The Journal of Neuroscience, February 15, 1998, 18(4):1602-1612
The Pharmacology and Roles of two K+ Channels in
Motor Pattern Generation in the Xenopus Embryo
Frederick M.
Kuenzi and
Nicholas
Dale
School of Biomedical Sciences, University of St. Andrews, St.
Andrews, Fife KY16 9TS, United Kingdom
The spinal neurons of the Xenopus embryo that
participate in the swimming motor pattern possess two kinetically
distinct sets of potassium currents: the fast
IKf and sodium-dependent
IKNa, which together constitute
~80% of the outward current; and the slow
IKs, which constitutes the remainder.
To study their respective roles in cell excitability and the swimming
pattern, we have characterized their pharmacological properties.
Catechol selectively blocked the fast potassium currents
(IC50, ~10 µM). The block was
voltage-dependent, with partial unblocking occurring at positive
voltages.
-Dendrotoxin and dendrotoxin-I selectively blocked the
slow potassium current. Catechol and the dendrotoxins had different
effects on membrane excitability: catechol caused spike broadening but
had little effect on repetitive firing, whereas both dendrotoxins
markedly increased repetitive firing without affecting spike width. By applying these agents to the whole embryo, we tested the role of the
fast and slow currents in motor pattern generation. Catechol had little
effect on fictive swimming, suggesting that the fast K+ currents are not critical to circuit operation.
However, dendrotoxin disrupted swimming early in the episode and
increased the duration of ventral root bursts. The slow
K+ current, which is a minor component of the total
outward current, thus appears to play an important role in motor
pattern generation.
Key words:
potassium channels; catechol; dendrotoxin; 4-aminopyridine; Xenopus; central pattern generator; neural
model; repetitive firing
Copyright © 1998 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/98/1841602-11$05.00/0