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Volume 16, Number 15,
Issue of August 1, 1996
pp. 4733-4741
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Chemically Mediated Cross-Excitation in Rat Dorsal Root
Ganglia
Ron Amir and
Marshall Devor
Department of Cell and Animal Biology, Life Sciences Institute,
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Primary afferent neurons in mammalian dorsal root ganglia (DRGs)
are anatomically isolated from one another and are not synaptically
interconnected. As such, they are classically thought to function as
independent sensory communication elements. However, it has recently
been shown that most DRG neurons are transiently depolarized when axons
of neighboring neurons of the same ganglion are stimulated
repetitively. Here we further characterize this functional coupling. In
electrophysiological recordings made from excised rat DRGs, we found
that DRG ``cross-depolarization'' is excitatory in that it is
accompanied by an increase in the probability of spiking in response to
otherwise subthreshold test pulses delivered intracellularly.
Cross-depolarization contributes to this mutual cross-excitation.
However, at least as important a contribution comes from a net increase
in the neurons' input resistance (Rin)
triggered by the stimulation of neighboring neurons. This change in
Rin occurs even when cross-depolarization
is absent or is balanced out. The amplitude of cross-depolarization was
found to be voltage-dependent, with a reversal potential at
approximately 23 mV. Reversibility and the change in
Rin both indicate that activity of
neighboring neurons causes a membrane conductance change that is
chemically mediated. Thus, far from being isolated, most DRG neurons
participate in ongoing mutual interactions in which neuronal
excitability is continuously modulated by afferent spike activity. This
intraganglionic dialog appears to be mediated, at least in part, by an
activity-dependent diffusable substance(s) released from neuronal
somata and/or adjacent axons, and detected by neighboring cell somata
and/or axons.
Key words:
cross-excitation;
cross talk;
dorsal root
ganglion;
neuropathy;
nonsynaptic neurotransmission;
pain
INTRODUCTION
Spike activity in primary afferent neurons in
dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) in vivo excites adjacent passive
neurons that share the same DRG (Devor and Wall, 1990 ). In cells with
resting discharge, this is reflected in an acceleration of firing
during and shortly after tetanic stimulation of neighboring afferents.
Because synapses are virtually absent in DRGs and because adjacent
neurons are isolated in individual satellite cell sheaths (Lieberman,
1976 ), cell-to-cell interactions within the DRG cannot involve synaptic
or electrical junctions. The possibility that intraganglionic
communication is based on a novel, nonconventional neural mechanism and
that it has practical consequences for sensory conduction in health and
disease motivates a deeper understanding of the underlying process.
Electrophysiological recordings in Devor and Wall's (1990) in
vivo study were made from axon microfilaments teased from the
sciatic nerve at a distance from the DRG, and hence precluded
observation of the underlying membrane potential. With this limitation
in mind, Utzschneider et al. (1992) recorded intracellularly from rat
DRG neurons in vitro using a setup that permitted selective
tetanic stimulation of the axons of neighboring DRG neurons. They
observed a transient ``cross-depolarization'' in ~90% of the cells
sampled. Because the time course of the depolarization resembled that
of DRG cross-excitation in vivo, they inferred that the
depolarization is responsible for DRG cross-excitation. However, the
cells studied in vitro rarely had resting spike discharge,
and they did not generate discharge on depolarization. It was therefore
not clearly established whether DRG cross-excitation is a direct
consequence of cross-depolarization. In the present study, we have
combined intracellular subthreshold electrical stimulation of DRG
neurons with repetitive stimulation of their neighbors to ask whether
DRG cross-depolarization indeed increases the excitability of the
affected cells and, if so, what is the underlying mechanism.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animals and preparation. The experiments were
performed using 47 young rats (27 males, 20 females, 2-6 weeks old;
15-145 gm) of the Wistar-derived Sabra strain (Lutzky et al., 1984 ).
The animals were deeply anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium
(Nembutal, 60 mg/kg, i.p.) and euthanized by carotid exsanguination.
DRGs L4 or L5 were excised with their dorsal roots (DRs), the spinal
nerve, and a variable length of attached sciatic nerve. After ~1 hr
recovery in a modified Krebs' solution containing (in
mM): NaCl 124, NaHCO3 26, KCl 3, NaH2PO4 1.3, MgCl 2, dextrose 10, and saturated with 95% O2 and 5%
CO2, pH 7.4 (290-300 mOsm, 20°C), the ganglia
were mounted in a recording chamber and superfused with the Krebs'
solution (1-2 ml/min, 20 or 37°C) to which 2 mM CaCl2 was added. Sharp
glass microelectrodes were used for intracellular recording and
stimulation (20-40 M filled with 3 M KCl or 2 M K-acetate). The electrodes were passed through
the undissected DRG capsule, which is thin in young rats. All cells
reported here had a stable resting membrane potential more negative
than 40 mV and, after intracellular somatic or extracellular axonal
stimulation, an overshooting spike. Data were recorded digitally on
magnetic tape for off-line analysis.
