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Volume 16, Number 13,
Issue of July 1, 1996
pp. 4089-4101
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
The Role of K+ Currents in Frequency-Dependent Spike
Broadening in Aplysia R20 Neurons: A Dynamic-Clamp
Analysis
Received March 1, 1996; revised April 16, 1996; accepted April 18, 1996.
Minghong Ma1, 3, 4 and
John Koester1, 2, 4
1 Center for Neurobiology and Behavior,
2 Department of Psychiatry, and 3 Department of
Physiology and Cellular Biophysics, College of Physicians and Surgeons,
Columbia University, and 4 The New York State Psychiatric
Institute, New York, New York 10032
The R20 neurons of Aplysia exhibit frequency-dependent
spike broadening. Previously, we had used two-electrode voltage clamp
to examine the mechanisms of this spike broadening (). We identified three K+ currents that mediate
action-potential repolarization: a transient A-type K+
current (IAdepol), a delayed rectifier current
(IK-V), and a Ca2+-sensitive
K+ current (IK-Ca). A major
constraint in that study was the lack of completely selective blockers
for IAdepol and IK-V,
resulting in an inability to assess directly the effects of their
activation and inactivation on spike broadening. In the present study,
the dynamic-clamp technique, which employs computer simulation to
inject biologically realistic currents into a cell under current-clamp
conditions (,b), was used either to block
IAdepol or IK-V or to
modify their inactivation properties.
The data in this paper, together with earlier results, lead to the
following hypothesis for the mechanism of spike broadening in the R20
cells. As the spike train progresses, the primary responsibility for
spike repolarization gradually shifts from
IAdepol to IK-V to
IK-Ca. This sequence can be explained on the
basis of the relative rates of activation and inactivation of each
current with respect to the constantly changing spike durations, the
cumulative inactivation of IAdepol and
IK-V, and the progressive potentiation of
IK-Ca. Positive feedback interactions between
spike broadening and inactivation contribute to the cumulative
inactivation of both IAdepol and
IK-V. The data also illustrate that when two or
more currents have similar driving forces and partially overlapping
activation characteristics, selectively blocking one current under
current-clamp conditions can lead to a significant underestimate of its
normal physiological importance.
Key words:
spike broadening;
dynamic clamp;
K+ current;
IAdepol;
inactivation;
Aplysia;
R20
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