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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 1998, 18(15):6009-6025
The Mormyrid Electrosensory Lobe In Vitro: Physiology
and Pharmacology of Cells and Circuits
Kirsty
Grant1,
Yoshiko
Sugawara2,
Leonel
Gómez1,
Victor
Z.
Han3, and
Curtis C.
Bell3
1 Institut Alfred Fessard, Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique, 91190 Gif sur Yvette, France,
2 Department of Physiology, Teikyo University School of
Medicine, Kaga 2-11-1, Itabashi-ku, Tokyo 173, Japan, and
3 Neurological Sciences Institute, Oregon Health Science
University, Portland, Oregon 97209
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ABSTRACT |
This paper is concerned with the electrosensory lobe (ELL) of
mormyrid electric fish as examined in in vitro slices.
Intracellular recordings from morphologically identified cells and
field potential recordings were used to characterize the physiology and
pharmacology of ELL cells. Most intracellular recordings were from the
Purkinje-like interneurons that are known as medium ganglion cells and
from the two types of efferent neurons, large ganglion and large
fusiform cells. Stimulation of primary afferent fibers elicits both
excitatory and inhibitory effects in these cells, with the excitatory
effects being mediated by both the AMPA and NMDA types of glutamate
receptors and the inhibitory effects being mediated by both
GABAA and glycine receptors. Parallel-fiber stimulation
evokes an EPSP-IPSP sequence, with the EPSPs being mediated by both
AMPA and NMDA receptors and the IPSPs being mediated by
GABAA receptors only. The parallel fiber-evoked EPSPs and
IPSPs show marked paired-pulse facilitation. A large and unusually
broad spike is recorded inside medium ganglion cells, and field
potential responses suggest that this spike is propagated into the
apical dendrites. The results provide essential information for
understanding how peripheral and central inputs are integrated in
ELL.
Key words:
mormyrid; electrosensory; electric fish; ELL; cerebellum; NMDA; AMPA; glycine; GABA; sensory processing
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INTRODUCTION |
This paper is concerned with the
mormyrid electrosensory lobe (ELL), the first stage in the central
processing of electrosensory information in which all of the primary
afferent fibers from peripheral electroreceptors terminate. The
mormyrid ELL and similar cerebellum-like sensory structures in other
fish receive extensive descending input from other central structures
in addition to the peripheral input, and the responses to these
descending inputs depend on previous associations with peripheral
inputs (Bell, 1982 ; Bodznick, 1993 ; Montgomery and Bodznick, 1994 ;
Bastian, 1995 ; Bell et al., 1997a ). Thus, the mormyrid ELL and similar
structures in other fish appear to be useful sites for investigating
the general issues of how descending input to a sensory structure and
synaptic plasticity affect the processing of sensory information.
Understanding these processes in ELL requires knowledge of its
morphology, physiology, and pharmacology. Such knowledge is often
obtained most readily in the in vitro slice preparation in
which central tracts can be selectively stimulated and in which pharmacological manipulations can be performed. An in vitro
slice preparation of the mormyrid ELL has therefore been developed, and
the present paper describes what has been learned with this preparation
using field potential recordings and intracellular recordings from
morphologically identified cells. The morphology of the cells that were
examined physiologically in this study is described elsewhere (V. Han,
C. Bell, Y. Sugawara, and K. Grant, unpublished observations).
Two recent papers (Grant et al., 1996 ; Meek et al., 1996 ) should be
consulted for the necessary morphological background to the present
study.
The goal of this paper was to determine the physiology and pharmacology
of synaptic responses to stimulation of parallel fibers and primary
afferents in different cell types, as well as some of their intrinsic
electrogenic properties. Most of the recordings were from GABAergic
Purkinje-like interneurons known as medium ganglion cells and from the
two types of ELL efferent cells, large ganglion, and large fusiform
cells (Meek et al., 1996 ; Grant et al., 1996 ; Bell et al., 1997b ), but
some recordings were from other cell types also. Parallel fibers are by
far the most numerous type of descending input to ELL and are of
undoubted functional importance. Pharmacological tools were used to
determine the types of transmitters and receptors that mediate the
excitatory and inhibitory synaptic responses.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Recordings were made in an in vitro slice preparation
of the ELL of mormyrid fish of the species Gnathonemus
petersii. A total of 60 fish were used for these experiments,
ranging in length from 9 to 14 cm.
Slice preparation. The fish were deeply anesthetized
by immersion in a cold aerated solution of tricaine methane sulfonate (MS-222) at a concentration of 100 mg/l. The skull was opened, and the
brain was irrigated with ice-cold artificial CSF (ACSF; for
composition, see below); while the valvula was retracted laterally, a
vertical cut was made in the transverse plane immediately rostral to
the ELL, the spinal cord was sectioned immediately caudal to the ELL,
and the caudal brainstem block containing the ELL was removed. The
brainstem block was transferred to ice-cold ACSF for 60 sec to harden
it a little, and then the rostral cut surface was glued to a microtome
block with cyanoacrylate glue, with the dorsal surface of the ELL
facing the blade. A U-shaped wall of agar (4% dissolved in ACSF) was
glued behind the brainstem block on its ventral side opposite the blade
to provide support during slicing. Gelatin (16% dissolved in ACSF at
~32°C) was poured between the agar wall and the ventral surface of
the brain as well as over the surface of ELL to add further support. We
cut 300- to 400-µm-thick slices in the transverse plane under
ice-cold ACSF with a circular blade (Olfa) rotating in a plane tilted
~10° from horizontal.
Slices were retrieved with a wide-bore pipette and transferred to a
holding bath where they were kept submerged at room temperature, supported on small squares of Kodak lens paper that served to minimize
direct handling. The ACSF used up to this point was almost sodium-free
with sucrose replacing the NaCl to reduce excitotoxic shock caused by
the slicing (Aghajanian and Rasmussen, 1989 ). The composition of
this low-sodium ACSF was as follows (in mM): NaCl 0, KCl
2.0, KH2PO4 1.25, NaHCO3 24, CaCl2 2.6, MgSO4 · 7H20 1.6, glucose 20, and sucrose 213. The slices were kept in the holding bath
in an ACSF solution containing a 1:1 mixture of low-sodium ACSF and
normal ACSF for 30 min and then maintained in normal ACSF. One or two
slices were transferred to an interface recording chamber. The
composition of the normal ACSF was as follows (in mM): NaCl
124, KCl 2.0, KH2PO4 1.25, NaHCO3
24, CaCl2 2.6, MgSO4 · 7H20 1.6, and glucose 20. Both Na-free and normal ACSF were bubbled with
95% O2 and 5% CO2, pH 7.2-7.4
(osmolarity, ~290 mOsm). The slices were supported in the recording
chamber on several thicknesses of Kodak lens tissue and superfused with
normal ACSF. The slices in the interface chamber were at room
temperature (22-25°C) and perfused at a rate of 1-3 ml/min by
gravity flow.
Recording. The different zones and layers of ELL could be
distinguished in the slice with the aid of a dissecting microscope. Most recordings were from the medial zone of ELL because of its large
size, but some were from the dorsolateral zone. No recordings were made
in the ventrolateral zone (Fig. 1). Most
recordings were from the ganglion layer of ELL (Fig. 1), because this
layer has the highest density of the larger ELL cells that are most likely to be recorded from successfully and, because of a special interest in one of the cells of this layer, the medium ganglion cell.
The interest in the medium ganglion cell followed from our interest in
synaptic plasticity (Bell et al., 1997c ) and our finding early in the
study that medium ganglion cells show such plasticity more readily than
other cell types (C. Bell, V. Han, Y. Sugawara, and K. Grant,
unpublished observations). A few recordings were taken from other
layers also.

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Figure 1.
Diagram of transverse ELL slice to show positions
of recording and stimulating electrodes. SM1 and SM2 are in the
molecular layer. SD is in the deeper layers (Intermediate and deep
fiber layers). DLZ, Dorsolateral zone of ELL;
EGp, eminentia granularis posterior;
fiber, deep fiber layer; gang, ganglion
layer; gr, granule layer; interm,
intermediate layer; mol, molecular layer;
MZ, medial zone of ELL; plex, plexiform
layer; and VLZ, ventrolateral zone of ELL.
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Field potential recordings were made with pipettes filled with 2.0 M NaCl having resistances of 4-10 M . Intracellular
recordings were made with sharp glass micropipettes filled with 2 M potassium methyl sulfate containing 2% biocytin
(Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR; Sigma, St. Louis, MO). Tip resistances
were 150-200 M . Biocytin was ejected for intracellular labeling by
applying tip-positive current pulses (0.5-1.5 nA; 500 msec on, 500 msec off) for 5-15 min passed between the recording electrode and a
silver-silver chloride reference electrode in the bath. Histological
methods for showing the morphology of injected cells are described
elsewhere (Bell et al., 1997a ).