Cross-depolarization and measurement of input resistance.
Three alternative protocols were used to deliver conditioning
stimulation trains (tetani) to the axons of neighboring DRG neurons
while avoiding the axon of the impaled neuron. In the first, electrical
pulses were delivered through an Ag/AgCl electrode pair placed across
the sciatic nerve (SN in Fig.
2A). Stimulus current was set just subthreshold for
the impaled neuron. By adjusting the polarity, it was usually possible
to activate a substantial proportion of the myelinated axons in the
nerve, as judged from the size of the compound action potential (CAP)
monitored through a suction electrode on the DR, without stimulating
the axon of the impaled neuron itself. In the second protocol, pulses
were delivered to the DR while the CAP was monitored from the sciatic
nerve (SDR in Fig. 5A). Finally, in
some experiments, the DR was split longitudinally and stimuli were
delivered to each branch separately (Fig. 3A). The branch
that when stimulated evoked a soma spike in the impaled neuron was
designated S1. The other branch, which contained only axons of
neighboring neurons and never evoked soma spikes, was designated S2. In
all protocols, stimuli were monophasic 0.1-0.2 msec square pulses, 7
mA, delivered singly or in 10 sec tetani at 10-500 Hz (usually 50 and/or 100 Hz). Two to sixteen repeated trials were run for each set of
stimulus parameters for a given cell. The stimulus parameters used were
not sufficient to activate unmyelinated axons as judged both from the
CAP and the failure to record evoked spikes from neurons with
unmyelinated axons.
Fig. 2.
Cross-depolarization in DRG neurons. A,
Sketch of one of the alternative experimental protocols (see Materials
and Methods). B, Intracellular voltage
(R&SIC) recording from an
AINF neuron in response to sub- and
suprathreshold pulses delivered through the intracellular micropipette
(SIC, 35 msec pulse) and the sciatic nerve
(SN, 0.1 msec pulse). The
SN -evoked spike is small because it did not
invade the soma (same calibration for both trials). C,
Cross-depolarization in this cell to 10 sec SN
tetani (dashed line) using stimuli subthreshold for the axon
of the impaled neuron, and frequency as indicated.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
Fig. 5.
Increased firing probability during
cross-depolarization is associated with increased
Rin. A, B, A third
experimental protocol, and an example of cross-depolarization evoked by
DR conditioning (SDR) subthreshold for the axon
of the impaled neuron. C, Left, Initially
subthreshold test pulses were delivered at 2 Hz through the
intracellular electrode (SIC, vertical voltage
deviations). Firing probability increased during conditioning (note
spikes during the peak of the cross-depolarization), but was unaffected
when an equivalent depolarizing shift was imposed by passing current
through the recording electrode. C, Right,
Probing with just suprathreshold test pulses (between
arrows) yielded no sign of excitability suppression. Upward
deflections before and after this time are just subthreshold test
pulses. D, Hyperpolarizing constant-current test pulses
reveal slightly increased Rin during DR
conditioning, but much decreased Rin during
an equivalent imposed depolarizing shift. E, Conditioning
also increased the probability of anodal break responses (using higher
amplitude hyperpolarizing test pulses than in D). An imposed
depolarizing shift of similar amplitude had no effect on firing
probability. Note the different change in
Rin during cross-depolarization versus
imposed depolarization. Sample voltage traces from time windows 1-6
are shown.
[View Larger Version of this Image (48K GIF file)]
Fig. 3.
Firing probability is increased during
cross-depolarization. A, A second experimental protocol. The
DR was split, and conditioning tetani were delivered to the half not
containing the axon of the impaled neuron (S2).
B, (Initially) subthreshold test pulses delivered at 2 Hz
(SIC) yielded firing probability of 0 action
potentials/5 sec epoch (#APs/5S). During conditioning,
firing probability increased, reaching the maximum possible of 10 APs/5
sec. C, Evoked responses during time windows 1-4 in
B. Each trace shows three consecutive sweeps.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
To test whether depolarization evoked by conditioning tetani is
accompanied by a change in whole-cell membrane conductance, the
amplifier bridge was carefully balanced, and constant current
hyperpolarizing pulses (0.5-2 nA, 20-100 msec, usually 80 msec)
were delivered intracellularly at 2 Hz. Input resistance
(Rin) was calculated from the early voltage
peak using Ohm's law.
