Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 10, 3208-3218, Copyright © 1990 by Society for Neuroscience
Cyclic AMP-induced slow inward current: its synaptic manifestation in Aplysia neurons
J Kehoe
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie, Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, France.
Three presynaptic neurons, monosynaptically connected to the medial cells
of the pleural ganglion of Aplysia californica and previously shown to
elicit cAMP-mediated diminutions in K conductance in those cells (Kehoe,
1985a, b), were shown to elicit still another slow synaptic current that
resembles the cAMP-induced cationic current described in the preceding
paper (Kehoe, 1990). The synaptic current elicited by these so-called
"blocking" neurons was compared, in hyperpolarized medial cells, with the
current induced by an intracellular injection of cAMP. It was found that
(1) both currents show an outward rectification, (2) both currents are
enhanced and prolonged by phosphodiesterase inhibitors (as well as by
intracellular acidification of the postsynaptic neuron and by bath-applied
caffeine), and (3) both currents react in the same way to changes in (Ca)0,
showing a net enhancement when (Ca)0 is reduced and, conversely, a marked
diminution when extracellular (Ca)0 is increased. The increase in amplitude
of the slow synaptic current in low-Ca solutions and its decrease in
high-Ca seawater are contrary to the changes that would be expected from
the known effects of Ca on transmitter release at chemical synapses,
revealing the overriding importance of the postsynaptic block by Ca. The
data presented here strongly suggest that both the slow inward current and
the diminutions in K conductance induced by the firing of the 3 blocking
neurons are mediated by cAMP. Like the 2 cAMP-mediated diminutions in K
conductance (Kehoe, 1985a, b), the cAMP-activated slow inward current,
because of its atypical voltage dependence, both depolarizes the medial
cell and causes an increase in its input resistance at resting potential.
Consequently, the synaptically activated increase in cAMP prolongs the
excitability of the medial cells for up to tens of seconds after the end of
presynaptic firing.