Most of the cells in the present paper were identified morphologically
by biocytin injection after physiological study. However, many of the
pharmacological tests were performed on cells that were not
subsequently identified morphologically. Cells of the medium ganglion
class could nevertheless be distinguished by electrophysiological criteria alone because of a distinctive large, broad action potential that is present only in this cell type (Bell et al., 1997c ; and see
below). The pharmacological results for medium ganglion cells that were
morphologically identified and for those that were only physiologically
identified are, therefore, discussed together. All other cell types in
the ganglion and plexiform layers fire exclusively large, narrow action
potentials. The majority (79 of 110) of morphologically identified
neurons that were not medium ganglion cells were large ganglion or
large fusiform cells. We therefore infer that the majority of
morphologically nonidentified cells with large, narrow spikes were
either large ganglion or large fusiform cells. The pharmacological
results from all neurons with large, narrow spikes were quite similar.
The pharmacological results for morphologically identified large
ganglion cells, morphologically identified large fusiform cells, and
morphologically unidentified cells with large, narrow spikes are
discussed together in the section on large ganglion and large fusiform
cells.
Stimulation. Two types of stimulating electrodes were used:
monopolar tungsten electrodes (A-M Systems) and fine (0.12 mm) concentric bipolar stainless steel electrodes (Fred Haer Inc.). The
tungsten electrodes, as obtained from the manufacturer, were insulated
except at the tip. The electrode tips were lightly scraped on a
sharpening stone to remove additional insulation and then plated with
gold to reduce electrode polarization. Stimulating current was
delivered between a single such electrode in the tissue (negative
electrode) and a second similar electrode or silver wire in the bath.
These electrodes could be raised and moved to activate different sites
during an intracellular recording.
The more superficial layers of ELL, the molecular, ganglion, plexiform,
and superficial granule layers, can be readily distinguished in the
living slice under the operating microscope, allowing for accurate
placing of stimulating and recording electrodes in these layers (for a
description of the different layers of ELL, see Meek et al., 1996 ).
However, the intermediate and deep fiber layers cannot be distinguished
from each other or from the lower border of the granule layer in the
slice, and stimulating electrodes could be placed only in the general
region of these deep layers.
Three stimulating electrodes were usually placed in the slice (Fig. 1),
one in the molecular layer near its outer margin (SM1), one
in the middle of the molecular layer (SM2), and one in the deep fiber or intermediate layer (SD). The two electrodes in
the molecular layer were used to stimulate separate bundles of parallel fibers. Paired-pulse facilitation of parallel fiber-evoked EPSPs at a
30 msec interstimulus delay was measured in seven cells. The
facilitation was marked with stimulus pairs SM1-SM1 (range, 27-108%;
mean, 54%) or SM2-SM2 (range, 18-69%; mean, 42%) but not with
stimulus pairs SM1-SM2 (range, 7-13%; mean, 1.3%) or SM2-SM1
(range, 15-3%; mean, 3.6%), indicating that the two sites did
indeed activate separate populations of parallel fibers. Stimuli were
constant current pulses with a duration of 0.1 msec and amplitudes of
5-60 µA.
Pharmacology. Drugs were bath-applied at the following
concentrations (in µM): bicuculline, 30;
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX), 10-35;
D-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoate (AP-5), 35-70; strychnine,
15; tetrodotoxin (TTX), 0.5-1.0; and cadmium, 100-200. Calcium-free
or magnesium-free ACSF was sometimes used and was prepared by omitting
CaCl2 or MgSO4 · 7H20,
respectively, from the above mixture.
Data analysis. Data were recorded on a digital tape recorder
and on the hard disk of a computer using the Axon Instruments (Foster
City, CA) Digidata 1200 interface and their Axotape software or the
Labmaster interface and Acquis 1 (Biological) software. Quantitative
measurements were made using Axon Instruments pClamp 6 or Acquis 1 software and plotted using Microcal Origin.
Some of the medium ganglion cells in this study were also included in a
previous short report focusing on synaptic plasticity at the parallel
fiber to medium ganglion cell synapse (Bell et al., 1997c ).
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RESULTS |
The first two sections of Results describe the field potential
responses to electrical stimulation of the deeper layers of ELL and of
the molecular layer. The subsequent sections describe the intracellular
responses of the different morphological cell types to these same
stimuli and to intracellularly injected current pulses.
Field potential responses to stimulation of the deep layers
(intermediate and deep fiber layers)
Low-intensity stimulation of the deep layers
Stimuli of 1-10 µA evoked responses that could be attributed to
activation of primary afferent fibers (Fig.
2A,B).
The response recorded in the granule layers to such a stimulus
consisted of a brief initial negative wave (Fig. 2Ae,
n pre) followed by a longer lasting negative wave
(Fig. 2Ae, n post). The initial
negative wave (n pre) was also present, and larger, in
the intermediate layer, but the second negative wave (n
post) was confined to the granule layers (Fig.
2Ad,Ae). Primary afferent fibers pass
through the deep fiber and intermediate layers to terminate in the
granule layers and do not extend into the plexiform layer (Bell and
Russell, 1978 ). The spatial distribution of the field potentials
therefore suggests that the initial negative wave is caused by impulses in the presynaptic primary afferents and that the second negative wave
is attributable to the postsynaptic responses to this afferent volley
in granule layer cells. The low threshold of the response is consistent
with this interpretation because primary afferent fibers have larger
diameters than other fibers in the deep layers and would be expected to
have a low threshold. The first component was refractory to the second
of two identical stimuli for only 2 or 3 msec, whereas most of the
second component was refractory for ~10 msec and was reduced for
~50 msec (some of the refractoriness of the second component is
probably caused by postsynaptic inhibition; see below). These
refractory periods of the two components are also consistent with the
first component being an axonal volley and the second component a
postsynaptic response.

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Figure 2.
Field potential responses to weak stimulation of
deeper layers. A, Responses recorded in different layers
of ELL. In c, the arrow points to a small
negative wave that may reflect excitation in the plexiform layer. In
e, n pre is probably caused by a
presynaptic volley in primary afferent fibers, and n
post is probably caused by a postsynaptic response in cells of
the granule layer. Amplitude calibration for traces
a-e is shown below trace
e. Amplitude calibration for trace f is
shown below trace f. s gr, Superficial
granule layer; d gr, deep granule layer. In this figure
and in other similar figures, the recording site for each trace is
indicated by the location of a filled circle on the
associated diagram of ELL layers that is connected to the trace by a
straight dashed line. B, All-or-none
changes in response amplitude to deep layer stimulus of continuously
increasing intensity. C, Pharmacology of granule layer
response to weak stimulation of the deep layers. All recordings were
made at the same site in response to the same stimulus. All are
averages of 15 sweeps. The dotted lines show the trace
preceding the indicated pharmacological effect. Note that the
postsynaptic component changes but that the presynaptic does not,
indicating that the afferent input volley is not affected by the drugs.
a, Predrug control; b, effect of
bicuculline (bic; 35 µM), note early
onset; c, effect of bicuculline plus CNQX (30 µM), note early onset; d, effect of
bicuculline, CNQX, and AP-5 (30 µM), note later onset of
AP-5 effect; e, cadmium (200 µM), note
that postsynaptic response remains prominent. D, Effect
of high-frequency stimulation on presynaptic and postsynaptic
components; five stimuli at 200 Hz. Single arrow points
to prominent postsynaptic component that is only present after the
first stimulus. Double arrows point to slowly rising
negativity that may reflect an electrical EPSP.
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Other types of fibers besides primary afferents are present in the deep
layers including: efferent axons of large ganglion and large fusiform
cells, commissural fibers passing to and from the contralateral side,
interzonal fibers between the medial and dorsolateral zones, corollary
discharge conveying fibers from the juxtalobar nucleus, and deeply
terminating fibers from the preeminential nucleus (Bell and Szabo
1986 ). These other fiber types are either unmyelinated or of much
smaller diameter than the large myelinated primary afferent fibers and
thus, likely to have a higher threshold. In addition, the laminar
patterns of origin or termination for these other fiber types are
different from those of primary afferent fibers, and their stimulation
would be expected to yield a different spatial distribution of field potentials from what was observed. Finally, although precise fiber counts have not been made, the total number of primary afferent fibers
is probably larger than that of any other fiber type. For all these
reasons then, weak stimulation of the deeper layers probably primarily
activates afferent fibers.
A small negative wave was also present in the plexiform layer that was
slightly delayed with respect to the postsynaptic negative wave in the
granule layer (Fig. 2Ac, arrow). The axons
of some granule cells are known to terminate in the plexiform layer (C. Bell, unpublished observations), and this negativity could be attributable to postsynaptic responses in the plexiform layer that are
caused by granule cells activated by afferent stimulation. Small
positive waves are present in the ganglion layer and in the deepest
part of the molecular layer, but most of the molecular layer does not
show any response to weak stimulation of the deep layers of ELL. The
overall distribution of the field potential responses shows that the
effects of direct afferent input from the periphery are largely
confined to ELL layers below the molecular layer.
