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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 15, 1999, 19(14):5768-5781
Determinants of Excitability at Transition Zones in
Kv1.1-Deficient Myelinated Nerves
Lei
Zhou1,
Albee
Messing2, and
Shing Yan
Chiu1
1 Department of Physiology, University of Wisconsin
School of Medicine, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, and
2 Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of
Veterinary Medicine and Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, Wisconsin 53706
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ABSTRACT |
This study examines the role of K channel segregation and fiber
geometry at transition zones of mammalian nerve terminals in the
peripheral nervous system. Mutant mice that are deficient in Kv1.1, a
fast Shaker K channel normally localized beneath the myelin sheath,
display three types of cooling-induced abnormal hyperexcitability
localized to regions before the transition zones of myelinated nerves.
The first type is stimulus-evoked nerve backfiring that is absent at
birth, peaks at postnatal day 17 (P17), and subsides in adults. The
second type is spontaneous activity that has a more delayed onset,
peaks at P30, and also disappears in older mice (>P60). TEA greatly
amplifies this spontaneous activity with an effective dosage of ~0.7
mM, and can induce its reappearance in older mutant mice
(>P100). These first two types of hyperexcitability occur only in
homozygous mutants that are completely devoid of Kv1.1. The third type
occurs in heterozygotes and represents a synergism between a
TEA-sensitive channel and Kv1.1. Heterozygotes exposed to TEA display
no overt phenotype until a single stimulation is given, which is then
followed by an indefinite phase of repetitive discharge. Computer
modeling suggests that the excitability of the transition zone near the nerve terminal has at least two major determinants: the preterminal internodal shortening and axonal slow K channels. We suggest that variations in fiber geometry create sites of inherent instability that
is normally stabilized by a synergism between myelin-concealed Kv1.1
and a slow, TEA-sensitive K channel.
Key words:
potassium channel gene; homologous recombination; myelinated nerves; transition zones; nerve conduction; mouse
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INTRODUCTION |
In adult mammalian myelinated
nerves, fast potassium channels (Kv1.1 and Kv1.2) are sequestered under
the myelin sheath in the juxtaparanodal region, but the role of these K
channels in regulating excitability has been a matter of speculation
(Chiu and Ritchie, 1980 ; Wang et al., 1993 ). The mature pattern of
localization is not achieved instantly at the beginning of myelination,
but is the result of a gradual redistribution process whereby Kv1.1 first appears at the node, then gradually shifts from the paranodal to
the juxtaparanodal positions as the nerve matures (Vabnick et al.,
1999 ). This channel redistribution is also accompanied by morphological
changes in myelin thickness, internodal length, and fiber diameter
(Pfeiffer and Friede, 1985 ; Yamamoto et al., 1996 ). How do channel
redistribution and morphological changes affect the excitability of the
myelinated nerves? The gradual redistribution of Kv1.1 under the myelin
sheath is accompanied by a gradual diminution of 4-AP sensitivity as
the nerve matures (Kocsis and Waxman, 1983 ; Vabnick et al., 1999 ).
Vabnick et al. (1999) suggested that the redistribution of
Kv1.1 (node paranode juxtaparanode) prevents aberrant
excitations during development.
An important issue not addressed by the above studies is whether
channel segregation plays a more important role at the transition zones
near the nerve terminal (where the myelinated segment ends and the
nonmyelinated segment begins) than elsewhere in the nerve. This issue
is interesting for various reasons. There is an impedance mismatch at
this transition zone, and the shortening of internodes before the nerve
terminal has been suggested to facilitate successful invasion of the
nerve terminal by action potentials (Revenko et al., 1973 ). From a
developmental standpoint, the transition zone may be the last site to
mature (Yamamoto et al., 1996 ). Even in the adult, ongoing myelin
remodeling of the internodal segments preceding the terminal may
persist (Baker and Ip, 1965 ; Quick et al., 1979 ; Pfeiffer and Friede,
1985 ). Regulation of transition zone excitability also has implications
for diseases such as multiple sclerosis, where pathological transition
zones are created during demyelination and remyelination. The
transition zone, because of its local geometrical heterogeneity, may be
inherently unstable and particularly sensitive to excitability perturbations.
The functional role of K channel clustering at transition zones was
first addressed using mutant mice that lack Kv1.1 (Zhou et al., 1998 ).
We reported that in immature nerves postnatal day 14 (P14)-P21, the
absence of Kv1.1, which is normally segregated to the paranode and
concealed by the myelin sheath, produces a disproportionately large
change in hyperexcitability at the transition zone compared with the
rest of the nerve (Zhou et al., 1998 ). Here, we extend these studies to
encompass a broader developmental range (P5-P101) to gain further
insight into the determinants of excitability zone excitability. In the
first part, we examine developmental changes in transition zone
excitability, and ask whether Kv1.1 deletion unmasks the importance of
other K channels. In the second part, we use a computer model to
examine various determinants of the excitability of the transition
zone. Our studies reveal two types of abnormal excitability changes
with different developmental schedules, and, in addition, unmask
a synergism between Kv1.1 and a TEA-sensitive channel or channels
that critically determines the excitability of the transition zone.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Kv1.1 null mice
Kv1.1 mutant mice in a mixed B6x129 genetic background (Smart et
al., 1998 ) were generated by heterozygote-heterozygote mating and used
for electrophysiological studies (Zhou et al., 1998 ). For
electrophysiological experiments performed on mice P11 or older, the
genotypes were predetermined by PCR analysis of tail DNA samples
performed at P6-P8 as described previously (Zhou et al., 1998 ). For
electrophysiological experiments performed on mice P10 or younger, the
genotype was determined after the experiments by PCR analysis of
postmortem tail DNA samples. Controls consisted of age-matched
littermates that were Kv1.1+/+.
Electrophysiology
Phrenic nerve-diaphragm preparation. Whole diaphragm
with phrenic nerve was excised from the wild-type and mutant mice and mounted in a recording chamber as described previously (Zhou et al.,
1998 ). Briefly, the nerve was stimulated with a bipolar electrode while
the nerve compound action potential was recorded from the cut end with
a tight suction electrode. The nerve-evoked muscle compound action
potential was recorded simultaneously with a surface electrode pressed
gently against the diaphragm surface. We consistently recorded from the
same location on the diaphragm surface in all experiments.
Intracellular recordings. Intracellular recordings from
single muscle fibers were performed with sharp microelectrodes (10-20 M , 3 M KCl) inserted near the endplate regions. The
muscle was cut on both sides of endplate region near the tendon regions
to prevent contraction and was incubated for ~1 hr before experiments started.
Presynaptic current measurement. Extracellular potential
measurement of the presynaptic current waveform was performed in the
triangularis sterni muscle-nerve preparation after the
technique of Brigant and Mallart (1982) , as described in our previous
work (Zhou et al., 1998 ). Briefly, a sharp microelectrode (3-5 M , 2 M NaCl) was inserted into the perineural space near the
endplate under visual guidance with Nomarski optics (400×). This thin
muscle preparation allows precise placement of the electrode near the heminodal region. Our recorded extracellular field potential waveform, which consisted of two negativities, is consistent with the position of
the recording pipette in the heminodal region as described previously
[Brigant and Mallart (1982) , their Fig. 9].