Measurement of change in cell excitability. Attempts to
titrate changes in the actual current threshold for evoking spikes by
intracellular stimulation failed because individual evoked spikes often
caused prolonged changes in threshold. As an alternative, we monitored
changes in the proportion of test pulses that evoked a spike during 10 sec periods of fixed intensity 1 or 2 Hz intracellular stimulation
(``firing probability'' = n responses/10 or 20 test
stimuli). To check for excitation, stimulus intensity was initially set
just below (~15%) threshold. At this intensity, firing probability
before conditioning was 0/10 or 0/20. An increase in this value to
3/10 or 5/20 during 10 sec of conditioning was considered
statistically significant excitation (p < 0.05, one-tailed Fisher exact probabilities test). Suppression was
checked using test pulses at just threshold intensity (the minimal
current required to achieve a firing probability of 20/20) and asking
whether the firing probability decreased during or after the
conditioning tetanus (criterion for p < 0.05 was
15/20, one-tailed Fisher test). In some experiments, stimulus
intensity was set to place firing probability between 0/20 and 20/20.
In this way, excitation and suppression could be monitored in the same
trial by obtaining an increase or a decrease in firing probability
(two-tailed Fisher test). Finally, in a few experiments we examined the
effect of conditioning tetani on the probability of evoking spikes at
the termination of strong hyperpolarizing pulses (anodal break
responses).
Stimulus pulses were applied to the impaled cell through the amplifier
bridge circuit (5-40 msec depolarizing pulses, 0.1-7 nA, 1 or 2 Hz).
Pulse duration was always much longer than the chronaxie for these
cells (1.8 ± 0.4 msec; n = 25), and therefore
changes in firing probability could not have reflected subtle,
uncontrolled changes in effective pulse width.
Cell characterization. The preparation did not permit
determination of receptive fields. Instead, we categorized neurons by
axonal conduction velocity (CV) and the shape of the intracellularly
recorded spike (Fig. 1). CV was calculated by dividing
propagation distance by spike latency after single suprathreshold
stimulus pulses to the sciatic nerve or the DR. For present purposes,
if the CV was >1 m/sec, the neuron was categorized as having a
myelinated axon (A-neuron) regardless of temperature or the animal's
age.
Fig. 1.
A0 and
AINF spikes. A0
(A) and AINF (B) spikes
(direct and differentiated record) after axonal stimulation (*) just
below and just above threshold (single sweeps). Note the inflection on
the rising phase (downward pointing arrows) and on the
falling phase (B only, upward pointing arrow).
CV = 8.6 m/sec for A, 4.3 m/sec for B.
[View Larger Version of this Image (16K GIF file)]
Two criteria were set to identify that minority of neurons for which CV
was not determined. The first was the presence of an inflection on the
falling phase of the intracellularly recorded action potential
(determined using an analog signal differentiator). Spikes were evoked
by axonal stimulation or by 1 msec intracellular stimulus pulses.
Neurons with CV <1 m/sec (C-neurons) consistently had an inflection,
whereas neurons with CV >1 m/sec mostly had no inflection. A second
criterion was spike width (measured at 1/2 peak-to-peak amplitude).
C-neurons always had a spike width >2 msec; in A-neurons, spike width
was always 2 msec. Thus, cells that showed no inflection and/or had a
spike width 2 msec were categorized as A-neurons even if CV was not
established. The observed relationship between CV, spike inflection,
and spike width was consistent with previous findings in rat DRGs and
sensory ganglia of other vertebrates (Gorke and Pierau, 1980 ; Harper
and Lawson, 1985 ).
All means are given ±SD. Unless otherwise noted, statistical
evaluations are based on Mann-Whitney U tests and
significance of linear correlation coefficient (criterion
p < 0.05).
RESULTS
Cell sample and spike characteristics
This report is based on data from 136 DRG A-neurons, 48 with an
inflection on the spike falling phase (AINF
neurons) and 88 with no inflection (A0 neurons).
Some cells of both types also had an inflection on the spike rising
phase (arrows in Fig. 1A,B; also see Ito,
1959 ). A0 neurons had narrower and lower
amplitude spikes than AINF neurons, lower resting
membrane potential, and faster axonal CV. In both cell types, spike
amplitude and width were sensitive to bath temperature (20 or 37°C,
Table 1). The A0 group represents
predominantly A afferents, most of which are low-threshold
mechanoreceptors; the AINF group, containing
mostly A afferents, probably includes most of the myelinated
nociceptors (Gorke and Pierau, 1980 ; Koerber and Mendell, 1992 ).
Cross-depolarization
We challenged 95 DRG neurons (54 A0; 41 AINF) with 10 sec, 50 or 100 Hz conditioning
tetani to the axons of neighboring neurons. Nearly all (90 of 95, or
95%) showed cross-depolarization (Fig. 2C);
only five were unaffected. Depolarization began within 500 msec of
tetanus onset, increased monotonically at a gradually decreasing rate
[rising phase time constant = 2.6 ± 0.7 sec (mean ± SD)], and at the end of stimulation returned to baseline over 1.5-57
sec (recovery = 5.9 ± 4.6 sec). Peak depolarization amplitude
ranged from 0.5 to 25 mV. No such response occurred with the
microelectrode positioned extracellularly.