Responses in the granule layer showed all-or-none, step-like changes in
amplitude as stimulus intensity was gradually increased above threshold
(Fig. 2B). Both the initial "n pre" and later "n post" waves showed these step-like changes. The phenomenon was
observed in 10 different slices, and the number of steps ranged between
four and seven. Single mormyromast afferent fibers have dense terminal
arbors in the granule layer with many boutons per fiber (Bell et al.,
1989 ). Each step-like increase was probably caused by recruitment by
the stimulus of an additional primary afferent fiber, suggesting that
the terminal fields of four to seven such fibers overlap within a small
region of the ELL granule layer.
Pharmacological analysis of the response to low-intensity stimulation
indicates important features of initial processing in ELL and provides
further evidence that the second component is postsynaptic (Fig.
2C). Addition of the GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline to the normal ACSF perfusing the slice caused a large increase in the amplitude and duration of the postsynaptic component (n = 8 slices; Fig. 2Cb), indicating that
the afferent input has a strong inhibitory effect in addition to its
initial excitatory effect. The latency of the bicuculline-induced
change indicated that the GABA release evoked by the presynaptic volley
has a latency of only 1 msec from the peak of the presynaptic volley.
Subsequent addition of both the AMPA receptor antagonist CNQX
(n = 4 slices; Fig. 2Cc) and the NMDA
antagonist AP-5 (n = 4 slices; Fig. 2Cd) caused reductions in the postsynaptic response, indicating that both
types of glutamate receptors are involved in the granule layer response
to afferent input. Replacement of the above drugs by the calcium
channel antagonist cadmium (200 µM) resulted in only a small additional reduction in the postsynaptic component (Fig.
2Ce; n = 4 slices). A prominent postsynaptic
component was also observed in ACSF with zero calcium in which the
calcium was replaced with an equimolar concentration of magnesium
(n = 4 slices; data not shown). Note that the
presynaptic component shown in Figure 2C was not affected by
any of these manipulations but was blocked, along with the postsynaptic
component, by the addition of TTX (n = 6 slices; Fig.
2Cf).
The presence of a large postsynaptic response when excitatory
transmission is blocked by glutamate receptor antagonists or by
blocking transmitter release (with cadmium or in the presence of zero
calcium) suggests that the response is partially mediated by electrical
synapses. An electrical synapse should follow high frequencies of
stimulation close to the following frequency of the presynaptic volley,
which in this case is ~300 Hz. However, only a small portion of the
postsynaptic response appears to follow such high frequencies, and most
of the response fails to follow >100 Hz. This is illustrated by the
responses to a brief 200 Hz train of stimuli recorded under cadmium
shown in Figure 2, in which only the first stimulus evokes a prominent
postsynaptic wave (single arrow). Later stimuli of the
train evoke a negativity that arises from the presynaptic volley and is
only distinguished from it by a slower rate of rise and longer duration
(double arrows). The small, slow-rising negativity
could be attributable to electrically evoked EPSPs (see Discussion),
and the larger component, which does not follow high frequencies, could
reflect voltage-sensitive responses such as spikes in the postsynaptic
cells. The presumed postsynaptic spikes are probably sodium spikes
because the response is still present in zero calcium and after calcium
channels are blocked by cadmium (Fig. 2Ce).
High-intensity stimulation
In contrast to the lack of molecular layer responses to weak
stimulation in the deeper layers, higher-intensity stimulation (20-50
µA) evoked prominent negative-going waves in the molecular layer
(Fig. 3). The threshold for these waves
was two to three times higher than the intensity at which the granule
layer response described above reached saturation. Two negative-going
waves were observed, an early one labeled "ne" in Figure 3 and a
slightly later one labeled "nl." The shortest latencies for these
waves were recorded in the deep molecular layer ~1 msec to the onset of ne and 2 msec to the onset of nl, and progressively longer latencies
were obtained as the recording site was moved outwards toward the
peripheral edge of the molecular layer.

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Figure 3.
Field potential responses to strong stimulation of
deeper layers. ne and nl indicate early
and late negative waves. Dotted lines indicate the
changes in latency of these waves between sites in the deep molecular
layer and sites in the superficial molecular layer.
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In three slices, stimulus sites in the granule, plexiform, ganglion,
and molecular layers just external to the ganglion layer were also
tested. Stimulation at these sites evoked the same negative-going waves
in the molecular layer but at lower stimulus intensities than those
necessary for stimulus sites in the deeper layers. The lowest threshold
was for stimuli in the deep molecular layer just external to the
ganglion layer, suggesting an initiation site in this region. Thus, the
negative-going field potentials evoked in the molecular layer in
response to deep layer stimulation are probably attributable to action
potential invasion of the apical dendritic trees of medium ganglion,
large ganglion, and large fusiform cells whose basal dendrites or
axonal processes were either stimulated directly or activated by
excitatory synaptic input from granule cells (see Discussion).
Field potential responses to stimulation of the
molecular layer
The principal components of the molecular layer include the apical
dendrites of cells with somas in the ganglion layer and below, and the
parallel fibers that cross the apical dendrites orthogonally. Three
waves, n1, n2, and n3, were recorded in response to a molecular layer
stimulus when the recording electrode was at the same height in the
molecular layer as the stimulus as the stimulus electrode, i.e., on the
same "beam" of parallel fibers but at some distance laterally (Fig.
4). Several features indicate that n1 is
caused by the parallel fiber volley evoked by the stimulus and that n2
is caused by a local excitatory postsynaptic response to the parallel
fiber input in the molecular layer dendrites: (1) n1 had a short
latency of <1 msec, was restricted to approximately the same molecular
layer height as the stimulating electrode, and had a short refractory
period of 2-4 msec when tested with two identical stimuli; (2) n2 had
a latency of 2-4 msec, which is similar to that of intracellularly
recorded EPSPs (see below), was also restricted to approximately the
same molecular layer height as the stimulating electrode, and had a
refractory period of 5-10 msec; (3) n2 showed paired-pulse
facilitation when two identical stimuli were delivered at intervals of
15-300 msec with the largest amount of facilitation occurring at
intervals of ~30 msec (see Fig. 7a,b); (4) n1
was unaffected by recording in calcium-free ACSF or in the presence of
glutamate receptor antagonists (see below), whereas n2 was markedly
reduced under these conditions (see Fig. 7d;
n = 8 and n = 20 for recordings in
calcium-free ACSF and with glutamate antagonists, respectively). The n1
wave did disappear, however, in the presence of TTX (n = 3; see below).

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Figure 4.
Depth series showing field potential responses to
stimulation in superficial molecular layer. Asterisk (*) at right
indicates location of stimulating electrode in the molecular layer. See
Results for explanations of n1, n2, and n3.
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A positive wave is recorded in the inner molecular layer and below in
response to the same molecular layer stimulus (Fig. 4d,
double arrows). The onset latency of the positive wave
is about the same as that of n2, and the wave must be caused, in part,
by the deeper layers acting as a current source for the sink caused by
synaptic excitation in the outer molecular layer.
There is an additional afferent input to the molecular layer, besides
the parallel fibers, that arises from nucleus preeminentialis, but
activation of this input could not explain the field potential recordings described above. Nucleus preeminentialis is a large feedback
nucleus located just anterior to ELL that projects back both directly
and indirectly to ELL (Bell and Szabo 1986 ). The fibers to ELL traverse
the molecular layer obliquely from the preeminential electrosensory
tract, which is located between ELL and the eminentia granularis
posterior (EGp; Fig. 1). The fibers terminate in a narrow
band in the deep molecular layer just external to the ganglion layer.
Activation of these fibers by stimulation of nucleus preeminentialis
results in a large, short-latency negative wave in the deep molecular
layer reflecting a current sink and a small, positive wave in the outer
molecular layer reflecting a current source. These potentials are
clearly quite different from the n1 and n2 waves that are evoked by
parallel-fiber stimulation and are restricted to the same level of the
molecular layer as the activated beam of parallel fibers.
The latency of the n1 wave as a function of distance from the
stimulating electrode provides an estimate of conduction velocity in
the parallel fibers of ELL (Fig. 5). Such
estimates were made in six different slices, and the measured
velocities were found to range between 0.5 and 0.8 M/sec.
Surprisingly, these velocities are somewhat higher than the 0.3-0.5
M/sec velocities measured in the mammalian cerebellum
(Eccles et al., 1967 ).

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Figure 5.
Field potentials in response to molecular layer
stimulus recorded along the parallel-fiber beam with measurement of
conduction velocity. A, Diagram showing location of
stimulating and recording electrodes. Numbers refer to
recording sites for the traces shown in B.
B, Recorded traces. Dotted line indicates
latency shift of n1 potential along the parallel-fiber beam.
