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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 2000, 20(11):4286-4299
Cellular Mechanisms of Long-Lasting Adaptation in Visual Cortical
Neurons In Vitro
Maria V.
Sanchez-Vives,
Lionel G.
Nowak, and
David A.
McCormick
Section of Neurobiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New
Haven, Connecticut 06510
 |
ABSTRACT |
The cellular mechanisms of spike-frequency adaptation during
prolonged discharges and of the slow afterhyperpolarization (AHP) that
follows, as occur in vivo with contrast adaptation, were investigated with intracellular recordings of cortical neurons in
slices of ferret primary visual cortex. Intracellular injection of 2 Hz
sinusoidal or constant currents for 20 sec resulted in a slow (
= 1-10 sec) spike-frequency adaptation, the degree of which varied
widely among neurons. Reducing either
[Ca2+]o or
[Na+]o reduced the rate of
spike-frequency adaptation. After the prolonged discharge was a slow
(12-75 sec) AHP that was associated with an increase in membrane
conductance and a rightward shift in the discharge frequency versus
injected current relationship. The reversal potential of the slow AHP
was sensitive to changes in [K+]o, indicating that it was
mediated by a K+ current. Blockade of transmembrane
Ca2+ conductances did not reduce the slow AHP. In
contrast, reductions of [Na+]o reduced
the slow AHP, even in the presence of pronounced
Ca2+ spikes. We suggest that the activation of
Na+-activated and Ca2+-activated
K+ currents plays an important role in prolonged
spike-frequency adaptation and therefore may contribute to contrast
adaptation and other forms of adaptation in the visual system in
vivo.
Key words:
plasticity; vision; K+ currents; pyramidal cell; receptive field; dynamics
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Adaptation, the property of reduced
neuronal activity in response to repetitive or constant stimulation, is
a common feature of sensory responses. In the visual system, exposure
to a high-contrast stimulus results in adaptation on both the
psychophysical (Blakemore and Campbell, 1969
; Lorenceau, 1987
) and
neurophysiological levels, a phenomenon that has a large cortical
component. It is characterized by a progressive decrease of neuronal
responses over seconds to the high-contrast stimulus and a reduced
response to low-contrast stimuli that requires tens of seconds to
recover (Maffei et al., 1973
; Movshon and Lennie, 1979
; Dean, 1983
;
Albrecht et al., 1984
; Ohzawa et al., 1985
; Saul and Cynader, 1989
;
Sclar et al., 1989
; Bonds, 1991
; Allison et al., 1993
) (see companion
paper, introductory remarks).
Recent intracellular recordings of cat primary visual cortical neurons
in vivo reveal that adaptation to a high-contrast stimulus is associated with a hyperpolarization (Carandini and Ferster, 1997
)
that is proportional to the reduction of firing rate (Sanchez-Vives et
al., 2000
), suggesting that intrinsic neuronal properties may contribute to contrast adaptation. Indeed, the induction of firing by
intracellular current injection results in a long-lasting
hyperpolarization and a decrease in the response to visual stimuli,
mimicking the adaptation induced by high-contrast visual stimuli.
Reciprocally, high-contrast visual stimulation leads to a decrease in
neuronal responsiveness to the intracellular injection of current
(Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000
).
What might be the mechanisms underlying the generation of such a
hyperpolarization in cortical neurons? Previous investigations of
cortical pyramidal cells have implicated
Ca2+ and/or voltage-sensitive
K+ currents such as
IM and
IAHP in spike-frequency adaptation and hyperpolarization lasting from tens of milliseconds to seconds (Madison
and Nicoll, 1984
; Pennefather et al., 1985
; Constanti and Sim, 1987
;
Schwindt et al., 1988
, 1989
, 1992
, 1997
; Avoli and Olivier, 1989
;
Storm, 1993
; Sah, 1996
; Ahmed et al., 1998
). In addition, after
prolonged current injections (seconds or longer), long-lasting
decreases in neuronal responsiveness and hyperpolarization have been
attributed to the activation of a
Na+-activated
K+ current (Foehring et al., 1989
;
Schwindt et al., 1989
; Kubota and Saito, 1991
; Safronov and Vogel,
1996
; Kim and McCormick, 1998
), or the activation of electrogenic ionic
pumps, such as the
Na+/K+ ATPase
(Gustafsson and Wigström, 1983
; Thompson and Prince, 1986
; Inoue
and Matsui, 1990
).
In the present study, we examined in visual cortical neurons maintained
in vitro the presence, properties, and mechanisms for
spike-frequency adaptation and for generation of prolonged hyperpolarizations in response to neuronal activation similar to that
generated during typical visual adaptation protocols in vivo. Our results show that the activation of
Ca2+, and particularly
Na+,
activated-K+ currents may be essential to
contrast adaptation in vivo.