Solutions
The normal Ringer's solution bathing the nerve-muscle
preparation contained (in mM): NaCl 129, KCl 3.0, CaCl2 2.4, MgSO4 1.3, NaHCO3 20, glucose 20, and HEPES 3. The solution was vigorously bubbled with 95%
O2 and 5% CO2 to a pH of 7.4, and the
preparation was continuously perfused by this solution at 2-3 ml/min.
Temperature of the bath was changed by a DC-feedback temperature
controller. A thermistor probe was placed near the stimulating and
recording site to monitor temperature changes. The nerve was stimulated with brief stimuli (0.01 msec) with a bipolar electrode connected to
the voltage output of a Grass Stimulator S48.
Computer modeling
The simulation model combines Halter and Clark's (1991) model
for myelinated axons and Miralles and Solsona's (1996) model for the
nerve terminal (see Fig. 7). For the nerve trunk portion, the axon
diameter/fiber diameter (d/D) ratio is 0.70 and the internodal length/axon diameter (L/d) ratio is 255, which is near the optimal dimensions for peripheral myelinated nerves (Waxman, 1975 ). The intraaxonal and periaxonal voltages are computed as in Halter and Clark
(1991) , with the voltage potential difference across the axonal
membrane determining the activation of ion channels distributed on the
axonal membrane. Our model consists of a myelinated fiber with 15 internodes, which ends at a nerve terminal with four branches (see Fig.
7). There are four types of ion channels in this model (Na channels,
fast K channels, slow K channels, and leakage channels).
Na channels. We used the nodal Na channel permeability value
(33.9 × 10 5 m/sec) from Halter's model
(1991) and distributed it at the nodes and heminode. At the internode
we assume that the Na channel density is 4% of the nodal value
(Shrager, 1989 ). Note that the Halter model (1991) uses a higher Na
channel density than other models because of the need to reproduce an
appropriate conduction velocity. At the presynaptic terminal, the Na
channel density is gradually reduced to 0.4% of the nodal value at the
tip of the terminal branch.
Fast K channels. We distributed fast, noninactivating K
channels in the internode with peak density at the juxtaparanodal region [which in our model is over the fluted paranodal axon segment (FLUT) region]. The kinetics of the fast K channel is taken from Halter (1991) , and is similar to the fast delayed rectifier in most
computer models of the myelinated fiber. The permeability of fast K
channels at the juxtaparanodal region is calculated from published
patch-clamp data (3.85 × 10 6 m/sec) [Vogel
and Schwarz (1995) , their Table 1]. The
density in the other internodal regions [stereotype internodal region (STIN) and paranodal myelin sheath attachment axon segment (MYSA)] declines to 8% of the peak value at FLUT. We assume there are no fast
K channels at the node. At the nerve terminal, the fast K channel
density is highest at the region right before the branches, then
declines to 0.8% of the FLUT value at the tip of the branch, with an
intermediate value in between. The kinetics of the presynaptic fast K
channel is identical to that in the axon.
Slow K channels. Slow K channel permeability and kinetics
were taken from the Halter model (9.37 × 10 7
m/sec). The kinetics of the slow K channels were obtained by Halter and
Clark (1991) by curve fitting to published slow potassium current data
from amphibian myelinated nerves. Slow K channels have a different
distribution than the fast K channels in having a major representation
at the nodal membrane. The channel density is highest at the node and
heminode and declines to 33% elsewhere along the axon (STIN, FLUT,
MYSA). Along the presynaptic terminal, the slow K channel density is
highest at the heminode, then gradually declines to 3.3% of the
heminode value at the terminal tip. Unlike the fast K channels, the
slow K channels are already activated at the resting potential. This K
channel profile is similar to that used in Miralles and Solsona
(1996) .
Leakage conductance. For the axon, the value for the leakage
conductance is 303 S/m2 for the node and 5 S/m2 for the internode (Hines and Shrager, 1991 ).
For the presynaptic terminal membrane, the leakage conductance is the
same as that for the internodal axon. The specific membrane capacitance
for the axonal membrane and each single myelin lamellae is 0.01 F/m2.
Ca channels. Although Ca influx is critical for
neurotransmitter release from the presynaptic terminal, the current is
very small and spatially limited to the terminal membrane region (Peres and Andrietti, 1986 ). We ignored calcium current in our simulations.
Simulations
The Crank-Nicholson integration method was used, and the time
steps for calculation are 0.5 µsec at 20°C and 0.2 µsec at
37°C. The simulation program was written in C and compiled by Borland C++5.02.
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RESULTS |
In this report, we document three types of abnormal
hyperexcitability in the PNS of Kv1.1 mutant mice, localized to the
transition zones of the nerve terminal. The three types of
hyperexcitability are stimulus-evoked nerve backfiring, spontaneous
activity, and synergism between Kv1.1 and TEA-sensitive channels. The
first type has already been described in our previous report, in
relation to a narrow developmental window (P14-P21; Zhou et al.,
1998 ). In the present study, we addressed a broader developmental range (P5-P101) during which myelination progresses from immature to mature
status. We used many of the same techniques for localization of
excitability changes described in the previous report (Zhou et al.,
1998 ).
First type of hyperexcitability: evoked nerve backfiring peaks
at P17
The key phenotypes of Kv1.1-null mice at different ages are
illustrated in Figure 1. Nerve and muscle
compound action potentials were recorded from the phrenic
nerve-diaphragm preparation. Figure 1A shows typical
responses, recorded at room temperature, of Kv1.1 preparations taken
from mice of three age groups (P10, P18, and P40). In the young mice
(P10), there is a one-to-one nerve-muscle transmission in Kv1.1 nulls,
which is indistinguishable from the age-matched, wild-type response
(wild-type data not shown). As the mice develop (P18), the first type
of hyperexcitability appears, demonstrated in our previous work to be
evoked nerve backfiring from the transition zone near the nerve
terminal (Zhou et al., 1998 ). This type of hyperexcitability peaks at
P17, and subsides with age (Fig. 1B,
left).

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Figure 1.
Developmental changes in excitability in the Kv1.1
null mutants. A shows typical nerve stimulation-evoked
muscle (top) and nerve (bottom) compound
action potentials from Kv1.1-null mutants of three age groups. The
muscle action potential was measured by a pipette pressed against the
diaphragm surface, whereas the nerve action potential was measured by a
tight suction electrode from the cut end of the phrenic nerve. To
highlight the delayed repetitive discharge in the nerve response, the
nerve signal has been amplified 10 times. The bath temperature was
20°C. With aging, the mutant phenotype changed from normal (P10), to
evoked repetitive activity (P18) and then to spontaneous activity in
the baseline before the stimulation (P40). B shows plots
of the evoked repetitive activity and spontaneous activity as a
function of animal age. Evoked nerve backfiring was quantified by
counting the number of spikes in the nerve compound action potential
trace over a fixed time interval (10-40 msec) after the stimulation.
Spontaneous activity was quantified by counting the number of nerve
spikes in a fixed baseline segment (30 msec) before stimulation. In
most experiments, the freshly dissected preparation was first warmed to
35°C for 5-10 min, and then the bath temperature was cooled to
20°C for the main parts of the experiments. The evoked and
spontaneous activity in most experiments were measured within 5-30 min
after this cooling. The smooth solid curves are fits (by eye) to the
data, showing peaks at P17 and P30 for the evoked nerve backfiring and
the spontaneous activity, respectively.