C, Graph showing changes in latency of the n1 peak as a
function of distance from recording site 1. Numbers
refer to the recording sites shown in A and
B. Additional points recorded in the same series between
these numbered sites are also indicated. The line shows
the best linear fit to all these points and indicates the conduction
velocity.
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The third component of the response to parallel-fiber stimulation, n3,
(Figs. 4, 6,
7) appears to be caused by an active
response in the dendrites of postsynaptic cells. Unlike the n1 and n2
components, the n3 component is present throughout the molecular layer
after a parallel-fiber stimulus in the superficial molecular layer
(Figs. 4, 6A). Indeed, the n3 component is larger and
occurs earlier in the deep molecular layer than in the superficial
molecular layer. The n3 component shows marked paired-pulse
facilitation, as illustrated in Figure 6A, in which
the larger size and shorter latency of this component in the deep
molecular layer is apparent. The shorter latency and larger size in the
deep molecular layer suggest that the cellular activity responsible for
the n3 component is initiated near the soma and is then propagated back
into the apical dendrites.

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Figure 6.
Field potentials illustrating the n3 response to
molecular layer stimulation. A, Depth series of
responses to molecular layer stimulation showing marked facilitation of
the n3 response to the second of two identical stimuli. Note the large
n3 peak to the second stimulus. The dotted line drawn
through the peaks shows the changes in latency from deep to superficial
sites in the molecular layer. The asterisk (*) indicates the level of
the stimulus in the molecular layer. B, Block of the n3
response to molecular layer stimulus by an immediately preceding strong
stimulus to the deep layers. Recordings in the molecular layer.
Top trace, Response to deep layer stimulus alone showing
nl response like that illustrated in Figure 3. Middle
trace, Response to molecular layer stimulus alone showing
prominent n3 response. Bottom trace, Block of n3
response by preceding deep layer stimulus.
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Figure 7.
Effects of Mg2+-free ACSF,
CNQX, and AP-5 on molecular layer responses to molecular layer
stimulation. Two identical stimuli were delivered 20 msec apart.
Recovery trace in e was recorded 15 min after return to
normal ACSF and removal of CNQX and AP-5. The response in this trace
showed only partial recovery because the CNQX was probably not entirely
washed out of the slice. The "recovery" response thus resembles the
response obtained with CNQX alone in the bath.
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The n3 component is similar to the second of the two molecular layer
negative waves that are evoked by strong stimulation in the deep layers
of ELL, as described above (Fig. 3, nl). The waves
are similar in their amplitude, their duration, and in their propagation from deeper to more superficial levels of the molecular layer. In fact, the two waves appear to have a common origin in that
evoking a negative wave by stimulation in the deep layers blocks the
subsequent occurrence of the n3 response to parallel-fiber stimulation
(n = 4 slices; Fig. 6B). Our
hypothesis is that these waves are caused by dendritic spikes that are
initiated in the somas or the proximal apical dendrites of medium
ganglion cells, large ganglion cells, and large fusiform cells and
propagated into the distal apical dendrites (see Discussion).
Pharmacology
Synaptic responses evoked by parallel-fiber stimulation appear to
be mediated by glutamate receptors of both the AMPA and NMDA type.
Replacing the normal ACSF with magnesium-free ACSF results in the
addition of later components to the response, indicating the presence
of NMDA receptors that are normally blocked in the presence of
magnesium (Fig. 7b). Addition of the AMPA receptor antagonist CNQX (20 µM) reduces the early components of
the response, and subsequent addition of the NMDA receptor blocker AP-5
(40 µM) eliminates the late components of the response
(Fig. 7c,d; all in magnesium-free ACSF). These
observations indicate that an early component of the synaptic response
is mediated by glutamate receptors of the AMPA type, and a later
component is mediated by glutamate receptors of the NMDA type. Similar
results were obtained in 20 different slices.
As expected, the n1 response was not affected by the presence of the
glutamate receptor antagonists. Surprisingly, however, a significant
short-latency component of the n2 response remained after addition of
the antagonists (Fig. 7d). This n2 component is still
present when chemical synaptic transmission is blocked with
calcium-free ACSF (n = 8 slices) or 100 µM cadmium (n = 10 slices), suggesting
that it is a presynaptic rather than a postsynaptic event. Both the n1
wave and the small n2 component disappear in the presence of TTX (5 µM). Similar small, nonsynaptic n2 components have been
observed in parallel fiber-evoked field potentials in the mammalian
cerebellum after destruction of Purkinje cells (Ito and Kano, 1982 ) or
blockade of AMPA glutamate receptors (Salin et al., 1996 ), and the
suggestion has been made that they are caused by some type of prolonged
depolarizing afterpotential in the parallel fibers.
Medium ganglion cells
A total of 64 medium ganglion cells were morphologically
identified after intracellular recording and labeling (membrane
potentials 50 to 80 mV; mean, 63 mV; SEM, 1.3 mV). The morphology
of the basal dendrites and axonal arbors was sufficiently clear to
identify 16 of these as type 1 medium ganglion cells (MG1) and 20 as
type 2 medium ganglion cells (MG2; for morphological descriptions of the two types of medium ganglion cells, see Meek et al., 1996 ) (Han,
Bell, Sugawara, and Grant, unpublished observations).
Intrinsic electrophysiological properties of medium
ganglion cells
The present in vitro study strongly supports the
conclusion of a previous in vivo study (Bell et al., 1997b )
that medium ganglion cells are characterized by the presence of large,
broad spikes of 40-60 mV in amplitude (mean, 54 mV; SEM, 2.0 mV) and
8-15 msec in duration. Sixty-three of the 64 morphologically
identified medium ganglion cells showed the large, broad spikes (Figs.
8, 9B,C,
10A), and none of the
other cell types recorded in the present study showed such spikes.

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Figure 8.
Responses of medium ganglion cells to
hyperpolarizing and depolarizing current pulses. The lowest intensity
depolarizing current pulse does not evoke a response. A slight increase
in current strength evokes a small spike (s) in
one sweep and no response in the other. A further increase evokes a
small spike followed by a medium, broad spike (mb) in
one sweep and a small spike, a medium, broad spike, and a delayed
large, broad spike (b) in the other. Finally, the
highest intensity pulse evokes a small spike followed by a large, broad
spike with an inflection on its rising phase (arrow) at
the amplitude and delay of the medium, broad spike. Only small spikes
are evoked at the off of the hyperpolarizing pulses.
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Figure 9.
Responses of medium ganglion cells to deep layer
and molecular layer stimulation. A, Weak stimulation
evokes a brief IPSP at one deep layer site (SD1) and an
EPSP at the other (SD2). B, In another
cell, deep layer stimuli evoke small, narrow spikes, a medium, broad
spike, and three large, broad spikes. Arrow points to
inflection on one of the large broad spikes that is probably caused by
an underlying medium, broad spike. C, EPSP responses to
parallel-fiber stimuli. EPSPs evoke broad spikes in two of the
traces. D, Effect of bicuculline on IPSPs evoked by
molecular layer (SM) and deep layer
(SD) stimuli. Both IPSPs disappear under bicuculline.
The blocking of the IPSP to SM reveals the presence of an EPSP that
evokes a small spike.
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Figure 10.
Paired-pulse facilitation of medium ganglion
cells in response to molecular layer stimuli. A,
Paired-pulse facilitation of EPSPs. Second EPSP evokes broad spikes on
some sweeps. B, Paired-pulse facilitation of both EPSPs
and IPSPs in same cell. The EPSP is indicated by the initial small
positive deflection after the shock artifact, C, Graph
of magnitude of paired-pulse facilitation as function of interpulse
interval. Inset shows example of responses on which the
graph was based. Note the faster rise time as well as the larger
amplitude of the second response.
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Most medium ganglion cells also showed a small, narrow spike (5-15 mV
in amplitude, 1-2 msec in duration; Figs. 8,
9B,D, 10A) that
fired independently of the large, broad spike and had a lower threshold
than the broad spike to intracellular (Fig. 8) or synaptic (Fig.
9D) stimulation. When both spikes were present, the
threshold of the small spikes to intracellular stimulation was lower
than that of the large, broad spike (40-80% of the broad spike
threshold as measured in eight cells). The broad spike most often arose from a small, narrow spike that became more tightly fused with the
broad spike at higher intensities. A second inflection was also often
observed on the rising phase of the broad spike (Figs. 8,
9B, arrows), reflecting the presence of a third
type of spike, a medium, broad spike (10-30 mV in amplitude and 5-8
msec in duration) that could occasionally occur in isolation (Figs. 8,
9B). All three types of spikes are blocked by TTX but not by
cadmium and are, therefore, sodium spikes (Bell et al., 1997c ).
The voltage responses of medium ganglion cells to depolarizing
intracellular current pulses that were below threshold for spikes were
either flat or showed only very small deflections or "humps." This
is in contrast to large ganglion and large fusiform cells, which often
showed marked deflections and even oscillations to depolarizing current
pulses that were below threshold for action potentials (see below and
Fig. 12A).
