Persistent Sodium and Calcium Currents Cause Plateau Potentials in Motoneurons of Chronic Spinal Rats
Centre for Neuroscience, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2S2, Canada Submitted 11 March 2003; accepted in final form 21 April 2003 After chronic spinal cord injury motoneurons exhibit large plateau potentials (sustained depolarizations triggered by brief inputs) that play a primary role...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 2003-08, Vol.90 (2), p.857-869 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Centre for Neuroscience, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G
2S2, Canada
Submitted 11 March 2003;
accepted in final form 21 April 2003
After chronic spinal cord injury motoneurons exhibit large plateau
potentials (sustained depolarizations triggered by brief inputs) that play a
primary role in the development of muscle spasms and spasticity (Bennett et
al.
2001a,b).
The present study examined the voltage-gated persistent inward currents (PICs)
underlying these plateaus. Adult rats were spinalized at the S 2
sacral spinal level and after 2 mo, when spasticity developed, intracellular
recordings were made from motoneurons below the injury. For recording, the
whole sacrocaudal spinal cord was removed and maintained in vitro in normal
artificial cerebral spinal fluid (nACSF), without application of
neuromodulators. During a slow triangular voltage-clamp command (ramp) a PIC
was activated with a threshold of 54.2 ± 4.8 mV (similar to
plateau threshold), with a peak current of 2.88 ± 0.95 nA and produced
a pronounced negative-slope region in the VI relation. This
PIC was in part mediated by Cav1.3 L-type calcium channels because it was low
threshold and significantly reduced by 10 to 20 µM nimodipine or 400 µM
Cd 2 + . The PIC that remained during a calcium channel
blockade (in Cd 2 + ) was completely and rapidly blocked by
tetrodotoxin (TTX; 0.5 to 2 µM), and thus was a TTX-sensitive persistent
sodium current. This persistent sodium current was activated rapidly about 7
mV below the spike threshold (spike threshold 46.1 ± 4.5 mV),
contributed approximately 1/2 of the initial peak of the total PIC,
inactivated partly to contribute only approximately 1/3 of the sustained PIC
(at 5 to 10 s), and deactivated rapidly with hyperpolarization (250 ms), had a low but variable threshold (either slightly above or below
the spike threshold), contributed the other approximately 1/2 of the initial
peak of the total PIC (before TTX), did not usually inactivate with time
(contributed approximately two-thirds of the sustained PIC), and deactivated
slowly with hyperpolarization to rest (in >300 ms). In summary,
low-threshold persistent calcium (Cav1.3) and sodium currents spontaneously
develop in motoneurons of chronic spinal rats and these enable large, rapidly
activated plateaus that ultimately lead to spastici |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.00236.2003 |