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Second type of hyperexcitability: spontaneous activity peaks
at P30
The disappearance of the evoked nerve backfiring was followed by a
new form of hyperexcitability consisting of spontaneous activity. This
spontaneous activity can be easily detected in the baseline of both the
muscle and nerve action potential traces before stimulation (Fig.
1A, P40). This spontaneous activity peaked at P30 but also subsides with further maturation (Fig.
1B, right). The inset in Figure
1B (right) compares the developmental
schedule of the evoked and spontaneous activity, showing the emergence of the spontaneous activity coincides with the disappearance of the
evoked activity. The spontaneous activity does not require previous
nerve stimulation and can be induced by monitoring both the resting
nerve and muscle activity while the bath temperature is lowered from 35 to 18°C (Fig. 2, left two
panels, P32, / ). The warm-cool cycle was repeated twice
to illustrate the reproducibility of the phenomenon (Fig. 2, left
two panels). In age-matched wild-type mice, no
spontaneous activity can be observed at either bath temperature (Fig.
2, right two panels). An interesting feature
about this spontaneous activity is that it tended to be quite labile,
particularly in older mice. For example, in several mice within the age
range P40-P53, the spontaneous activity, although present during the early part of an experiment, disappeared after several cycles of
temperature change; in several older mice (P60-P101), spontaneous activity was virtually absent to begin with. In contrast, in the younger null mutants (P23-P30), the spontaneous activity persisted through multiple cycles of temperature change during experiments that
lasted 1-2 hr.

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Figure 2.
Spontaneous nerve activity in old null mutants
originated from the nerve terminal region. Top shows the
schematic drawing of the experimental configuration. Compound muscle
and nerve activities were measured simultaneously in the phrenic
nerve-muscle preparation from a P32 null mutant. A lidocaine pipette,
consisting of a pair of closely spaced pipettes, one for ejecting
lidocaine (150 mM) and the other for sucking it up, was
used to selectively block conduction on the phrenic nerve halfway
between the nerve cut end and the nerve terminal. At 20°C,
spontaneous muscle and nerve activity could be observed in the null
mutant (left two panels) but not in the age-matched wild
type (right two panels). The spontaneous activity in the
mutant was induced by cooling, as shown by changing the bath
temperatures. Curare (15 µM) blocked the muscle activity
without affecting the nerve activity. Local conduction block with
lidocaine abolished the spontaneous activity, demonstrating its origin
from the nerve terminal region.
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Localization of spontaneous activity to the nerve
terminal region
To delineate nerve versus muscle contributions to the spontaneous
activity, curare was added to immobilize the muscle fibers (Fig. 2,
left two panels). This eliminated the muscle
spontaneous activity, but left intact the nerve spontaneous activity,
suggesting that the hyperexcitability originated from the nerve. Where
in the nerve does the spontaneous activity originate? The activity detected by the recording pipette at the cut end could represent spontaneous activity of the nerve trunk, injury activity from the cut
end, or activity originating from the nerve terminal region that
backpropagates along the nerve. To distinguish between these possibilities, a lidocaine pipette was used to selectively block nerve
conduction at a site located roughly halfway between the recording
pipette and the nerve terminal (Fig. 2, top scheme). Our lidocaine pipette was fabricated and tested in numerous control experiments to allow a local nerve blockade without leakage of the drug
into the bath to block other parts of the nerve. If the spontaneous
nerve activity was uniformly distributed over the nerve trunk, this
interruption of conduction at the midpoint should block half of the
activity reaching the recording pipette. If the spontaneous activity
was caused by injury excitation occurring at the cut end of the nerve,
this local block should produce no effect on the recorded spontaneous
activity. Neither result was observed. Instead, the spontaneous
activity was completely abolished by the lidocaine block (Fig. 2,
left two panels, bottom). The best
explanation of the complete silencing of the spontaneous activity is
that the activity originated from the nerve terminal region. Further
corroborative evidence on this point will be presented below when we
explore whether myelinated or nonmyelinated fibers generate the
spontaneous activity.
The spontaneous activity originates from myelinated fibers
Phrenic nerves contain both myelinated and nonmyelinated fibers,
and an important issue is which fiber type gives rise to the
spontaneous activity. To resolve this issue, a brief, supramaximal stimulation (0.01 msec) was applied to the nerve trunk to activate only
the fastest conducting myelinated fibers, which produced a compound
action potential derived only from these fibers. Interestingly, the
spontaneous activity, which was present in the baseline before the
action potential, was completely occluded for ~100 msec after the
action potential (Fig. 1A, P40 nerve
trace). Furthermore, the spontaneous activity was occluded
in a graded manner, as more myelinated fibers are recruited by
gradually increasing the stimulation strength (data not shown). We are
confident that only myelinated fibers were being stimulated because a
slow conducting compound action potential corresponding to
nonmyelinated fiber activation was not observed with our brief
stimulations. Unless there was an interaction between myelinated and
nonmyelinated fibers (some kind of ephaptic interactions), which we
think highly unlikely, we believe that this interaction between the
spontaneous activity and myelinated nerve activation is best explained
by the spontaneous activity arising from myelinated nerves. As will be
discussed later (see Figs. 8-11), the computer simulations showing
that myelinated nerves indeed have the capability of generating
spontaneous discharge, at least for the evokable type further
strengthen this argument. The fact that ~100 msec had to elapse
before the spontaneous activity resumed suggests a refractoriness of
~100 msec for the generation of the spontaneous activity. This could
reflect refractoriness either in the nerve trunk or in the generation
of spontaneous activity from the nerve terminal. Twin-pulse experiments
showed that the nerve trunk is fully capable of generating a second
impulse 10 msec after the first pulse (data not shown). Hence, the
refractoriness in the spontaneous activity reflects the refractoriness
of the site of origin of the spontaneous activity, presumably the nerve terminal region. This argument for the terminal origin of the spontaneous activity is indirect, but is consistent with our earlier, more direct evidence based on local conduction block. We conclude that
the spontaneous activity originates near nerve terminal regions of
myelinated fibers.
TEA amplifies the spontaneous activity
Besides fast K channels, myelinated fibers also express slow K
channels that have been suggested to modulate repetitive discharge of
the nerves. Unlike fast K channels that are absent from the node, slow
K channels have a major representation at the nodal membrane, although
they are also expressed in the internode (Kocsis et al., 1986 ; Baker et
al., 1987 ). An interesting issue is whether spontaneous activity in the
Kv1.1-null mice is linked to slow K channels. Because slow K channels
are TEA sensitive, we examined the effect of TEA on the spontaneous
activity. We found the developmental onset of spontaneous activity in
the null mutants was also accompanied by an increasing ability of TEA
to induce or amplify spontaneous activity. Figure
3A (left) shows a
P29 mutant mouse where the baseline spontaneous activity was not very
robust. Application of TEA gradually increased the baseline spontaneous
activity (Fig. 3A, left, nerve records), and ultimately
transformed the response to one that resembled the severe spontaneous
activity phenotype observed in some null mutants. This effect of TEA in
amplifying the endogenous nerve spontaneous activity is highly
age-dependent, occurring only in old (P23-P100) but not in young
(P12-P14, Fig. 3B) mutant mice. In the young mice, the only
observed effect of TEA was a potentiation of the evoked nerve
backfiring that is normally insignificant in these young mutants (Fig.
3B); spontaneous activity was never induced in the baseline.
In all age groups tested, TEA (0.5-5 mM) had no effect on
the wild-type mice (Fig. 3A,B).

