Connors B W, Kriegstein A R
J Neurosci. 1986 Jan;6(1):164-77. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.06-01-00164.1986.
The electrophysiological properties of neurons in the three-layered dorsal cortex of the turtle, Pseudemys scripta elegans, have been studied in vitro. Intracellular recordings suggested two distinct classes of neuronal behavior. Cell labeling with either Lucifer Yellow or horseradish peroxidase revealed that these behaviors correlated with the two morphological classes of cortical neurons: pyramidal cells and stellate cells. Examination of Golgi-stained neurons of dorsal cortex did not uncover any other obvious classes. Pyramidal cells had their somata in the cell layer, and extended several densely spined apical dendrites through the molecular layer to the pia. They also had spiny basilar dendrites directed through the subcellular layer toward the ependymal border. Physiologically, pyramidal cells had relatively prolonged action potentials that showed marked frequency adaptation during a sustained suprathreshold current pulse. Their most striking characteristic was a tendency to fire two discrete sizes of action potential, one small (mean = 34 mV) and of relatively low threshold, the other large (mean = 76 mV) and of higher threshold. We hypothesize that at least some small spikes arise from distal dendritic sites, whereas large spikes are somatically generated. Both spikes were tetrodotoxin-sensitive, although calcium-dependent electrogenesis occurred when potassium channels were blocked. In contrast to pyramidal cells, the somata of stellate cells were found in the molecular and subcellular zones. Their dendrites tended to be horizontally oriented and spine-free. Stellate cells had relatively brief action potentials, each of which was followed by a large but short-lasting undershoot of membrane potential. Stellate cells showed little or no spike frequency adaptation. Spike amplitudes were always relatively uniform and large (mean = 73 mV). Thus, in the dorsal cortex of turtles, the pyramidal cells, which are projection neurons, and stellate cells, which are local GABAergic inhibitory neurons, have distinctly different membrane characteristics. The physiological properties of the two types of turtle cortical neurons are very similar to their counterparts in cortical structures of the mammalian telencephalon.
对锦龟(Pseudemys scripta elegans)三层背侧皮层神经元的电生理特性进行了体外研究。细胞内记录显示出两类不同的神经元行为。用荧光黄或辣根过氧化物酶进行细胞标记表明,这些行为与皮层神经元的两种形态学类型相关:锥体细胞和星状细胞。对背侧皮层的高尔基染色神经元检查未发现任何其他明显类型。锥体细胞的胞体位于细胞层,其几条密集有棘的顶端树突穿过分子层延伸至软脑膜。它们还有有棘的基底树突,穿过亚细胞层指向室管膜边界。在生理上,锥体细胞具有相对较长的动作电位,在持续的阈上电流脉冲期间表现出明显的频率适应性。它们最显著的特征是倾向于发放两种不同大小的动作电位,一种较小(平均 = 34 mV)且阈值相对较低,另一种较大(平均 = 76 mV)且阈值较高。我们推测至少一些小的尖峰来自树突远端部位,而大的尖峰是在胞体产生的。两种尖峰均对河豚毒素敏感,尽管当钾通道被阻断时会发生钙依赖性电发生。与锥体细胞相反,星状细胞的胞体位于分子层和亚细胞区。它们的树突倾向于水平取向且无棘。星状细胞具有相对短暂的动作电位,每个动作电位之后是膜电位的一个大但持续时间短的负后电位。星状细胞几乎没有或没有尖峰频率适应性。尖峰幅度总是相对均匀且较大(平均 = 73 mV)。因此,在龟的背侧皮层中,作为投射神经元的锥体细胞和作为局部GABA能抑制性神经元的星状细胞具有明显不同的膜特性。这两种龟皮层神经元的生理特性与其在哺乳动物端脑皮层结构中的对应物非常相似。