Responses of medium ganglion cells to stimulation in the
deep layers
Weak stimuli at intensities that evoked negative field potentials
restricted to the plexiform layer and below (exciting mainly primary
afferent fibers) evoked both IPSPs and EPSPs in medium ganglion cells.
The IPSPs predominated. Thirty-two medium ganglion cells were tested
with such stimuli and, of these, 15 cells showed only IPSPs, 3 showed
only EPSPs, and 2 showed both IPSPs and EPSPs. In the two cells that
showed both IPSPs and EPSPs, the IPSPs were elicited at one stimulation
site in the deeper layers, and the EPSPs were elicited at another site
that was ~100 µm lateral to the first site (Fig. 9A).
The IPSPs in two of the cells showed step-like, all-or-none changes in
amplitude with gradual changes in stimulus intensity, suggesting the
activation of single afferent fibers or interneurons.
The GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline (30 µM) was added to the bath during recording from nine of
the medium ganglion cells showing IPSPs in response to deep layer
stimulation. The IPSPs in three of these cells were completely blocked
by bicuculline, as indicated in Figure 9D in which
bicuculline is shown to block the IPSP to deep stimulation
(SD) as well as the IPSP to molecular layer stimulation
(SM). The IPSPs in the remaining six cells were only
reduced in duration and amplitude or unaffected by the bicuculline. The
glycine receptor antagonist strychnine (15 µM) was added
to the bath during recording from three of the six cells with IPSPs resistant to bicuculline and in each case caused the complete disappearance of the IPSPs. Similar effects of bicuculline and strychnine are shown for a large ganglion cell (see Fig.
13A,B). Thus, inhibitory processes
mediated by both GABAA and glycine receptors appear to be
present in the ELL circuitry between primary afferents and medium
ganglion cells. Long-latency, long-duration GABAB-type
responses were not observed.
Substitution of magnesium-free ACSF for normal ACSF had clear effects
on synaptic responses to deep stimulation, indicating the presence of
excitatory synapses with the NMDA type of glutamate receptors in the
deep layers of ELL (as was also indicated by the pharmacological
analysis of granule layer field potentials described previously). In
four cells, EPSPs were present in magnesium-free ACSF with bicuculline
(30 µM) that were not present with bicuculline alone. In
four cells, substitution of magnesium-free ACSF alone resulted in the
appearance of long-duration (60 msec) IPSPs in addition to the
short-duration (15 msec) IPSPs that were present in normal ACSF.
Addition of AP-5 (35 µM) to the bath caused the disappearance of the IPSPs in one of these cells.
More intense stimulation in the deep layers evoked short-latency spikes
in medium ganglion cells (Fig. 9B). Small, narrow spikes
(evoked in 7 of 32 cells tested with deep stimuli), medium, broad, and
large, broad spikes (evoked in 10 of the 32 tested cells) could be
evoked by stimulation at the same sites from which synaptic potentials
were evoked by weak stimulation or by stimulation at adjacent sites.
The onset latencies of the small spikes were 0.5-1 msec, and the onset
latencies of the medium, broad spikes were 0.5-2 msec. The large,
broad spikes arose from the small or medium, broad spikes and had
latencies to the peak of 2-4 msec. The short latencies suggest that
the cells are activated by direct stimulation of axons or basal
dendrites, although the participation of some synaptic excitation
cannot be excluded, particularly for the broad spikes.
Responses of medium ganglion cells to
parallel-fiber stimulation
Parallel-fiber stimulation evoked either an EPSP (45 of 63 cells
tested) or an EPSP-IPSP sequence in medium ganglion cells (17 of 63 cells tested). EPSP and IPSP here simply mean the presence of,
respectively, depolarizing and hyperpolarizing synaptic potentials at
the resting membrane potential. Testing at depolarized membrane potentials or in the presence of bicuculline was not done for all cells
but probably would have shown that an EPSP-IPSP sequence was the most
common synaptic response. The EPSPs had latencies of 1.5-4 msec and
durations of 15-60 msec. The latency of the EPSP corresponded to the
latency of the n2 component of the parallel fiber-evoked field
potential. The IPSPs lasted ~20 msec and could be large enough to
almost obscure the EPSP that preceded them (responses to SM
in Figs. 9D, 10B). The EPSPs and IPSPs
were graded with stimulus intensity, and the larger EPSPs could evoke
small or large, broad spikes (Figs. 9C,
10A). The threshold of the small spikes was usually
lower than that of the large, broad spikes, in accord with the results
described above for intracellular current injection.
Both the EPSPs and IPSPs evoked by parallel-fiber stimulation showed
paired-pulse facilitation (Figs. 10,
11), and a second EPSP often evoked
spikes when the first did not (Fig. 10A). The paired-pulse facilitation lasted for 100-300 msec (Fig.
11C) and was comparable in magnitude and duration to the
paired-pulse facilitation described above for the parallel fiber-evoked
field potentials. The EPSP is assumed to be a monosynaptic response to
parallel-fiber activation, and the paired-pulse facilitation of the
EPSP probably reflects a presynaptic process in the parallel-fiber
terminal (Zucker, 1989 ). The parallel fiber-evoked IPSPs are probably
disynaptic responses, however, because of parallel-fiber activation of
inhibitory stellate cells or of other medium ganglion cells. Both
stellate and medium ganglion cells are GABAergic and contact medium
ganglion cells (Meek et al., 1996 ). The observed facilitation of IPSPs could be attributable to facilitation at the excitatory synapse between
parallel fibers and these inhibitory cells.

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Figure 11.
Pharmacology of parallel fiber-evoked synaptic
responses in medium ganglion cells. Effects of bicuculline, CNQX, and
AP-5.
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The excitatory effect of parallel fibers on medium ganglion cells
appears to be mediated by glutamate and by postsynaptic receptors of
both the AMPA and NMDA type, a finding that is consistent with the
field potential results described previously. The effects of CNQX and
AP-5 were tested in nine medium ganglion cells, five of which were
tested in the presence of normal ACSF (Fig. 11) and four in the
presence of magnesium-free ACSF. CNQX (20 µM) alone caused a 20-60% reduction in the size of the parallel fiber-evoked EPSP in seven of these cells but had little effect in two cells. The
further addition of AP-5 (40 µM) caused the complete
disappearance of the EPSP in eight cells and the nearly complete
disappearance of the EPSP in one cell. All these tests of glutamate
receptor antagonists were done in the presence of bicuculline.
The IPSPs evoked by parallel fibers are clearly mediated by receptors
of the GABAA type because the IPSPs were completely eliminated by bicuculline (n = 15; Fig. 9D).
Thus, there was no indication of a role for glycine or for
GABAB receptors in the inhibition evoked by parallel-fiber
stimulation. The latency of the parallel fiber-evoked IPSP was short
enough to reduce the amplitude of the EPSP, as illustrated in Figure
10, A and B, in which the addition of bicuculline
to the bath resulted in an increase in both the amplitude and duration
of the excitatory synaptic response.
Differences between MG1 and MG2 cells
No clear physiological differences could be established between
these two cell types. There was, however, some indication that
excitation by deep stimulation was more likely in MG2 cells than in MG1
cells. Thus, of eight morphologically identified MG2 cells that showed
a synaptic response to deep stimulation, one cell showed an EPSP only,
two cells showed EPSPs and IPSPs, and five cells showed IPSPs only. On
the other hand, all six of the MG1 cells with a synaptic response
showed only IPSPs. The greater amount of excitation in MG2 cells is
consistent with a hypothesis (Han, Bell, Sugawara, and Grant,
unpublished observations), based on basal dendrite morphology,
that MG2 cells are excited by afferent input from the center of their
receptive fields (E cells) whereas MG2 cells are inhibited (I cells),
but further work will be necessary to confirm this difference (see
Discussion).
Large ganglion and large fusiform cells
A total of 40 large ganglion cells (membrane potentials 50 to
80 mV; mean, 67; SEM, 2.2 mV) and 39 large fusiform cells (membrane
potentials, 50 to 80 mV; mean, 63 mV; SEM, 2.0 mV) were recorded
intracellularly and morphologically identified. These two types of
large efferent cells are quite distinct from each other
morphologically, with somas and basal dendrites in different layers of
ELL (Grant et al., 1996 ). Moreover, in vivo experiments
showed that they respond differently to electrosensory stimuli; large
ganglion cells are inhibited in the center of their receptive fields,
and large fusiform cells are excited (Bell et al., 1997b ).
Nevertheless, only minimal physiological differences between these two
cells were observed in our in vitro recordings, and the
results for the two cell types are presented together.