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Figure 3.
Differential TEA sensitivity in old and young null
mutants. Nerve stimulation-evoked nerve and muscle compound action
potentials were measured from phrenic nerve-diaphragm preparations of
two age groups: old (P23-P40; A, C) and
young (P12-P14; B, D). Wild-type
littermates from the same age groups were used as controls.
A and B show typical muscle and nerve
responses to 5 mM TEA. The responses were generated by
supramaximal nerve stimulation with the time between two traces being 1 min. The nerve traces have been amplified 10 times to illustrate the
spontaneous nerve activity. TEA was without effect on the muscle
response in the wild type but showed an age-dependent effect in the
null mutants. In the young mutants, the evoked backfiring was
potentiated while in the older mutants spontaneous activity was
amplified. TEA did not affect the initial nerve compound action but
caused a gradual decline in the muscle compound action in the old
mutant. C and D show the averaged results
of the TEA-induced decline in the muscle action potential in the old
(C) but not young (D, open
symbols) mutants. Wild-type data are represented by
closed symbols. E and F
show the temperature sensitivity of the TEA-induced spontaneous
activity. Old mutants were used that had little or no endogenous
spontaneous activity. Resting compound nerve activity was recorded from
the nerve cut ends (as in Fig. 2) as the temperature of the bath was
switched between 35 and 20°C. In E (P61), adding 5 mM TEA to the bath dramatically induced spontaneous
activity. In F (P101), spontaneous activity was induced
with TEA concentrations as low as 0.5 mM. Curare was
present to immobilize the muscle (E,
F).
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An important difference between the endogenous spontaneous activity and
the TEA sensitivity is that whereas the endogenous spontaneous activity
declines with age (Fig. 1B, right), the
effect of TEA persists through all ages tested. Figure 3, E
and F, shows two old null mutants that displayed little or
no spontaneous activity. TEA (5 mM) dramatically induced a
spontaneous activity that is highly temperature-sensitive (Fig.
3E, P101). In the other null mutant (Fig. 3F,
P68), a stepwise increase in TEA concentrations showed that as low as
0.5 mM TEA was enough to induce the spontaneous activity.
One striking effect of TEA in the older mutants was a gradual
abolishment of neurotransmission, as seen in the elimination of the
evoked muscle compound action potential (Fig. 3A,
left, muscle records). The mechanism for
this TEA action is unclear. Because TEA has been suggested to block
choline uptake (Roed, 1989 ), one possibility is that the
neurotransmission block is caused by a dual action of TEA in inducing
spontaneous discharge as well as slowly depleting the ACh release pool.
Although we have not resolved the mechanism for the neurotransmission
block induced by TEA, the gradual reduction of the evoked muscle
compound action potential becomes a very convenient assay for the
age-dependent severity of the action of TEA, as shown in the summarized
plot in Figure 3 for old (C) and young
(D) null mutants.
Single muscle recordings
To gain further quantitative information into the action of TEA on
the null mutant nerves, we recorded the postsynaptic membrane potential
(PSP) from single muscle fibers in cut muscle preparations. Figure
4A shows recordings of
a Kv1.1-null PSP with no baseline spontaneous activity. Nerve
stimulation was given every 30 sec. Adding TEA (5 mM)
produced a prolonged phase of PSP discharge at ~10 Hz (Fig.
4A, bottom, inset at expanded
time scale). In other experiments, this spontaneous activity was
induced by TEA without using nerve stimulation. The amplitude of PSP
gradually reduced to zero, with a time course similar to that observed
in the reduction of the muscle action potential in uncut muscle
preparations (Fig. 3C). The gradual disappearance of the PSP
was not caused by failure of nerve action potentials because both the
compound nerve action potential and the refractory period of nerve
transmission were totally unaffected by TEA treatment (data not shown).
TEA (5 mM) was without effect on the wild-type PSP (Fig.
4A).

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Figure 4.
Measurement of TEA-induced repetitive discharge in
single muscle fiber. A shows evoked PSPs recorded with
sharp electrodes in cut-muscle preparations. The PSP was evoked by
stimulating the phrenic nerve with a single stimulation every 30 sec.
TEA (5 mM) had no effect on the evoked PSP of wild type
(top trace). In the null mutant, TEA led to spontaneous
PSPs with a regular frequency of ~10 Hz (bottom,
inset, expanded time scale). The stimulation was turned
off when the spontaneous discharge occurred. The amplitude of the
spontaneous PSP slowly declined to zero. B,
Dose-response relationship of TEA. Presynaptic current waveforms were
measured extracellularly from the triangular sterni nerve-muscle
preparation in which resolvable single spikes from four to eight single
fibers can be measured as TEA concentration was increased. A sample
extracellular presynaptic current waveform was shown (B,
top right), illustrating that TEA depressed a negativity
corresponding to activation of a presynaptic K conductance. The
increase in the spike frequency (probably caused by recruitment of more
fibers) with increasing TEA concentration was measured. TEA was applied
for 10 min at each concentration. The sigmoidal dose- response curve
was fitted to the data with a half-maximal effective concentration of
0.77 ± 0.05 mM (n = 3).
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Dose-response relation
Using the triangularis sterni preparation, we recorded
presynaptic current waveforms from a bundle of four to eight fibers by
inserting a microelectrode into the preterminal region of Kv1.1-null endplates. This preparation produced well resolved single spikes whose
frequency increased with TEA concentrations (Fig. 4B,
left), probably resulting from recruitment of more fibers
into spontaneous activity. The dose-response relationship between TEA
concentration and the spontaneous activity revealed a half-maximal
dosage of 0.77 mM (Fig. 4B,
right).
Temperature sensitivity and origination from the nerve
terminal region
Using the technique of local conduction block with lidocaine (Fig.
2), we demonstrated that the TEA-induced spontaneous activity, like the
endogenous spontaneous activity, originated from nerve terminals of
myelinated fibers (data not shown). Further, the TEA-induced
spontaneous activity, like the endogenous one, was temperature-sensitive (Fig. 3E). From these similarities, we
suggest that the TEA-induced activity and the spontaneous activity have a common origin. It appears that in the absence of Kv1.1, the excitability of the mutant nerve terminals is dominated by a
TEA-sensitive K channel or channels.
The repetitive discharge is not related to Ca-activated K channels
at the nerve terminal
It is possible that blocking calcium currents or blocking
calcium-activated potassium channels at the nerve terminal may lead to
repetitive discharge in the mutant. We therefore applied blockers of
calcium-activated potassium channels (apamin, which blocks a different
class of calcium-activated K channels than that blocked by TEA, 250 nM, for 1 hr), or removed bath calcium, to test these possibilities. We found that neither manipulation mimicked the effect
of TEA (data not shown), suggesting that the action of TEA in the null
mutants was unrelated to blocking calcium-activated potassium channels.
Effect of elevating bath potassium
Another possible mechanism for the action of TEA is that it causes
a membrane depolarization, leading to repetitive discharge in Kv1.1
nulls whose transition zones are already destabilized by the absence of
Kv1.1. However, we found that raising the bath potassium concentration
from the normal value of 3 to 9 mM did not reproduce the
effect of TEA.