Responses were larger and more reliable using 100 Hz than 50 Hz tetani
(4.5 ± 4.0 mV vs 3.2 ± 3.1, n = 30, p < 0.01; 47 of 47 vs 74 of 82 responded,
p = 0.05). Still larger responses were obtained using
200 and 500 Hz tetani (Fig. 2C). Stimulation of whole DRs at
an intensity subthreshold for the axon of the impaled neuron yielded
somewhat larger and more reliable responses than stimulation of
longitudinally split DRs or stimulation of the sciatic nerve
(SN). All three sites, however, were effective
(Table 2). Responses were smoothly graded as stimulus
intensity was increased, with a direct correlation between
cross-depolarization amplitude and the size of the evoked CAP until
saturation (n = 4). Thus, the reason for the larger
responses using the whole DR protocol presumably was that a larger
number of adjacent neurons were stimulated. Neither the probability of
evoking responses nor response amplitude depended on cell type
(A0 vs AINF), axonal CV, or
bath temperature (p > 0.2 in each case). None
of the responding cells fired action potentials during the course of
cross-depolarization, although we have seen such crossed afterdischarge
on occasion in vitro. Other parameters of crossed
depolarization are provided by Utzschneider et al. (1992) .
Table 2.
Comparison of three sites for delivering conditioning
stimulation (all tetani were 50 Hz for 10 sec)
| Site of conditioning
stimulation |
Prevalence of crossdepolarization*
(n responses/n tested,
%) |
Cross-depolarization amplitude** (mV) |
|
| Sciatic nerve
(SN) |
9/11 (82%) |
2.9
± 2.4 |
|
| Dorsal root
(DR) |
p > 0.2
51/55 (93%) |
p > 0.2 3.4 ± 3.0 |
|
| Split
DR |
14/16 (88%) |
1.9 ± 1.4 |
|
|
*, Two-tailed Fisher test.
|
|
**, Two-tailed Mann-Whitney U test.
|
|
Changes in excitability during
conditioning-evoked cross-depolarization
Depolarization does not necessarily yield excitation. For example,
activation of a Cl conductance may depolarize
neurons, but it shunts membrane current, hence usually
suppressing cell excitability (Dudel and Kuffler, 1961 ). We
therefore checked the effect of conditioning tetani on cell
excitability directly using subthreshold intracellular test pulses.
During conditioning, most cells (53 of 57, or 93%) showed an increase
in their probability of being fired by these test pulses
(p < 0.001; Fig. 3). Indeed,
the change was large enough to reach our statistical criterion
individually in 41 of the 53 responding cells (77%). Both 50 and 100 Hz tetani were effective. Some cells fired occasional bursts of 2-3
spikes in response to test pulses. In these, the probability of
bursting increased, and the interval between spikes within a burst
decreased during cross-depolarization (Fig.
4A). Finally, seven cells were tested with
hyperpolarizing test pulses. In each there was an increase in anodal
break spiking, with firing probability rising from 0/20 to 5/20
(p < 0.05) in six of the seven cells (Fig.
5E). All of these observations indicate that
conditioning tetani evoke cross-excitation in vitro as they
do in vivo.
Fig. 4.
Cross-excitation. A, Increased firing
probability during cross-depolarization in a cell that fired bursts in
response to intracellular stimulus pulses (10 msec, 2 Hz). The
experimental protocol was as in Figure 5A. Conditioning,
with resulting cross-depolarization, caused an increase in firing
probability (bursts/5 sec). Spike bursts during time windows 1-4 (3 or
4 superimposed traces each) are shown below. Note that
spikes in A and in subsequent figures are truncated.
B, Conditioning tetani may produce cross-excitation even
without triggering cross-depolarization. The experimental protocol was
as in Figure 3. Conditioning did not trigger cross-depolarization in
this AINF neuron (top), but
nonetheless produced cross-excitation (bottom). Firing
probability, initially set at 5/20, increased to 13/20 during the
conditioning tetanus (p < 0.05). Downward
deflections are shock artifacts, and upward deflections are spikes
(note the prolonged postspike AHPs).
[View Larger Version of this Image (32K GIF file)]
Spike discharge in a small proportion (~2%) of DRG neurons studied
in vivo was suppressed during periods of tetanic stimulation
of their neighbors (Devor and Wall, 1990 ). To test for such
cross-suppression in vitro, we applied intracellular test
pulses that were near or just suprathreshold. As expected, in most
cells cross-depolarization caused firing probability either to increase
(7 of 8 cells with initial firing probability set <20/20) or to remain
unchanged (15 of 16 cells with initial firing probability = 20/20;
Figs. 4B, 5C). However, two cells were
exceptional. In one, firing probability fell slightly during the
conditioning tetanus (from 5/20 to 2/20, p > 0.2), and
in the other it fell significantly (from 20/20 to 10/20,
p < 0.01). Thus, some cells appear to show
cross-suppression.
