. High pressure may alter information transfer in this connection. We used rat corticohippocampal slices for studying the effect of pressure on the transfer function between synaptic inputs from the medial perforant path (MPP) and spike generation by granule cells (GC) of the dentate gyrus. High pressure (10.1 MPa) reduced single MPP field excitatory postsynaptic potentials (fEPSP) amplitude and slope by nearly 50 %. Field antidromic action potentials (AAPs) elicited by stimulation of GC axons, and PS (population spike) generation by the pressure-depressed MPP fEPSP were not significantly altered at hyperbaric conditions. Nevertheless the relationship PS/fEPSP increased at high pressure indicating dendritic hyperexcitability in the GC. PSs elicited by paired-pulse MPP fEPSPs at 10-200 ms inter-stimulus intervals (ISI), and PS generated by trains of 5 fEPSPs at 25 Hz were also not affected in spite of severe pressure-induced synaptic depression. Similarly, trains of AAPs at 25 Hz were not significantly changed. Trains of fEPSPs at higher frequency (50 Hz), however, induced additional spikes at high pressure, indicating pressure-disruption of the regular low-pass filter properties of the DG. Such effect was closely mimicked by partial blockade of GABAA inhibition. High pressure depresses synaptic activity while increases excitability in the neuronal dendrites but not in the axons. This mechanism, allowing neuronal communication at low input signals, may partially cope with pressure effects at the low frequency range (<25 Hz), but losses reliability at higher frequencies (>50 Hz).




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Y. Etzion, A. Mor, and Y. Grossman
Differential modulation of cerebellar climbing fiber and parallel fiber synaptic responses at high pressure
J Appl Physiol, February 1, 2009; 106(2): 729 - 736.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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