4-AP reproduces the spontaneous activity phenotype in the
wild type
An interesting issue is whether the spontaneous activity phenotype
in the null mutants is a direct result of Kv1.1 gene deletion or a
secondary effect caused by alteration in expression of other genes or
changes in myelin morphology. In preliminary studies we have found no
changes in the myelin morphology by ultrastructural examination of
longitudinal sections of Kv1.1 mutant sciatic nerves (data not shown).
Furthermore, at least in brain, the expression of a closely related
member, Kv1.2, was not altered by Kv1.1 deletion (Smart et al., 1998 ).
Nevertheless, we felt our case for a primary effect of Kv1.1 deletion
would be strengthened if we could reproduce the mutant phenotype by
acutely blocking Kv1.1 in a wild-type mouse. DTX would have been a
preferred drug because of its specific action on Shaker K channels such
as Kv1.1. However, its access to paranodal K channels under the myelin
sheath is restricted (Zhou et al., 1998 ; Vabnick et al., 1999 ). Hence,
we used 4-AP, a broad-spectrum blocker of fast K channels that can
penetrate the myelin sheath. Figure 5
shows the effect of 4-AP (250 µM) on an old (P35) and a
young (P13) wild-type phrenic nerve-diaphragm preparation. In the
older wild-type mouse (top), cooling-induced spontaneous activity was
absent before 4-AP, but appeared after 4-AP application. Using the
technique for local blockage of nerve conduction with lidocaine (Fig.
2), we demonstrated that the 4-AP induced spontaneous activity
originated from the nerve terminal regions. In the younger wild-type
mouse (bottom), no effect of 4-AP was seen. Hence, the key features of
the Kv1.1-null phenotype with respect to spontaneous activity (delayed
developmental onset, temperature-sensitivity, origination from the
nerve terminal region) were all reproduced by 4-AP in the wild type,
supporting the case that the mutant phenotype reflects a primary effect
of losing Kv1.1.

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Figure 5.
Developmental appearance of spontaneous nerve
activity in null mutants could be mimicked by applying 4-AP to the wild
type. Left panels, Absence of temperature dependence of
resting nerve activity in an old (P31, top) and young
(P13, bottom) wild-type mouse. Right
panels, 4-AP (250 µM) induced
temperature-sensitive spontaneous activity in the old, but not young,
wild-type mouse. Resting nerve activity was measured from the cut end
of a phrenic nerve as in Figure 2. Using selective lidocaine blockade
(as in Fig. 2), we demonstrated that the 4-AP-induced spontaneous
activity originated from the nerve terminal region (data not
shown).
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We hasten to point out that the 4-AP studies, unlike our gene deletion
studies, lack the specificity to pinpoint the site of
hyperexcitability. For example, 4-AP blocks both myelin-concealed K
channels and fast K channels on the presynaptic membrane. In contrast,
our gene deletion removes the former while leaving the latter intact.
The 4-AP experiment alone does not allow the relative role of terminal
versus myelin-segregated K channels in controlling the transition zone
excitability to be sorted out. In contrast, this conclusion was
possible with our Kv1.1 null mutants.
Synergism between Kv1.1 and TEA-sensitive channels
Besides inducing spontaneous activity, TEA also produces an
evokable response in the Kv1.1 mutants that is best characterized as a
synergism between TEA-sensitive and Kv1.1 channels. This is best
studied in the heterozygotes whose phenotype is indistinguishable from
the wild type before TEA application, as described below.
Heterozygotes as a model system to study synergism
between Kv1.1 and TEA-sensitive channels
The heterozygotes are ideal for examining synergistic interaction
between TEA and Kv1.1 deficiency, for several reasons. First, the
half-normal gene dosage present in Kv1.1 heterozygotes is associated
with ~50% reduction in mRNA level (Smart et al., 1998 ), suggesting
that the expression of Kv1.1 protein, though not eliminated, is
reduced. Second, this partial Kv1.1 deficiency alone causes no overt
phenotypes. Thus, the PNS excitability is virtually indistinguishable from the wild type (Smart et al., 1998 ). In the present study, the
transition zone excitability of the heterozygotes is normal (both
evoked nerve backfiring and spontaneous activity were absent). Figure
6, A and B, shows a
phrenic nerve-diaphragm preparation from a P35 heterozygote (+/ )
before TEA application. In these experiments, a fixed paradigm was
applied to both wild type and heterozygotes. After dissection, the
preparation was allowed to stabilize at 20°C for 60 min before the
experiments began. The experiment started by raising the temperature to
35°C for 6-10 min during which a single stimulation was given. The
temperature was then lowered to 20°C, and another single stimulation
given (Fig. 6A). Both stimulations triggered a single
nerve response in the heterozygote (Fig. 6A). TEA (5 mM) was then added (Fig. 6B). The
response to the single stimulation at 35°C remained unaffected. When
the system was cooled to 20°C, no spontaneous activity appeared (Fig.
6B). However, a single stimulation triggered a
long-lasting phase of repetitive discharge (~15 min) that could be
terminated by warming (Fig. 6B). This phenomenon
could then be reproduced by cooling, in which case a single stimulation
again was needed to trigger the long-lasting repetitive discharge. In
some heterozygotes (Fig. 6E), spontaneous activity
appears before the stimulation (asterisk). However, in a total of four
heterozygotes tested, stimulation was needed to initiate the discharge.
We suspect that with TEA present, the system is at such a critical
balance that a single "accident" or ectopic firing can initiate the
long-lasting repetitive discharge. That the evoked repetitive discharge
originates from the nerve terminal was demonstrated by using local
lidocaine blockade (Fig. 2) to decouple the nerve terminal from the
nerve trunk. In this "nerve-trunk-only" preparation, no
long-lasting discharge was seen after a single nerve stimulation (Fig.
6F). Finally, TEA had no effects on the wild-type
preparation under similar experimental conditions (Fig.
6C,D). In other experiments, we observed that
higher TEA concentrations (10 mM) or prolonged TEA
incubation did produce a similar, but less robust phenomenon in some
wild types. This suggests that this synergism phenomenon involving TEA
might also be present in the wild type, but the threshold for
developing it is much lower in the heterozygotes. Collectively, the
data in Figure 6 clearly suggests a synergistic phenomenon. Thus,
though Kv1.1 deficiency alone (Fig. 6A) and TEA alone
(Fig. 6D) produce no overt phenotypes, their
combination ( /+ plus TEA) produces a dramatic effect on the evoked
excitability (Fig. 6B).

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Figure 6.
Demonstration of synergism between Kv1.1
deficiency and TEA in Kv1.1 heterozygotes (+/ ). The
traces represent continuous recordings of resting
phrenic nerve activity recorded by suction electrodes (see Fig. 2).
Curare (15 µM) was present in the bath to eliminate
muscle activity. Arrows indicate nerve action potentials
in response to single nerve stimulations applied to the middle of the
nerve trunk. The synergism under study is a single-stimulation evoked,
long-lasting repetitive discharge that requires a combination of
partial Kv1.1 deficiency (+/ ) and TEA. This synergism was
demonstrated by several steps. First, Kv1.1 deficiency (+/ ) alone was
without effect (A). Second, TEA alone (i.e., in
+/+ with normal Kv1.1 expression) also was without effect
(C, D). However, when Kv1.1 deficiency
(+/ ) was combined with TEA (B), a single
stimulation evoked a dramatic phase of repetitive discharge that could
be terminated by warming. E shows an example of a
step-wise increase in the baseline activity (asterisk)
before the single stimulation in a TEA-treated Kv1.1-heterozygote.