Relation between cross-depolarization and firing probability
Although increased firing probability coincided with
cross-depolarization, there was no significant correlation between
their magnitudes (r = 0.1, p > 0.2).
For example, firing probability sometimes increased even when there was
no cross-depolarization (Fig. 4B). This suggests that
depolarization per se is not the only key parameter controlling firing
probability. To check this directly, we used two alternative
strategies. In the first, we monitored firing probability while
imposing 10 sec depolarizing current steps through the microelectrode.
For most of the cells sampled (9 of 14), test pulses were set so that
during the imposed depolarization, firing probability remained 0/20.
Then, in a separate trial, conditioning tetani were given yielding the
same level of depolarization. In all 14 cells, firing probability
increased, reaching 5/20 in 12 (p < 0.005).
Thus, overall, cross-depolarization evoked a significantly larger
increase than did imposed depolarization of equal amplitude (Fig.
5C, Table 3). Cross-depolarization also
increased the probability of obtaining anodal break spikes more than
equivalent imposed depolarizing steps did (n = 5; Fig.
5E).
The second strategy was to balance out cross-depolarization with
hyperpolarizing current applied through the microelectrode during
conditioning. All five cells tested in this way continued to show
increased firing probability despite the absence of depolarization
(Fig. 6C). These results prompted us to ask
whether firing probability is affected by a change in the conductance
of the cell membrane as well as by membrane depolarization.
Fig. 6.
Balancing out cross-depolarization did not abolish
cross-excitation. A, Hyperpolarizing test pulses (1 nA, 20 msec, 2 Hz) were applied during cross-depolarization (left
trace) and indicated ~10% increase in
Rin from a control level of 7 M .
Identical test pulses revealed a 25% decrease in
Rin when depolarization of similar
amplitude was imposed intracellularly (right trace).
B, Cross-depolarization was balanced out with intracellular
hyperpolarizing current. This revealed a 35% increase in
Rin during conditioning at 50 Hz
(left) and a 45% increase during conditioning at 100 Hz
(right). C, Intracellular hyperpolarizing test
pulses initially 25% subthreshold for anodal break spikes (1.3 nA, 85 msec, 2 Hz) evoked such spikes during 50 Hz (left) and 100 Hz (right) conditioning tetani (upward deflections, spikes
truncated). Cross-depolarization was quenched during these trials.
Rin increased ~55% and 75%,
respectively.
[View Larger Version of this Image (75K GIF file)]
Conductance change associated with conditioning tetani
Constant current hyperpolarizing pulses were used to
monitor cell Rin (Figs. 5, 6). In some of
the cells, there was a voltage sag after an initial early peak (Fig.
5E). This sag represents inward rectification. Measurements
were made at the voltage peak to avoid possible effects of conditioning
on the process responsible for the sag. However, we confirmed that had
measurements been made at the end of the hyperpolarizing pulse, the
basic conclusions would not have been materially altered. Inward
rectification in DRG cells has been described by others and will not be
commented on further here (Gorke and Pierau, 1980 ; Belmonte and
Gallego, 1983 ; Harper and Lawson, 1985 ). We examined 52 neurons, all
showing cross-depolarization (mean 4.5 ± 3.7 mV, range 0.5-18
mV). Results were variable. In 19 cells (37%), conditioning tetani had
no effect on Rin despite cross-depolarization of
as much as 4.5 mV. In 23 cells (44%), Rin
decreased (by a maximum of 10.3 ± 7.5%, range 2-28%) and in 10 (19%) it increased (by 8.8 ± 6.4, range 1-22%). The time course
paralleled that of the cross-depolarization.
To evaluate how much of the change in Rin
was attributable to membrane depolarization and how much to other
effects of conditioning, we imposed equivalent 10 sec depolarizing
steps. These almost always yielded a decrease in
Rin (outward rectification) even when
cross-depolarization yielded an increase. Subtracting this
depolarization-evoked change in Rin from
the change produced by conditioning tetani nearly always yielded a net
increase in Rin (38 of 42 cells,
Figs. 5D,E and 6A,
Rin difference in Table 3). In these
cells, there was a significant positive correlation between the
magnitude of the Rin increase and the
magnitude of cross-depolarization ( Rin
difference vs cross-depolarization, r = 0.37, p < 0.05, Table 3). There also was a significant
correlation between the magnitude of the
Rin increase and the degree of
cross-excitation ( Rin difference vs firing probability, r = 0.77, p < 0.05, Table 3). Two cells showed a net decrease in
Rin and two showed no change.
We also tried balancing out cross-depolarization with hyperpolarizing
current. Here, conditioning almost always yielded increased
Rin (15 of 18 cells tested, mean 26.9 ± 21.9%, Fig. 6B). In the three exceptional cells,
Rin decreased (by 9, 12, and 14%).
Likewise, in four cells in which conditioning increased the probability
of anodal break spikes despite quenching of cross-depolarization, there
was an increase in Rin (Fig.