All of the large ganglion and large fusiform cells showed only one type
of spike, a large, narrow spike that ranged in amplitude between 25 and
70 mV (mean, 52 mV; SEM, 3.4 mV) for the large ganglion cells and
between 30 and 70 mV (mean, 54 mV; SEM, 2.7 mV) for the large fusiform
cells. None of these cells showed the large, broad spikes
characteristic of medium ganglion cells. The narrow spikes were
followed by prominent afterhyperpolarizations lasting 4-6 msec. As
expected, the large, narrow spikes, like the spikes of the medium
ganglion cells, were blocked by TTX (5 µM;
n = 7) and are, therefore, sodium spikes.
Depolarizing intracellular current pulses that were below threshold for
a spike evoked a "hump-like" depolarizing potential of 4-5 msec in
duration in many large ganglion and large fusiform cells (Fig.
12A,
arrow). This depolarizing potential increased in amplitude
as the strength of the intracellular current increased, giving rise to
a spike at the highest level (Fig. 12A,
arrowhead).

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Figure 12.
Responses of large ganglion and large fusiform
cells to intracellular current pulses, stimulation of the deep layers,
and stimulation of the molecular layer. A, Responses to
intracellular current pulses. Currents that are subthreshold for the
spike evoke a graded depolarizing potential at the onset of the current
pulse (arrow). This potential may be responsible for the
inflection (arrowhead) on the rising phase of the spike
evoked by a suprathreshold current pulse. B, EPSPs and
IPSPs evoked in the same cell by stimulation at two different sites in
the deep layers. Stimulation of SD1 evokes an EPSP, and stimulation of
SD2 evokes an IPSP. C, IPSP evoked by weak stimulation
of deep layer and antidromic spike evoked by stronger stimulation at
the same site. Top traces show response to weak
stimulation. Bottom traces show responses to stronger
stimulation at threshold for antidromic spike. D, IPSPs
with different shapes evoked by stimulation at different deep layer
sites. E, Paired-pulse facilitation of both the EPSP and
IPSP evoked by parallel-fiber stimuli.
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Responses to stimulation in the deep layers
Weak stimuli at intensities that probably activated primary
afferent fibers evoked both IPSPs and EPSPs in large ganglion and large
fusiform cells (Figs. 12B-D,
13A,B).
Higher-intensity stimulation often evoked short-latency (<0.5 msec)
antidromic spikes (Fig. 12C, bottom traces)
in both cell types (12 of the 39 large ganglion cells and 18 of the 33 large fusiform cells tested with deep stimulation).

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Figure 13.
Pharmacology of synaptic responses of large
ganglion and large fusiform cells. A, Effect of
bicuculline and strychnine on IPSPs evoked by deep layer
stimulation. B, EPSP to deep layer stimulation revealed
by blocking of IPSPs with bicuculline and strychnine. C,
Effects of bicuculline, AP-5, CNQX, and calcium-free media on parallel
fiber-evoked IPSPs and EPSPs.
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Stimulation in the deep layers evoked IPSPs much more frequently than
EPSPs in both large ganglion and large fusiform cells. Thus, 34 IPSPs,
but only 6 EPSPs, were observed in the 34 morphologically identified
large ganglion cells that were tested with deep layer stimuli, and 30 IPSPs, but only 6 EPSPs, were observed in the 33 large fusiform cells
that were tested with such stimuli. The prominence of IPSPs in large
fusiform cells was surprising, given the in vivo finding
that large fusiform cells are excited in the center of their receptive
fields (see Discussion).
Stimulation at different sites in the deep layers could evoke different
synaptic responses in the same cell. Thus, weak stimulation at one site
could evoke an EPSP, and stimulation at another site could evoke an
IPSP (Fig. 12B). Similarly, stimulation at threshold could evoke a short-duration IPSP at one site but a long-duration IPSP
at another site (Fig. 12D). Changes in stimulus
intensity also sometimes caused a change in the synaptic response, from an IPSP to an EPSP or to an IPSP-EPSP sequence, for example.
The EPSPs and IPSPs were generally graded in amplitude with stimulus
intensity, although abrupt, all-or-none changes in amplitude were also
sometimes observed with both EPSPs and IPSPs, suggesting activation of
a single afferent fiber or interneuron. The maximum amplitudes of the
IPSPs could be as large as 12 mV, but the EPSPs were generally <2 mV
in the absence of pharmacological blockade of inhibition (see below).
The IPSPs ranged in duration from 15 to 80 msec and, in some cases,
appeared to have both an early and a late component (Figs.
12C,D).
Pharmacological studies indicated that the IPSPs evoked by deep
stimulation in large ganglion and large fusiform cells, like those of
medium ganglion cells, are mediated by both GABAA and glycine receptors. Thus, the GABAA blocker bicuculline (35 µM) by itself blocked the IPSPs to deep stimulation in
only 5 of the 15 cells tested. The IPSPs that remained under
bicuculline in these 10 cells had short latencies and short durations
(Fig. 13A). The further addition of strychnine (15 µM), a glycine receptor blocker, to the bath completely
blocked the remaining IPSPs in all 10 of these cells (Fig.
13A). Most interestingly, complete block of the IPSPs by
bicuculline or by a combination of bicuculline and strychnine revealed
the presence of short-latency EPSPs (n = 6) that could
be quite prominent (Fig. 13B) and that would not have been
noticed in the absence of the inhibition blockers. Long-latency, long-duration IPSPs indicative of GABAB-mediated responses
were not observed.
Substitution of magnesium-free ACSF for normal ACSF also revealed the
presence of EPSPs to deep stimulation, indicating the involvement of
glutamate receptors of the NMDA type in excitatory responses to deep
stimulation. Thus, EPSPs were present either in isolation or in
combination with IPSPs in all of the cells tested with deep stimulation
in the presence of magnesium-free ACSF (n = 5), but
were visible in only 19% of the cells tested in normal ACSF
(n = 64), as described above. Two of the cells recorded
in magnesium-free ACSF were further tested with CNQX and AP-5. Addition
of CNQX caused a slight reduction of EPSP amplitude in one cell and had
little effect in the other, whereas the further addition of AP-5
blocked both EPSPs completely. Magnesium-free ACSF plus bicuculline was
substituted for normal ACSF plus bicuculline in an additional six
cells, and in five of these cells the substitution resulted in marked
enhancement of the EPSPs or the appearance of new and large EPSPs after
the initial IPSPs that remained after bicuculline.
Responses to parallel-fiber stimulation
Single-shock parallel-fiber stimuli evoked either an EPSP only
(45%, 34 of 75), an EPSP-IPSP sequence (48%, 36 of 75), or an IPSP
only (7%, 5 of 75) in the 75 large ganglion and large fusiform cells
tested with such stimuli. IPSPs to parallel-fiber stimuli were clearly
more common in large ganglion and large fusiform cells than in medium
ganglion cells in which most cells responded with an EPSP only. As
described previously, only 27% of the medium ganglion cells
(n = 62) responded with an EPSP-IPSP sequence, and no
cells responded with an IPSP alone. IPSPs appeared to be not only more
frequent but also larger in large ganglion and large fusiform cells
than in medium ganglion cells, although this difference was not
examined quantitatively. IPSPs appeared to be more common in large
fusiform cells than in large ganglion cells. Thus, 65% of the large
fusiform cells (n = 34) showed either an EPSP-IPSP sequence or an IPSP, whereas only 46% of the large ganglion cells (n = 41) showed EPSP-IPSP sequence or an IPSP.
Both the excitatory and inhibitory components of the parallel-fiber
response showed paired-pulse facilitation (Figs. 12E,
13C) with a time course similar to that described previously
for medium ganglion cells.
The inhibition evoked by parallel-fiber stimulation in cells with
large, narrow spikes, like that in medium ganglion cells, was
consistently and entirely blocked by bicuculline (Fig. 13C). The parallel fiber-evoked IPSPs were completely blocked in all 11 of
the tested cells. Thus, the parallel fiber-evoked IPSPs in large
ganglion and large fusiform cells, like those in medium ganglion cells,
appear to be mediated by GABAA receptors, and there is as
yet no indication of mediation by GABAB receptors or by
glycine.
The parallel fiber-evoked EPSPs in these cells appear to be mediated by
glutamate receptors of both the AMPA and NMDA type, as described
previously for medium ganglion cells. In five narrow-spike cells in
which bicuculline was present to block the IPSPs, the addition of CNQX
(20 µM) to the bath either blocked the parallel-fiber EPSP (three cells) or reduced it (two cells), and in the latter two
cells, the addition of AP-5 (40 µM) completely blocked
the EPSPs. In another cell, AP-5 alone caused a small reduction in the
EPSP, and the addition of CNQX resulted in the nearly complete elimination of the EPSP (Fig. 13C). An additional five cells
were examined in magnesium-free ACSF or magnesium-free ACSF plus
bicuculline. The addition of AP-5 caused a greater reduction in the
EPSPs of these cells than the addition of CNQX. In all 11 cells the
EPSP was either completely or almost completely eliminated by CNQX and
AP-5 together.