F, Demonstration that the evoked repetitive discharge in
TEA (+/ ) did not arise from the nerve trunk. The nerve terminal was
decoupled from the main nerve trunk by a local lidocaine block halfway
between the recording pipette and the nerve terminal (Fig. 2). This
left a functional nerve-trunk-only preparation that responded to
stimulation, but did not produce the long-lasting repetitive discharge.
Same (+/ ) preparation as in E.
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Computer simulations
In this section, a computer model is developed to examine the
determinants of transition zone excitability. We are particularly interested in geometrical factors, as well as the synergism between Kv1.1 and slow K channels suggested by our studies above. Our goal is
to see whether some of these phenomena can be reproduced by our model.
The model (see Materials and Methods) has 14 nodes and a nerve terminal
with four branches (Fig. 7). The model
has Na channels (for action potential generation), two types of K channels (Kfast and Kslow) and a leakage
channel. Axonal Kfast channels (intended to simulate Kv1.1)
have the highest density at the paranodal-juxtaparanodal region, low
density at the rest of the internode, and are absent from the node.
Axonal Kslow channels have major nodal representation and
have reduced density in the internode. Kfast channels are
closed at the resting potential but are activated during an action
potential. In contrast, Kslow channels are already open at
the resting potential. The four presynaptic terminal branches have both
Kfast and Kslow channels with kinetics identical to the axonal channels.

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Figure 7.
Schematic drawing of the computer model. The
model for myelinated nerve- presynaptic terminal is based on Halter
and Clark (1991) for the myelinated axon and Miralles and Solsona
(1996) for the nerve terminal. Dimensions are in micrometers.
A, The nerve fiber is represented as a triaxial
distributed-parameter model (Halter and Clark, 1991 ), and we follow
their terminology for the various nerve regions. The node, paranode
(MYSA), juxtaparanode (FLUT), and
internode (STIN) are represented by 1, 4, 4, and
5 segments, with a total distance of 1.5 µm (node), 10 µm (MYSA), 8 µm (FLUT), and
2000 µm (STIN), respectively. Each segment has
its own morphological and ion channel parameters to describe the two
compartments, the intra-axonal and periaxonal space. The distance
between the axon and the myelin sheath is 0.001 µm
(MYSA), 0.003 µm (FLUT), and
0.004 µm (STIN). These values are taken from
Halter and Clark (1991) . The axon diameter at the node is 5 µm. For
the MYSA region, the axon diameter gradually increases from 4.8 to 5.6 µm. The axon diameter at STIN is 8 µm. B, For the
preterminal region, we progressively shortened the internodal length to
mimic the actual morphology, with a progressive ratio of
1:0.5:0.25:0.125:0.0675 ( = 0.5) starting at the fourth
internode before the presynaptic terminal. This shortening ratio is
taken from Miralles and Solsona (1996) , whose ratio in turn was based
on morphological data (Quick et al., 1979 ). Internodal shortening is
achieved by only shortening STIN, leaving all other parameters (length
of FLUT and MYSA, axonal diameter, myelin sheath thickness, etc.)
unaffected. The nerve terminal is represented by four branches.
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Myelin-segregated Kfast channels are more important
than terminal K channels in maintaining transition zone stability
Figure 8B shows an
action potential that propagates along the myelinated nerve (from top
to bottom) and invades the nerve terminal. The gradual rightward shift
of the action potential traces reflects the time delays in arriving at
successive sites caused by conduction delay. Cooling from 37 to 20°C
broadens the action potential, slows the conduction velocity, but does
not alter the faithful, one-to-one invasion of the nerve terminal (Fig.
8B). We now try to destabilize this transmission by
one of two ways. First, we selectively delete all K channels on the nerve terminal branches. This broadens the action potential at the
nerve terminal as expected, but the faithful one-to-one invasion ensures (Fig. 8C). Second, we selectively delete all axonal
Kfast channels segregated under the myelin sheath (Fig.
8A). This produces little or no change in the shape
of the action potential, but dramatically destabilizes the system. The
action potential first successfully invades the terminal branches.
However, ~15 msec later, a second action potential is spontaneously
initiated at the third node upstream from the nerve terminal
(asterisk), causing two action potentials, one back-propagating along
the nerve, and one forward-propagating to the terminal branches,
causing a second invasion of the nerve terminal. After this second wave
of excitation, no subsequent re-excitation is observed, even after at
long times (data not shown).

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Figure 8.
Myelin-concealed Kfast channels, not
presynaptic K channels, are important stabilizers against backfiring. A
single stimulation was given to the 14th node (data not shown) upstream
from the terminal, eliciting an action potential that propagates from
top to bottom toward the nerve terminal. Only the last portion of the
nerve near the terminal is shown. Action potentials at successive sites
along the nerve are shown. The rightward shift of the traces represents
conduction velocities of 25 m/sec (37°C) and 14 m/sec (20°C),
respectively. The standard model (i.e., wild-type) contains
Kfast on both the axon and presynaptic terminal branches.
A, Selective deletion of all axonal Kfast
channels concealed by the myelin (setting Kfast = 0 at
MYSA, FLUT, and STIN). B, Standard model (wild-type)
with normal Kfast on both axons and nerve terminal
branches. C, Selective deletion of all K channels
(Kfast and Kslow) on the presynaptic
terminal branches. Only deletion of the myelin-concealed
Kfast produces backfiring, which is initiated at the third
node upstream from the terminal (marked with an
asterisk). The second action potential propagates both
backward along the nerve and forward toward the nerve terminal.
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The effect of preterminal internodal length
The above simulation suggests that a major determinant of nerve
backfiring is the gradual internodal shortening that precedes the nerve
terminal. Thus, backfiring occurs after the shortening begins, but
upstream from the transition zone site (the heminode). Teleologically,
the shortening of the internodes is needed for impedance matching to
facilitate invasion of the nerve terminal (Revenko et al., 1973 ; Waxman
and Brill, 1978 ). However, this shortening might also elevate the
inherent excitability of the last few myelinated segments (with more
nodes per unit length). We suggest that this, coupled with an increase
in electrotonic coupling between the nodal and the internodal membrane
caused by internodal shortening (Barrett and Barrett, 1982 ), makes the preterminal myelinated segment prone to re-excitation. The
myelin-segregated Kv1.1 might act to stabilize the transition zone by
damping out excessive nodal and internodal electrotonic coupling in the
preterminal regions. This teleological argument is corroborated by the
simulation in Figure 9, A and
B, showing that if the internodes are forbidden to undergo
preterminal shortening (Fig. 9A), deletion of Kv1.1 no
longer causes backfiring. However, the price is that action potentials
now fail to invade the nerve terminal because of impedance mismatch.
Another example in which local shortening of internodes is important is
remyelinated nerves. Figure 9C shows a myelinated nerve with
a remyelinated segment consisting of eight abnormally short internodes.
With normal presence of fast K channels under the myelin sheath,
propagation over the remyelinated region is highly stable except for a
minor slowing of conduction velocity over the short internodes (Fig.
9C). However, deletion of fast K channels under the myelin
causes instability as the action potential propagates over the
remyelinated segment (Fig. 9D), resulting in nerve
backfiring initiated at one of the short internodes (asterisk). The
results of Figure 9 suggest that the myelin-concealed Kv1.1 plays an
important role in preserving electrical stability whenever a local
variation of internodal length occurs, both physiologically and
pathophysiologically.

