Centro Interdisciplinario de Neurociencia de Valparaíso (CINV) and Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Valparaíso, Valparaíso, Chile.
J Neurophysiol. 2012 Dec;108(11):3009-23. doi: 10.1152/jn.01033.2011. Epub 2012 Sep 5.
Mammalian peripheral cold thermoreceptors respond to cooling of their sensory endings with an increase in firing rate and modification of their discharge pattern. We recently showed that cultured trigeminal cold-sensitive (CS) neurons express a prominent hyperpolarization-activated current (I(h)), mainly carried by HCN1 channels, supporting subthreshold resonance in the soma without participating in the response to acute cooling. However, peripheral pharmacological blockade of I(h), or characterization of HCN1(-/-) mice, reveals a deficit in acute cold detection. Here we investigated the role of I(h) in CS nerve endings, where cold sensory transduction actually takes place. Corneal CS nerve endings in mice show a rhythmic spiking activity at neutral skin temperature that switches to bursting mode when the temperature is lowered. I(h) blockers ZD7288 and ivabradine alter firing patterns of CS nerve endings, lengthening interspike intervals and inducing bursts at neutral skin temperature. We characterized the CS nerve endings from HCN1(-/-) mouse corneas and found that they behave similar to wild type, although with a lower slope in the firing frequency vs. temperature relationship, thus explaining the deficit in cold perception of HCN1(-/-) mice. The firing pattern of nerve endings from HCN1(-/-) mice was also affected by ZD7288, which we attribute to the presence of HCN2 channels in the place of HCN1. Mathematical modeling shows that the firing phenotype of CS nerve endings from HCN1(-/-) mice can be reproduced by replacing HCN1 channels with the slower HCN2 channels rather than by abolishing I(h). We propose that I(h) carried by HCN1 channels helps tune the frequency of the oscillation and the length of bursts underlying regular spiking in cold thermoreceptors, having important implications for neural coding of cold sensation.
哺乳动物外周冷感受器对其感觉末梢的冷却反应表现为放电频率的增加和放电模式的改变。我们最近的研究表明,培养的三叉神经冷敏感(CS)神经元表达一种明显的超极化激活电流(I(h)),主要由 HCN1 通道携带,在胞体中支持亚阈共振,而不参与对急性冷却的反应。然而,外周药理学阻断 I(h)或 HCN1(-/-) 小鼠的特征表明,急性冷检测存在缺陷。在这里,我们研究了 I(h)在 CS 神经末梢中的作用,冷感觉转导实际上发生在 CS 神经末梢。在中性皮肤温度下,角膜 CS 神经末梢显示出有节奏的放电活动,当温度降低时,切换到爆发模式。I(h)阻断剂 ZD7288 和 ivabradine 改变 CS 神经末梢的放电模式,延长了尖峰间隔,并在中性皮肤温度下诱导爆发。我们对 HCN1(-/-)小鼠角膜 CS 神经末梢进行了特征描述,发现它们的行为与野生型相似,尽管在放电频率与温度的关系中斜率较低,这解释了 HCN1(-/-) 小鼠在冷感觉缺失的原因。ZD7288 也影响了 HCN1(-/-) 小鼠神经末梢的放电模式,我们认为这是由于 HCN2 通道存在于 HCN1 通道的位置。数学模型表明,用较慢的 HCN2 通道取代 HCN1 通道可以再现 HCN1(-/-) 小鼠 CS 神经末梢的放电表型,而不是消除 I(h)。我们提出,HCN1 通道携带的 I(h)有助于调节冷感受器中基础规则放电的振荡频率和爆发长度,这对冷感觉的神经编码具有重要意义。