Thick, smooth dendrite cells
Fifteen cells of this type were recorded intracellularly and
morphologically identified. Membrane potentials ranged from 57 to
73 mV (mean, 61; SEM, 6.3). Stimulation of the deep layers most
commonly evoked brief (10-15 msec) IPSPs (Fig.
14A,
right). Of the 14 cells tested for responses to deep
stimulation, 7 showed an IPSP, 2 an IPSP-EPSP sequence, and 2 an EPSP.
Higher intensity stimulation evoked short-latency antidromic spikes
(Fig. 14A, right) in 5 of the 14 tested
cells (range, 30-50 mV; mean, 40; SEM, 4.5). The axons of these thick,
smooth dendrite cells branch extensively in the deep granule and
intermediate layers (Han, Bell, Sugawara, and Grant, unpublished
observations) and were probably activated by such stimuli.
Parallel-fiber stimuli evoked almost exclusively EPSPs in these cells
(Fig. 14A, left). Fourteen of the 15 cells tested showed an EPSP only and only one cell showed an EPSP-IPSP sequence. These cells have apical dendrites in the lower half of the
molecular layer that would be contacted by the activated parallel
fibers.

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Figure 14.
Responses of thick, smooth dendrite and small
fusiform cells to molecular and deep layer stimuli. A,
Thick, smooth dendrite cell. Molecular layer stimuli evoke an EPSP
(left). Deep layer stimuli evoke an IPSP at low
intensity and an antidromic spike at higher intensity. The antidromic
spike has a pronounced afterhyperpolarization (ahp).
Top, High-gain traces; bottom, low-gain
traces. B, Small fusiform cell. Molecular layer stimuli
evoke an EPSP (left). Deep layer stimuli evoke an EPSP
at low intensity and an antidromic spike at higher intensity. The
antidromic spike has a pronounced afterhyperpolarization
(ahp). Top, High-gain traces;
bottom, low-gain traces.
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Small fusiform cells
Nine cells of this type were recorded intracellularly and
morphologically identified. Membrane potentials ranged from 50 to
72 mV (mean, 60; SEM, 3.5). These cells were unique among the ELL
cells studied here in that stimulation of the deep layers evoked mainly
EPSPs rather than IPSPs (Fig. 14B, right).
All nine of the cells were tested with deep stimuli. Six cells showed
EPSPs only, one showed an EPSP to one site and an IPSP to another site, and none showed IPSPs only. The EPSPs had a short latency and could be
caused by direct primary afferent innervation of these cells because
the cell bodies and basal dendrites of these small fusiform cells are
in the region of afferent termination. Higher intensity stimulation
evoked antidromic spikes in six cells (Fig. 14B,
right). The axons of these small fusiform cells, like the thick, smooth dendrite cells, ramify in the deep granule and
intermediate layers in which they could have been activated by the deep
layer stimuli (V. Han, unpublished observations). The spikes in
these cells were generally smaller than the spikes in other cell types ranging between 10 and 65 mV (mean, 30; SEM, 5.3). Most electrode penetrations in these experiments were in the ganglion or plexiform layers (see Materials and Methods) in which the small fusiform cell has
only an apical dendrite, the soma being located 100 µm away in the
intermediate layer. Thus, most recordings were probably taken from the
apical dendrite and the smaller spike size could be caused by the
electrotonic distance from the soma. Parallel-fiber stimuli evoked an
EPSP only in six cells (Fig. 14B, left)
and an EPSP-IPSP sequence in one cell.
Primary afferent fibers
Two primary afferent fibers were recorded intracellularly in the
granule layer and identified morphologically. Both of these fibers
responded to stimulation of the deep layers with a short-latency spike
presumed to result from direct activation of the fiber (Fig. 15, response to SD). The
spikes had pronounced depolarizing afterpotentials lasting 6-8 msec,
just like the spikes recorded near the terminals of mormyromast primary
afferents in vivo (Bell, 1990 ), and a second spike could
arise from this depolarizing afterpotential. Synaptic potentials could
be evoked in these fibers as was also observed in vivo.
Thus, stimulation of the parallel fibers in the molecular layer evoked
an EPSP in one fiber (Fig. 15, response to SM), and stimulation of the deep layers, at an intensity below the threshold for
the spike, evoked an EPSP in the other fiber (data not shown). Mormyromast afferent fibers are known to make electrical synapses with
some granule cells (Bell et al., 1989 ; Meek et al., 1994 ). The synaptic
potentials observed in the afferent recordings of this study as well as
those observed in in vivo recordings (Bell, 1990 ) are
probably caused by synaptic inputs to postsynaptic cells on which the
afferents terminate and not to synaptic inputs onto the afferents
themselves. The synaptic potentials in the postsynaptic cells are
observed inside the afferent fibers through the electrical connections
of the electrical synapses. Thus, the synaptic potentials recorded in
primary afferent fibers in response to molecular layer stimulation
could be evoked indirectly via cells such as the thick, smooth dendrite
cell or the small fusiform cell, both of which have dendrites in the
molecular layer and axonal terminals in the granule layer where they
may contact the granule cells on which primary afferent fibers also
terminate. Termination of other afferent fibers on the same granule
cells that receive input from the recorded fiber could explain the EPSP
evoked by deep layer stimulation, as suggested in a previous study
(Bell, 1990 ).

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Figure 15.
Responses of primary afferent fiber to molecular
and deep layer stimuli. Molecular layer stimuli evoke an EPSP
(left). A near-threshold deep layer stimuli evokes
spikes in some traces. The spikes have a pronounced afterdepolarization
that evokes a second spike in one trace. Top, High-gain
traces; bottom, low-gain traces.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Initial processing of afferent information in the
granule layer
The dramatic increase in the postsynaptic component of the field
potential response to afferent stimulation after adding bicuculline (Fig. 2Ca) indicates prominent, short-latency inhibition at
the first stages of sensory processing, and the continued presence of a
large postsynaptic component after blocking chemical transmission suggests electrical transmission from afferent fibers to ELL cells. Both features have morphological correlates. Primary afferent fibers
form mixed electrical-chemical synapses on granule cells, and these
same cells are also contacted by large terminals that contain flattened
vesicles immunoreactive for GABA (Bell et al., 1989 ; Meek et al.,
1994 ).
Previous physiological studies also support the presence of electrical
synapses and short-latency inhibition. As described above, intra-axonal
recordings from mormyromast afferent fibers show a variety of synaptic
potentials that are best explained by synaptic inputs to postsynaptic
cells as observed through electrical synapses (Bell, 1990 ). Moreover,
one of these synaptic potentials is a prominent IPSP that is evoked by
stimulating electroreceptors on the skin near the electroreceptor
giving rise to the recorded fiber.
Dendritic spikes and their propagation in medium
ganglion cells
The relatively large amplitudes of the medium and large, broad
spikes indicate that they originate electrotonically close to the
recording site. Because the recordings were probably taken from the
somatic or dendritic regions of the cells rather than from the thin
unmyelinated axon, the medium and large, broad spikes probably
originate from the soma or dendrites. The small, narrow spike is
probably an axon or initial segment spike that does not always invade
the somatodendritic region and is conducted only passively to the
recording site. The lower threshold of the small, narrow spike is
consistent with this interpretation because recordings from several
different kinds of central cells have shown that axon spikes have a
lower threshold than somatic or dendritic spikes, even when the
injected or synaptic current is in the soma or dendrites (Stuart et
al., 1997 ).
The n3 negative wave evoked by parallel-fiber stimuli and the later
negative wave (nl) evoked by deep layer stimulation shared a
number of properties, including amplitude, duration, initiation in the
ganglion layer or deep molecular layer, and propagation toward the
external surface of the molecular layer. These shared properties and
the interaction between the two waves indicate a common origin. Our
hypothesis is that both waves are caused by broad spikes in medium
ganglion cells that are initiated in the soma or at the base of the
apical dendrites and actively propagated out these dendrites toward the
external surface of ELL.
This hypothesis is supported by parallels between the two negative
field potentials and intracellularly recorded broad spikes. The
latencies of the broad spikes in response to molecular and deep layer
stimuli are similar to the latencies of the n3 and nl waves,
respectively. In addition, the paired-pulse facilitation of the
intracellularly recorded EPSPs evoked by molecular layer stimuli often
resulted in the occurrence of a broad spike to the second EPSP (Fig.
10A), and this could explain the marked facilitation of the n3 wave in field potential responses to the same stimuli (Fig.
6A).
This explanation of the n3 and nl waves is consistent with the
morphological fact that apical dendrites of medium ganglion cells are
the major vertically oriented element in the ELL molecular layer. The
number of apical dendrites of medium ganglion cells is 10-20 times
greater than the combined total for large ganglion and large fusiform
cells (Meek et al., 1996 ). A vertically propagating extracellular field
potential can only be mediated by cellular elements that are also
vertically oriented (Hubbard et al., 1969 ). A smaller negative-going
wave, ne, preceded the larger and later negative wave, nl, in response
to strong, deep layer stimuli and was also propagated toward the
external surface of ELL (Fig. 3). Propagation of dendritic action
potentials in the apical dendrites of large ganglion and large fusiform
could explain this earlier wave.