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Figure 9.
Deletion of Kfast fails to induce
backfiring if there is no preterminal internodal shortening. Effects of
deleting Kfast with (B) or without
(A) internodal shortening before the nerve
terminal. In the absence of preterminal internodal shortening, deletion
of myelin-concealed K channels fails to destabilize the system.
However, because of impedance mismatch, the action potential fails to
invade the nerve terminal. C, D, Remyelinated fibers.
The remyelinated segment is represented by eight short internodes, each
one-fifth of the normal internodal length. C, Normal
fast K channels present under the myelin sheath. D,
Deletion of all fast K channels under the myelin sheath. Nerve
backfiring is initiated at the asterisk. Temperature of
the simulation is 20°C.
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Kv1.1 redistribution
Recently, Vabnick et al. (1999) demonstrated a
paranodal-to-juxtaparanodal redistribution of Kv1.1 during development
and suggested that this channel redistribution prevents aberrant
excitation during development. An interesting issue is whether the
disappearance of evoked backfiring during myelin maturation may reflect
K channel redistribution. However, we found that in our standard model
(Fig. 8), redistribution of Kfast channels from the
paranode to the juxtaparanode has no effect on the evoked nerve backfiring.
Slow K channels are crucial in transition zone excitability only
when expression of Kv1.1 is compromised
Our empirical studies suggest that TEA-sensitive channels become a
critical modulator of transition zone excitability once Kv1.1 is
deleted or reduced. Because one probable candidate for the
TEA-sensitive channel is the Kslow channel, we use our
model to examine the effects of different combinations of
Kfast and Kslow on transition zone
excitability. When Kfast is normal (Fig. 10A,
left), reduction of Kslow (80% remaining to
20%) has no effect on transition zone excitability. However, deletion
of Kfast (Fig. 10A, right)
markedly sensitizes the system to reduction of
Kslow, resulting in an increasing phase of evoked
repetitive discharge as Kslow is progressively reduced.
This is consistent with our observation that the null mutant is very
sensitive to TEA (~0.5 mM; Fig. 3F),
whereas the wild type is insensitive up to 5 mM. Our
computer simulations raise three important points about this stabilizing role of Kslow (in the absence of
Kfast). First, only reduction in axonal
Kslow, but not the presynaptic terminal
Kslow, produces the evoked repetitive discharge
(data not shown). Second, the repetitive discharge is localized to a
site just preceding the transition zone. The rest of the fiber is not
destabilized by the Kslow reduction. Third, a local
reduction of Kslow (restricted to the three short
internodes just preceding the terminal) is enough to dramatically
destabilize the system to the same level as a global reduction (Fig.
10B).

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Figure 10.
Kslow channels are important only
when Kfast expression is compromised. Only axonal K
channels are manipulated in this simulation. A,
Left, Reduction of Kslow in the presence of
intact Kfast. The percentage refers to the percentage of
Kslow remaining. No destabilizing effect was seen.
Vertical solid bar next to the nerve diagram illustrates
the region over which Kslow is reduced.
Right, The same reduction of Kslow after a
deletion of Kfast. The system becomes highly unstable, with
repetitive backfiring (evoked by a single stimulation) initiated from
the third node upstream from the transition zone. B,
Local Kslow reduction. Only axonal Kslow over
three shortened internodal segments (indicated by the vertical
solid bar) just proximal to the nerve terminal is reduced. This
causes the same destabilization as a global Kslow reduction
in A. Temperature of the simulation is 20°C.
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Our model also can reproduce the synergism between TEA and Kv1.1
deficiency seen in the heterozygotes (Fig. 6B).
Figure 11A shows that
a 85% reduction (15% remaining) in Kfast and 99%
reduction (1% remaining) in Kslow, each performed
alone, has no effect on the excitability. However, when the two
reductions are performed in combination, a single action potential,
after approaching the nerve terminal, evokes repetitive nerve
backfiring (Fig. 11B). The site of backfiring is the
third node upstream from the terminal (Fig. 11B,
asterisk) and, once evoked (by a single action potential), lasts indefinitely (Fig. 11C). Thus, major features of the
synergism between TEA and Kv1.1 deficiency in the heterozygotes are
reproduced by our model.

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Figure 11.
Synergism between Kslow and
Kfast at the transition zone. Only axonal K channels are
manipulated in this simulation. A, Left,
Composition of axonal K channels: Kfast = 15% of
normal; Kslow = 100% of normal. The conduction is
normal. Right, Composition of axonal K channels:
Kfast = 100% of normal; Kslow = 1%
of normal. The conduction is also normal. B, The
manipulations in A performed in combination:
Kfast = 15% of normal; Kslow = 1%
of normal. A dramatic synergistic interaction is revealed. After a
single stimulation, action potentials are spontaneously initiated at
the third node (asterisk) upstream from the terminal,
traveling both backward along the nerve and forwards toward the
terminal. C represents a plot of the response from the
initiation site (third node) at long time scale, showing that this
single-stimulation evoked repetitive discharge, once initiated, shows
no sign of abating. Note the similarity to the synergism demonstrated
empirically for TEA in the heterozygotes (Fig.
6B). Temperature of the simulation is
20°C.
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DISCUSSION |
Myelinated fibers exhibit local variation in geometry as well as
regional channel segregation. The transition zone between the
myelinated and the nonmyelinated segment near the nerve terminal is a
site of impedance mismatch that is particularly vulnerable to
excitability perturbation, both physiologically and pathologically. This paper shows, through the use of a genetic mutant, that deleting a
fast K channel (Kv1.1) that is normally segregated under the myelin
sheath produces profound changes in the transition zone excitability
not seen elsewhere in the nerve. Our empirical and theoretical study
gives insight into how Kv1.1 channels function to stabilize a zone of
inherent instability just proximal to the terminal and how synergistic
interaction with a TEA-sensitive K channel or channels is indispensable
to this function.
Kv1.1 is an axonal channel critical for stabilizing transition
zones in axonal trees
Transition zones in general refer to the regions in an axonal tree
where there is a local change in geometry caused by certain functional
requirements. Important examples are the branch points or the nerve
terminal region where the myelinated segment ends and the nonmyelinated
segment begins. The safety factor for nerve conduction is altered at
these sites because of impedance mismatch (Swadlow et al., 1980 ).
Impedance mismatching is normally minimized by local variation in fiber
geometry. For example, the internodes shorten as the nerve terminal is
approached (Quick et al., 1979 ), and this has been shown theoretically
to facilitate invasion of the nerve terminal (Khodorov and Timin,
1975 ). Even in normal adult, the disproportionately short internodes
preceding the terminal may reflect active Schwann cell remodeling
(Quick et al., 1979 ). In pathological situations, remyelination
proceeds by forming short internodes preceding lesion sites, providing
impedance matching that contributes to successful propagation (Waxman
and Brill, 1978 ).
Other variations in local fiber geometry may also prove important.
First, post-branching internodes are significantly smaller than the
rest of the fiber (Pfeiffer and Friede, 1985 ). Second, in dorsal root
ganglion (DRG) neurons, the first internode after the initial segment
has an unusually thin myelin sheath (Spencer et al., 1973 ). At the
branch point of DRG neurons, the caliber of the CNS-directed axon is
different from the PNS-directed axon (Spencer et al., 1973 ). Third,
action potentials could fail at branch points (Wall, 1995 ), and
frequency-dependent failures at branch points (Grossman et al., 1973 )
could act as safety measures to prevent an injurious level of axonal
activity from permeating other regions of the axonal tree.