6C). Changes in Rin were the
same for A0 and AINF
neurons (p > 0.2, Table 3). There was no
significant correlation between the change in
Rin and either CV (r = 0.14, p > 0.2) or resting membrane potential
(r = 0.08, p > 0.2).
Reversal of cross-depolarization
The observation that conditioning tetani increased
Rin even when membrane potential was held
constant implies that they affect ion channels via a chemical
mediator(s). This was confirmed by measuring the amplitude of cross
depolarization while systematically varying the membrane potential.
Hyperpolarization usually increased cross-depolarization amplitude
(15/18). Unfortunately, significant depolarization generally triggered
membrane instability and/or failure of recovery to rest. However, in
nine neurons part of the trajectory was revealed, including four
neurons in which the response to conditioning reversed and became
hyperpolarizatory (by linear interpolation at mean = 19.9 mV).
In two of these, closely spaced data points were obtained near the
reversal potential, which was at 23 mV in both cases (Fig.
7).
Fig. 7.
Reversal of cross-depolarization.
Right, Peak amplitude of voltage shift evoked by 10 sec, 50 Hz conditioning tetani (Vtet., ordinate) as a function of
membrane holding potential (Vm). Symbols
identify five neurons, two of which reversed. Traces on the
left are from cell ( ). Resting potentials = 55 mV
( ), 54 mV ( ), 61 mV(+), 53 mV ( ), 56mV
( ).
[View Larger Version of this Image (14K GIF file)]
Spike shape during conditioning tetani
In most cells, the action potential evoked by axonal or
intracellular stimulation was followed by an afterhyperpolarization
(AHP), usually brief (<20 msec), but sometimes prolonged (up to
several seconds). During conditioning tetani, in the presence of
cross-depolarization or in its absence, the brief AHP amplitude
decreased (34.8 ± 10.3%, n = 11), following a
time course that paralleled that of cross-depolarization. There was
also a small delay in the falling phase of the spike (by 13.0 ± 6.7%, n = 11, Fig. 8). Both changes
imply a reduction in K+ current. There was no
consistent change in spike amplitude, and there was no noticeable
effect on the prolonged AHP when present.
Fig. 8.
Spike AHP decreases during conditioning tetani (10 sec, 100 Hz), with kinetics resembling those of cross-depolarization.
In the record shown, cross-depolarization was quenched. Traces in
B show spike shape before (pre) and
during conditioning. Note delay in spike falling phase
during conditioning. The horizontal dashed line indicates
the resting membrane potential.
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
Despite the fact that primary sensory neurons in mammalian
DRGs are anatomically isolated from one another with no synaptic
interconnections, our data indicate that they are nearly all coupled in
an activity-dependent manner. Recording from excised rat DRG A-neurons
in vitro, we confirmed the finding of Utzschneider et al.
(1992) that impulse activity evokes cross-depolarization of passive
neighbors. The depolarization proved to be excitatory as evidenced by
the appearance of spike responses to previously subthreshold test
pulses. DRG cross-excitation is associated with an increase in
Rin. Presumably, both the
cross-depolarization and the increase in
Rin contribute to cross-excitation.
Relation of cross-excitation to cross-depolarization and increased
Rin
Cross-depolarization is expected to be excitatory because it
brings the cell closer to its firing threshold. However, there were
several indications that this is only one of the mechanisms underlying
cross-excitation. First, cells showed a smaller increase in firing
probability when they were depolarized by an intracellular voltage step
than when cross-depolarization of the same amplitude was evoked by
conditioning tetani. Second, there was no correlation between the
magnitude of the cross-depolarization and the increase in firing
probability. We documented increased firing probability in cells, the
membrane potential of which did not change in response to tetanic
stimulation of neighbors, or in which cross-depolarization was quenched
with applied hyperpolarizing current. In a few cases, conditioning
increased firing probability during periods when the cell was actually
hyperpolarized as a result of spike-evoked AHP (5/41 cells). The
apparent reason for these anomalies is that even without a change in
membrane potential, conditioning stimuli increase
Rin, rendering test pulses more effective.
Indeed, there was a significant positive correlation between the net
increase in Rin and cell excitability. We
conclude that, typically, both the cross-depolarization and the
increase in Rin triggered by conditioning
tetani contribute to mutual cross-excitation within DRGs.
Mechanism of cross-depolarization
Synaptic contacts are vanishingly rare in DRGs, if they exist at
all (Lieberman, 1976 ; Kayahara et al., 1981 ; Pannese, 1981 ).