TTX-sensitive dendritic action potentials that propagate out the
dendrites are present in a number of different central neurons, including pyramidal cells of the gymnotid ELL (Turner et al., 1994 ),
pyramidal cells of the mammalian cerebral cortex (Regehr et al., 1993 ;
Stuart and Sakmann, 1994 ) and hippocampus (Spruston et al., 1995 ), and
mammalian substantia nigra neurons (Hausser et al., 1995 ). Such spikes
convey information into the dendrites about spikes in the axon or soma.
In both the hippocampus (Magee and Johnston, 1997 ) and cerebral cortex
(Markram et al., 1997 ), the spikes were shown to have a role in
associative synaptic plasticity of the Hebbian (Hebb, 1949 ) type. These
latter findings are consistent with previous findings in the mormyrid
ELL showing that the broad spike is necessary for anti-Hebbian
associative synaptic plasticity at the parallel fiber to medium
ganglion cell synapse (Bell et al., 1993 ; C. Bell, V. Han, Y. Sugawara,
and K. Grant, unpublished data). The breadth of the broad spike could
have functional significance in allowing voltage-sensitive calcium
channels to remain open longer, or in relieving the voltage block of
NMDA channels for a longer period of time.
Pharmacological results and comparison with findings in other
cerebellum-like structures
The finding that responsiveness to parallel-fiber stimuli is
mediated by glutamate receptors of both the AMPA and NMDA type has also
been found in other cerebellum-like sensory structures, including the
gymnotid ELL (Bastian, 1993 ; N. J. Berman and L. Maler, personal
communication) and the mammalian dorsal cochlear nucleus (Manis
and Molitor, 1996 ). Berman et al. (1997) also found that responses to
the direct input from nucleus preeminentialis to ELL cells are mediated
by both types of glutamate receptors. Only AMPA responsiveness to
parallel-fiber stimulation is found in the adult cerebellum, however
(Kano et al., 1988 ; Konnerth et al., 1990 ). Ligand-binding studies in
the molecular layer of the gymnotid ELL (Maler and Monaghan, 1991 ) and
immunocytochemical studies in the molecular layer of the dorsal
cochlear nucleus (Kirkwood et al., 1995 ) also show both types of
glutamate receptors. Finally, in situ hybridization shows a
high level of expression of the NMDAR1 subunit in pyramidal cells of
the gymnotid ELL (Bottai et al., 1997 ).
Disynaptic IPSPs evoked by parallel-fiber stimulation in medium
ganglion, large ganglion, and large fusiform cells were consistently and completely blocked by bicuculline, indicating that they are mediated by GABAA receptors and not by glycine. The cells
responsible for the parallel fiber-evoked inhibition are probably
stellate cells of the molecular layer and medium ganglion cells, both
of which are known to be GABAergic and to have the appropriate
connections (Meek et al., 1996 ). Similarly, parallel fiber-evoked IPSPs
in the gymnotid ELL (Berman and Maler, personal communication) and in
the cerebellum (Ito, 1984 ) are also completely blocked by bicuculline. In contrast, parallel-fiber stimulation in the dorsal cochlear nucleus
evokes IPSPs that are mediated by both GABAA and glycine receptors (Golding and Oertel, 1996 ).
IPSPs evoked by deep layer stimulation in medium ganglion, large
ganglion, and large fusiform cells were mediated by both GABAA receptors and by glycine, as indicated by blockade
with bicuculline and strychnine, respectively. Inhibition mediated by
both GABAA and glycine receptors also appears to be present in the deeper layers of the dorsal cochlear nucleus (Golding and Oertel, 1996 ) and in the granule layer of the cerebellum (Otterson et
al., 1988 ). GABAA but not glycine responsiveness is present in the deeper layers of the gymnotid ELL (Berman and Maler, personal communication).
Excitatory effects of afferent input to the deeper layers of the
mormyrid ELL were shown to be mediated by both AMPA and NMDA receptors.
Morphological studies suggest the presence of both types of receptors
in the deeper layers of the gymnotid ELL (Maler and Monaghan, 1991 ;
Bottai et al., 1997 ) and dorsal cochlear nucleus (Petralia et al.,
1996 ), but physiological studies of the two types of glutamate
receptors in the deeper layers of these structures have not been
published. Both AMPA and NMDA responsiveness are present in cerebellar
granule cells (Silver et al., 1992 ).
Predominance of IPSPs in response to deep layer stimulation
EPSPs were evoked in medium ganglion, large ganglion, and large
fusiform cells by weak stimulation of the deep layers, but IPSPs
clearly predominated. Predominance of IPSP responses was expected in
large ganglion cells because in vivo experiments showed that
these cells are inhibited by electrosensory stimuli in the centers of
their receptive fields (Bell et al., 1997b ). IPSPs to deep layer
stimulation were not expected in large fusiform cells, however, because
the same in vivo studies showed that these cells are excited
by electrosensory stimuli in the centers of their receptive fields.
More EPSPs were also expected in type 2 medium ganglion cells, because
morphological findings suggested that these cells are excited in the
centers of their receptive fields (Han, Bell, Sugawara, and Grant,
unpublished observations). Three explanations may be suggested
for the unexpected predominance of inhibition in large fusiform cells
and MG2 medium ganglion cells:
(1) Strong and rapid inhibition at the earliest stages could obscure
excitatory responses to afferent stimuli in the slice. This study
showed that primary afferent input evokes a powerful and short-latency
inhibition in the granule layer of ELL. Stimulation of afferent fibers
in vitro is unselective compared with stimulation of
electroreceptors in vivo and probably activates as much
inhibition as excitation. Furthermore, domination of inhibitory over
excitatory effects of deep layer stimulation was shown by the
intracellular recordings in which large EPSPs, which had not been
visible before, were revealed after the addition of inhibitory
antagonists (Fig. 13B).
(2) Responsiveness to afferent input is partly mediated by NMDA
receptors, and these receptors may be less strongly activated in the
slice. EPSPs were significantly more common in response to deep
stimulation when magnesium-free ACSF was substituted for normal ACSF,
and EPSPs recorded under these conditions or in the presence of
bicuculline were blocked by the NMDA antagonist AP-5. Most of our
recordings were made in normal ACSF (without bicuculline and without
AP-5), and NMDA receptors were probably not as effective under
these conditions.
(3)Lack of facilitatory electric organ corollary discharge input
in the slice preparation. Excitatory responses to electrosensory stimuli in large fusiform cells recorded in vivo are
strongly facilitated when the stimuli are delivered at short delays
after the electrical organ discharge motor command. This
facilitation seems to be attributable to an excitatory corollary
discharge-driven input to the interneurons that mediate the
electrosensory responses of the large fusiform cells (Bell et al.,
1997b ), and such an input to granule layer neurons with the right
latency for mediating the facilitation can be observed in recordings
from primary afferent fibers, as described above (Bell, 1990 ). No
corollary discharge signal is present in the slice, of course, and the
interneurons responsible for the electrosensory excitation of large
fusiform cells might therefore be deprived of critical excitatory
input.
In general, the deeper layers of ELL are only poorly understood. Some
cells of the deeper layers evoked EPSPs in the cells studied here and
in vivo (Bell et al., 1997b ), and others evoked IPSPs. Some
IPSPs were of short duration, whereas others were of long duration, and
some were blocked by bicuculline whereas others were blocked by
strychnine. Clearly, much remains to be learned about the morphology,
connectivity, and pharmacology of cell types in the deep layers of
ELL.
In summary, this study has provided an overview of synaptic responses
and intrinsic electrical properties of identified cells in the mormyrid
ELL. Inhibitory processes have been identified at the first stage of
processing in which afferents contact granule cells, at the next stage
in which the granule cells inhibit the Purkinje-like medium ganglion
and efferent cells, and in the effects of parallel-fiber activation on
these cells. Differences in the functional roles of these different
levels of inhibition will be a worthy subject for future investigation.
Finally, the presence of NMDA and AMPA receptors at parallel-fiber
synapses and the likelihood of propagated dendritic spikes in molecular
layer dendrites are results with important implications for an
understanding of the anti-Hebbian plasticity that has been identified
at these synapses.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 17, 1998; revised May 15, 1998; accepted May 19, 1998.
This work was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation
and the National Institute of Mental Health to C.B., by contract
CI1*CT92-0085 from the European Economic Community, a grant from NATO
and funds from the Centre National de Recherche Scientifique to K.G.,
and by grants from the del Duca Foundation and Yamada Science
Foundation to Y.S.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Curtis C. Bell, Neurological
Sciences Institute, Oregon Health Science University, 1120 Northwest
20th Avenue, Portland, OR 97209.
 |
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