Collectively, transition zone excitability has profound implications
for signal integration in axonal trees, both physiologically and
pathophysiologically (Swadlow et al., 1980 ). Our paper suggests that
Kv1.1 is important at these sites.
Is axonal segregation of K channels a critical factor in determining
transition zone excitability? If so, what K channel subtypes are
important? Recent physiological analysis of Kv1.1-deficient mice has
produced compelling evidence that the axonal Kv1.1 channel is a major
determinant of transition zone excitability, both in myelinated and
nonmyelinated fibers. In the nonmyelinated axonal tree of a CNS neuron
(the cerebellar basket cell), deletion of axonal Kv1.1 has been
suggested to confer hyperexcitability on neurons by specifically
reducing conduction failures at branch points (Zhang et al., 1999 ). In
myelinated axons of the PNS, Kv1.1 is segregated under the myelin
sheath and exerts a profound stabilizing effect on the action potential
when it reaches the transition zone near the nerve terminal (Zhou et
al., 1998 ; this paper). Computer simulations in this paper suggest that
the preterminal shortening of the internodes, while functioning to
facilitate invasion, also concomitantly predispose the system to
re-excitation. Damping out re-excitation by the use of myelin-concealed
K channels has the advantage of preserving a one-to-one transmission
without altering the waveform of the action potential, the duration of which determines the amount of release and which can be independently controlled by K channels located right at the terminal itself.
Developmental changes in transition zone excitability
All the excitability changes observed in this study occur at or
near the transition zone and not elsewhere in the myelinated fiber.
There are three lines of argument to support this conclusion. First,
none of the excitability changes originate from the nerve fiber, as
demonstrated by the experiment in Figure 2 for the spontaneous activity
and by Figure 6F for the evoked repetitive activity. Second, the nerve terminal membrane cannot be responsible for the
abnormal excitability, because Kv1.1 is normally absent on the nerve
terminal membrane in the wild type (before the gene deletion). This has
been well demonstrated by immunohistochemistry in our previous paper
(Zhou et al., 1998 , their Fig. 4). Therefore, by elimination, the site
of abnormal excitability is most likely at or near the myelinated
segments before the transition zone. Third, this is further given
strong support by the computer simulations in this paper, which
demonstrate that the evoked repetitive discharge indeed originates from
the myelinated nerve segment just before the transition zone (Figs.
8-11).
During postnatal development of Kv1.1-null mice, two types of abnormal
hyperexcitability (evoked backfiring and spontaneous activity) emerge
from the transition zone region in succession. The stimulus-evoked
evoked backfiring peaks at P17 and then declines, but is followed by a
period of spontaneous activity that peaks at P30 and then also
subsides. What causes the disappearance of evoked backfiring as
myelination proceeds? One possibility is that it reflects developmental
redistribution of Kv1.1 from the paranodal region (MYSA in our computer
model) deeper to the juxtaparanodal region (FLUT in our model) (Vabnick
et al., 1999 ). Indeed, Kv1.1 has a peak occupancy at the paranode at
~P15-P20 and thereafter starts to shift to the juxtaparanode
(Vabnick et al., 1999 ). However, our computer simulation does not
support this explanation, at least for the particular geometry chosen
in our model. We suspect a more important factor may be developmental
changes in fiber geometry or morphology near the transition zone. For
example, there might be a tightening of the paranodal seal during
maturation. However, we are already using an adult paranodal seal (1 nm) in our simulations. Another important change in geometry might be an elongation of the terminal branches as the animal ages. Indeed, in
our computer modeling, deletion of Kv1.1 no longer produces nerve
backfiring when the three terminal branches are lengthened by a factor
of 10 (data not shown).
It is unclear what mechanisms underlie the emergence of spontaneous
activity in the older Kv1.1 mutant mice. The parallel appearance of TEA
sensitivity suggests the involvement of a TEA-sensitive K channel. This
TEA-sensitive channel normally is not important when Kv1.1 is present,
but becomes critical when expression of Kv1.1 is compromised. In the
null mutants, TEA induces spontaneous activity that does not require
stimulation. It is interesting that the sensitivity to TEA remains
unabated even in old mutants in which endogenous activity has all but
subsided (Fig. 3E,F). This
raises the possibility that the improvement of the excitability phenotype with age (>P60, Fig. 1B) may be related to
a compensatory upregulation of a TEA-sensitive K channel. In the
heterozygotes, in which Kv1.1 expression is reduced, TEA produces no
phenotype until a single stimulation is given, in which case a
virtually indefinite phase of repetitive discharge resulted. This
synergistic interaction between TEA-sensitive and Kv1.1 channels might
have profound implications in clinical syndromes involving Kv1.1
mutations such as episodic ataxia (Browne et al., 1994 ). For example, a patient may lack an overt phenotype because of the stabilizing action
of residual a TEA-sensitive channel or channels. However, any
interference with these TEA-sensitive channels, perhaps associated with
metabolic stress, would allow a single ectopic action potential to
incite a dramatic and protracted clinical symptom of hyperexcitability. The delicate balance is further illustrated by our computer modeling demonstrating that local perturbation of TEA-sensitive K channel in two
or three internodal segments preceding the nerve terminal is sufficient
to completely destabilize the system. The important point in this study
is not only establishing the importance of Kv1.1, but also the
unmasking of a delicate balance hinging on a residual K channel whose
dysregulation may provoke the manifestation of clinical symptoms.
The nature of the TEA-sensitive channels
What is the channel subtype and location of the TEA-sensitive K
channel that interacts with Kv1.1 to modulate hyperexcitability? One
possibility is that TEA targets a presynaptic K channel, inhibition of
which undermines the transition zone stability when Kv1.1 is deleted.
An argument against this is that in our computer simulations, deleting
only K channels in the presynaptic terminal branches makes no
difference to the excitability of the transition zone, with or without
Kv1.1. We believe a more likely possibility is that TEA targets slow K
channels located on the axons. At present, the support for such an
explanation is primarily theoretical. The synergism between Kv1.1 and
TEA can be simulated in our model by manipulating only the fast and
slow K channels on the axons. No combination of manipulations involving
only presynaptic K channels, or with only fast axonal K channels, can
reproduce this synergism. Slow K channels have been suggested to be
blocked by TEA with an effective dose of ~1 mM (Baker et
al., 1987 ), which is consistent with our dose-response studies on TEA
(Fig. 4B). We cannot rule out TEA exerting its effect
by blocking residual fast K channels in our Kv1.1 mutants. However, as
stated earlier, blocking all fast K channels alone in our computer
model never reproduces long-lasting discharges. The idea that
TEA-sensitive, slow K channels are important in modulating repetitive
discharge in myelinated axons has already been suggested (Baker et al.,
1987 ; Waxman, 1995 ). Our results suggest that this slow K channel is
crucial at transition zones whenever Kv1.1 expression is compromised.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 24, 1999; revised April 28, 1999; accepted May 4, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant
RO1-23375 to S.Y.C. and A.M. We thank Tammy Robbins and Denise Springman for expert technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to S. Y. Chiu, Department of
Physiology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, 1300 University
Avenue, 285 Medical Science Building, Madison, WI 53706.
 |
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