Furthermore, with only infrequent exceptions (Pannese et al., 1991 ),
each neuron in the DRG is wrapped in an individual satellite cell
sheath (Lieberman, 1976 ; Pannese, 1981 ). This prevents close apposition
between adjacent neurons in the ganglion, restricting the possibility
of electrical contact through gap junctions and other ephaptic
interactions. There remain two obvious candidate communication
mechanisms: (1) activity-evoked elevation of extracellular
K+ concentration
([K+]o) and (2)
nonsynaptic release of a chemical mediator(s). By nonsynaptic chemical
communication, we envisage the release of mediator molecules from cell
somata and/or intraganglionic axons (or axon varicosities), in the
absence of a closely apposed postsynaptic membrane, and their diffusion
from the release site to a relatively distant receptive membrane. A
priori, both of these candidate mechanisms are possible, and they are
not mutually exclusive.
With respect to K+ coupling, Utzschneider et al.
(1992) demonstrated doubling of the baseline 3 mM
[K+]o in rat DRGs
following conditioning tetani of the sort used here (also see Deschenes
and Feltz, 1976 ). An increase in
[K+]o in the bulk
extracellular medium is expected to equilibrate through the seam that
separates adjacent ensheathing satellite cells (Shinder and Devor,
1994 ) and through the thin satellite cell sheath itself, and hence to
present a similar concentration change to the soma surface. Dye and
electrical coupling has been demonstrated among satellite cells in
autonomic ganglia (Maudlej and Hanani, 1992 ). If this also occurs in
DRGs, then ionic equilibration through this glial syncitium (Karwosky
et al., 1989 ; Brunet and Jirounek, 1994 ) could also contribute to the
spread of K+ depolarization. Applying the Goldman
(constant field) equations, we calculate that an increase in
[K+]o from 3 to 6 mM is expected to evoke a depolarization of
~8.5 mV (Hille, 1992 ). This is well within the range of
cross-depolarization amplitudes observed in our DRG cells.
Conditions within DRGs also permit nonsynaptic chemically mediated
coupling. Release of a number of candidate mediators from DRGs has been
documented. These include a range of neuropeptides, excitatory amino
acids, eicosanoids, and nitric oxide (references in Shinder and Devor,
1994 ). In some instances, neurotransmitter/peptide-containing axonal
``baskets'' (``glomeruli,'' ``pericellular nests'') surround the
perineuronal satellite cell sheath in a manner that should favor
nonsynaptic chemical interactions (Matsuda and Uehara, 1981 ; Kuramoto
et al., 1990 ; Devor et al., 1995 ). As for reception of the chemical
signal, DRG neurons are known to be invested with a wealth of receptors
for the above and other neurotransmitters (references in Shinder and
Devor, 1994 ). Small molecules in the bulk extracellular space have
access to the soma membrane, especially in the axon hillock region by
diffusion through the seam that separates adjacent ensheathing
satellite cells (Shinder and Devor, 1994 ). Thus, in principle,
molecules of a chemical mediator released during the conditioning
tetanus could diffuse into the bulk extracellular medium in the DRG and
from there gain access to receptors on neighboring DRG cells.
The observed changes in spike shape during conditioning are consistent
with both the [K+]o and
the neurotransmitter hypotheses. The falling phase of spikes and the
brief AHP reflect the opening of delayed rectifier
K+ channels. Thus, the increase in spike duration
and the reduction in AHP amplitude during conditioning could result
from a reduction in K+ driving force because of
increased [K+]o.
Likewise, the changes could be attributable to a transmitter-mediated
decrease in K+ conductance.
How can we chose between these two coupling options? One major
distinction is the predicted effect on membrane conductance as measured
by Rin. Neurotransmitters open (or close)
ion channels and hence (usually) change Rin
(Hille, 1992 ). Nernstian depolarization by elevated
[K+]o, on the other hand,
is not expected to yield a conductance change. As noted, we
consistently observed a change in Rin,
favoring the neurotransmitter hypothesis. It is true that
K+-evoked depolarization may secondarily change
(decrease) Rin by activating outward
rectifying K+ channels. However, we found that
the net effect of conditioning was to increase
Rin. Only 2 cells out of 42 showed a net
decrease. A second piece of evidence favoring a chemical mediator is
the observation that cross-depolarization can be reversed by shifting
the membrane potential far enough in the positive direction.
Classically, mediators affect the opening of ion channels, but the
direction of ion flow through the channels is determined by the
electrochemical gradient present. Hence, flow direction is reversible
if ion channels are involved.
We know of only one report in which K+ ions were
seen to affect membrane conductance directly. Rudomin et al. (1979)
showed in molluscan neurons that depolarization evoked by increased
[K+]o can trigger a small
decrease in Rin over and above that
produced by the depolarization-evoked membrane rectification. The
current could not be reversed, and its mechanism was not determined.
Because cross-depolarization is associated with increased
Rin and does reverse, we are
clearly not dealing with the same phenomenon. Taken together, all of
these observations argue in favor of chemically mediated coupling,
although they do not rule out a
[K+]o component as well.
At present, we are unable to apportion the amplitude of
cross-excitation between the effects of increased
[K+]o and those of the
putative chemical mediator(s).
