Onozuka M, Imai S, Furuichi H, Ozono S
Department of Anatomy, Gifu University School of Medicine, Japan.
J Neurobiol. 1991 Apr;22(3):287-97. doi: 10.1002/neu.480220308.
The effect of 70-kD protein (P70, a specific protein found in cobalt-induced epileptogenic focus of rat cerebral cortex) on membrane properties was examined in identified neurons of the snail, Euhadra peliomphala, using the pressure injection method combined with the voltage-clamp technique. In neurons that normally exhibited spontaneous regular firing, intracellular injection of P70 elicited bursting activity and a negative slope resistance (NSR) region in their current-voltage (I-V) curve in a manner corresponding to the duration of its injection. These responses were suppressed by prior injection of an antibody to P70 into the neurons, and were markedly inhibited by a reduction of extracellular Na+ ions and the anticonvulsant agent phenytoin, but not by Co(2+)-substituted Ca(2+)-free saline. In addition, intracellularly applied P70 potentiated both bursting activity and the NSR induced by a Na channel activator, veratridine. However, prior application of a saturating dose of this activator occluded the effect of P70. These results suggest that P70 elicits a Na(+)-dependent negative resistance, which may contribute to the generation of bursting activity.