Harvey P J, Li Y, Li X, Bennett D J
Centre for Neuroscience, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2006 Sep;96(3):1141-57. doi: 10.1152/jn.00335.2005. Epub 2005 Nov 9.
Months after sacral spinal transection in rats (chronic spinal rats), motoneurons below the injury exhibit large, low-threshold persistent inward currents (PICs), composed of persistent sodium currents (Na PICs) and persistent calcium currents (Ca PICs). Here, we studied whether motoneurons of normal adult rats also exhibited Na and Ca PICs when the spinal cord was acutely transected at the sacral level (acute spinal rats) and examined the role of the Na PIC in firing behavior. Intracellular recordings were obtained from motoneurons of acute and chronic spinal rats while the whole sacrocaudal spinal cord was maintained in vitro. Compared with chronic spinal rats, motoneurons of acute spinal rats were more difficult to activate because the input resistance was 22% lower and resting membrane potential was hyperpolarized 4.1 mV further below firing threshold (-50.9 +/- 6.2 mV). In acute spinal rats, during a slow voltage ramp, a PIC was activated subthreshold to the spike (at -57.2 +/- 5.0 mV) and reached a peak current of 1.11 +/- 1.21 nA. This PIC was less than one-half the size of that in chronic spinal rats (2.79 +/- 0.94 nA) and usually was not large enough to produce bistable behavior (plateau potentials and self-sustained firing not present), unlike in chronic spinal rats. The PIC was composed of two components: a TTX-sensitive Na PIC (0.44 +/- 0.36 nA) and a nimodipine-sensitive Ca PIC (0.78 +/- 0.82 nA). Both were smaller than in chronic spinal rats (but with similar Na/Ca ratio). The presence of the Na PIC was critical for normal repetitive firing, because no detectable Na PIC was found in the few motoneurons that could not fire repetitively during a slow ramp current injection and motoneurons that had large Na PICs more readily produced repetitive firing and had lower minimum firing rates compared with neurons with small Na PICs. Furthermore, when the Na PIC was selectively blocked with riluzole, steady repetitive firing was eliminated, even though transient firing could be evoked on a rapid current step and the spike itself was unaffected. In summary, only small Ca and Na PICs occur in acute spinal motoneurons, but the Na PIC is essential for steady repetitive firing. We discuss how availability of monoamines may explain the variability in Na PICs and firing in the normal and spinal animals.
大鼠骶段脊髓横断数月后(慢性脊髓大鼠),损伤平面以下的运动神经元会出现大的、低阈值持续性内向电流(PICs),其由持续性钠电流(Na PICs)和持续性钙电流(Ca PICs)组成。在此,我们研究了正常成年大鼠的运动神经元在骶段水平急性脊髓横断时(急性脊髓大鼠)是否也表现出Na PICs和Ca PICs,并探讨了Na PIC在放电行为中的作用。在体外维持整个骶尾段脊髓的情况下,从急性和慢性脊髓大鼠的运动神经元进行细胞内记录。与慢性脊髓大鼠相比,急性脊髓大鼠的运动神经元更难激活,因为输入电阻降低了22%,静息膜电位在放电阈值(-50.9±6.2 mV)以下进一步超极化4.1 mV。在急性脊髓大鼠中,在缓慢电压斜坡期间,一个PIC在动作电位阈值以下被激活(在-57.2±5.0 mV),并达到峰值电流1.11±1.21 nA。这个PIC的大小不到慢性脊髓大鼠的一半(2.79±0.94 nA),通常也不足以产生双稳行为(不存在平台电位和自发放电),这与慢性脊髓大鼠不同。该PIC由两个成分组成:一个对河豚毒素敏感的Na PIC(0.44±0.36 nA)和一个对尼莫地平敏感的Ca PIC(0.78±0.82 nA)。两者都比慢性脊髓大鼠中的小(但Na/Ca比值相似)。Na PIC的存在对于正常的重复放电至关重要,因为在缓慢斜坡电流注入期间不能进行重复放电的少数运动神经元中未检测到可检测到的Na PIC,并且与具有小Na PIC的神经元相比,具有大Na PIC的运动神经元更容易产生重复放电且最小放电率更低。此外,当用利鲁唑选择性阻断Na PIC时,即使在快速电流阶跃时可以诱发瞬态放电且动作电位本身不受影响,稳定的重复放电也会被消除。总之,急性脊髓运动神经元中仅出现小的Ca PIC和Na PIC,但Na PIC对于稳定的重复放电至关重要。我们讨论了单胺的可用性如何解释正常动物和脊髓动物中Na PICs和放电的变异性。