Candidate chemical mediators
Our data constrain the possible range of candidate mediators of
DRG cross-excitation, although identification will have to await
completion of the appropriate pharmacological manipulations under
voltage clamp. First, the mediator probably depolarizes the membrane
and attenuates K+ current, although this is
uncertain because of the unknown contribution of
[K+]o. Second, it
triggers increased Rin and elevated
excitability. A priori, the most likely cause for this constellation of
changes is closure of K+ channels (Hille, 1992 ).
However, because the response reverses at 23 mV, well positive of the
K+ battery, another ionic conductance(s) must be
involved (Brown et al., 1971 ). The Cl battery
in DRG neurons, on the other hand, is not far from the reversal
potential, and GABAA receptors, which couple to
Cl channels, are known to be expressed by DRG
neurons (Deschenes et al., 1976 ; Gallagher et al., 1978 ). However,
GABAA receptor activation would be expected to
decrease, not increase, Rin. No other
single ionic conductance meets all of the known constraints. Possible
ways out of this dilemma are if more than one ion passes through a
single channel (Callahan and Korn, 1994 ) or if the mediator affects
more than one channel type. Indeed, there may be more than one mediator
involved.
Several neuropeptides, including substance P, CCK, and CGRP, evoke
depolarization with increased Rin when
applied to mammalian myenteric ganglion cells (Nemeth et al., 1985 ;
Palmer et al., 1986 ; Hanani et al., 1988 ), but these are found mostly
in small-diameter neurons, most of which are C-neurons (Lawson, 1992 ).
In the present study, the mediator is almost certainly associated with
A-neurons, as the conditioning tetani used to evoke cross-excitation
drove few, if any, C-neurons. A more likely possibility is
serotonin/5HT. This has the appropriate membrane effects (Christian et
al., 1989 ; Todorovic and Anderson, 1990 ) and is detectable
histologically in rat DRG, albeit only with special enhancement
procedures and mostly in small neurons (Lawson, 1992 ). Another
possibility is ATP, which is abundant in rat DRG A-cells. External
application of ATP normally induces depolarization with decreased
Rin (Krishtal et al., 1988 ; Bean et al.,
1990 ). However, Tokimasa et al. (1993, their Fig. 3) reported recently
that in bullfrog DRG A-cells, ATP application blocks a
K+ conductance yielding increased
Rin.
Functional implications of DRG cross-excitation in health
and disease
Our results indicate that, far from being isolated as classically
believed, most DRG neurons participate in ongoing mutual interactions
in which neuronal excitability is continuously modulated by afferent
spike activity in neighboring neurons. This dialog appears to be
mediated, at least in part, by an activity-dependent diffusable
substance(s) released from neuronal somata and/or adjacent axons, and
detected by neighboring cell somata and/or axons. In vitro
in DRGs taken from nerve-intact animals, the mutual interaction is
reflected in subthreshold cross-depolarization and increased firing
probability. In vivo, however, particularly in the
presence of nerve injury, it may occasion accelerated spontaneous
firing and, in some cells, recruitment of activity in silent neurons
(Devor and Wall, 1990 ).
Extrapolating from these observations, one can imagine how, under
conditions of pathological afferent hyperexcitability, excitatory
coupling among DRG neurons could enter a positive feedback mode. For
example, an afferent volley from the skin might evoke cross-excitation
in the DRG. The resulting increase in intrinsic DRG activity would then
cross-excite still more DRG cells. In principle, reiteration of this
process could bring about an excitatory ``explosion,'' involving a
large proportion of the ganglion. The expected result is the sort of
paroxysmal, electric shock-like sensation characteristic of certain
neuropathic pain conditions (White and Sweet, 1969 ; Rappaport and
Devor, 1994 ). If cross-excitation occurs in other primary sensory
ganglia, it could contribute to corresponding functional pathologies
(e.g., tinitus, syncope, etc.).
It is not obvious to us what role subthreshold DRG
cross-excitation might play in the normal economy of sensory
systems. Its prevalence in DRGs in nerve-intact animals, however,
suggests that it might play some yet-to-be-defined role, perhaps of a
metabolic nature, in communication or coordination among sensory
neurons sharing a particular ganglion. For example, cross-excitation
might provide each neuron in the ganglion with information about the
net amount of spike activity being generated in its dermatome. Such
information might be used to help regulate the synthesis and transport
of transducer molecules, and hence to stabilize, over time, the
sensitivity of the peripheral sensory ending.
FOOTNOTES
Received Jan. 23, 1996; revised May 3, 1996; accepted May 13, 1996.
This work was supported by grants from the Israel Ministry of Science
and Arts, the United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation, and
the German-Israeli Foundation for Research and Development. We thank J. Kocsis, P. D. Wall, and Y. Yarom for useful comments on this
manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Marshall Devor, Department of
Cell and Animal Biology, Life Sciences Institute, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel.
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