A preliminary report of these results was presented in abstract form
(Sanchez-Vives et al., 1997
).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Ferrets were cared for and used in accordance with all
appropriate regulatory guidelines. For the preparation of slices, 2- to
4-month-old ferrets of either sex were deeply anesthetized with sodium
pentobarbital (40 mg/kg) and killed by decapitation. The forebrain was
rapidly removed, and the hemispheres were separated with a midline
incision. Four hundred-micrometer-thick coronal slices of the primary
visual cortex were cut on a vibratome (DSK Microslicer; Ted Pella,
Redding, CA). A modification of the technique developed by Aghajanian
and Rasmussen (1989)
was used to increase tissue viability: during
preparation of slices, the tissue was placed in a solution in which
NaCl was replaced with sucrose while maintaining an osmolarity of 307 mOsm. After preparation, slices were placed in an interface-style
recording chamber (Fine Sciences Tools, Foster City, CA). Cortical
slices were superfused for the first 10 min with an equal mixture in
volume of the normal bathing medium and the sucrose-substituted
solution. After this, normal bathing medium was switched into the
chamber throughout the experiment. Bath temperature was maintained at
34-35°C.
Intracellular recordings were initiated after 2 hr of recovery. The
normal bathing medium contained (in mM): NaCl, 124; KCl, 2.5; MgSO4, 2; NaHPO4,
1.25; CaCl2, 2; NaHCO3, 26;
and dextrose, 10, and was aerated with 95% O2,
5% CO2 to a final pH of 7.4. In experiments that
required reduction of
[Na+]o, all or
part of NaCl was replaced with choline-Cl in equimolar concentrations.
When NaCl was replaced with choline-Cl,
[NaHCO3]o was not changed, giving a
solution containing at least 26 mM
[Na+]o. Block of
transmembrane Ca2+ currents was achieved
by replacing CaCl2 with either
MnCl2 or CoCl2, and sodium
phosphate was omitted from the bathing medium to avoid precipitation.
Sharp intracellular recording electrodes were formed on a Sutter
Instruments (Novato, CA) P-80 micropipette puller from medium-walled glass (1BF100; World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL) and beveled
on a Sutter Instruments beveller to final resistances of 50-100 M
.
Micropipettes were filled with either 2 M KAc and, in some
cases, 2% biocytin was added for intracellular labeling of recorded
neurons. Biocytin-filled neurons were visualized through standard
avidin-biotin-horseradish peroxidase reaction with diaminobenzidine (Horikawa and Armstrong, 1988
).
Drugs were obtained from Research Biochemicals (Natick, MA) or Sigma
(St. Louis, MO) and were applied either in the bath or locally via
pressure ejection from a micropipette (1-4 µm tip diameter) after
being dissolved in the bathing solution. After the micropipette was
positioned in proximity to a target cell in the slice, a brief pulse of
pressure (10-250 msec; 200-350 kPa) was applied to the back of the
microelectrode to extrude 1-20 pl of solution per pulse.
Sinusoidal current injection was used to induce spikes (except when
mentioned). To mimic simple cell activation by sinusoidal drifting
gratings that we used in the accompanying in vivo
investigation (Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000
), a low-high-low intensity
pattern of current was used. The duration of high-intensity current
injection was always of 20 sec and the frequency of 2 Hz. The
low-intensity sinusoidal current injection was replaced by negative or
positive square pulses of 120-300 msec to determine changes in input
resistance or changes in firing frequency after the high-current
intensity injection. The response of cortical neurons to sinusoidal
current injection was quantified as spikes per cycle or per second
using Spike-2 software (Cambridge Electronic Design, Cambridge, UK).
Ionic currents underlying the afterhyperpolarization (AHP) and
afterdepolarization (ADP) were examined with the hybrid
current-voltage-clamp protocol in which the cell was induced to
discharge prolonged trains of action potentials by intracellular
injection of current in the current-clamp recording mode. After current
injection, the recording was switched to the voltage-clamp mode and
held at various membrane potentials. Voltage clamp was achieved with an
Axoclamp-2B amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA) through the
use of discontinuous single electrode voltage-clamp protocols in which
the gain was 0.5-2.5 nA/mV and the switching frequency was 2-4 kHz.
The output of the headstage was continuously monitored to insure
adequate settling in between the current injection portions of the duty
cycle. Data are reported as mean ± SD.
 |
RESULTS |
As reported in the companion paper (Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000
),
presentation of a high (30-80%)-contrast sinewave drifting grating
for 30-60 sec resulted in pronounced adaptation of action potential
discharge in primary visual cortical neurons in vivo (Fig.
1A). After adaptation
to a high contrast, the return to a low-contrast (5-20%) grating
revealed a significantly reduced action potential response (with
respect to the preadaptation period) in 56% (22 of 39) of the cortical
neurons. Recovery to preadaptation firing rate was achieved after 5-82
sec (19.3 ± 16.3 sec; n = 22; Fig.
1A).

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Figure 1.
Comparison of action potential adaptation
generated in response to a visual stimulus in vivo,
intracellular injection of sinusoidal current in vivo,
and intracellular injection of sinusoidal current in vitro.
A, Presentation of an 80% contrast sinusoidal grating for a
period of 1 min to this cortical neuron resulted in a strong adaptation
of action potential discharge. After return to the 20% contrast
grating, the action potential discharge was strongly suppressed and
slowly recovered. B, Response of a cortical neuron to
the intracellular injection of different amplitude sinusoidal currents
in vivo. Increasing the amplitude of the sinusoidal
current from 0.15 to 1 nA peak-to-peak resulted in an increase in
discharge rate as well as adaptation of action potential discharge.
Returning the amplitude of the current injection to control reveals a
marked depression in action potential discharge rate, which recovered
slowly over the next minute. C, Similarly, the
intracellular injection of sinusoidal currents of two distinct
amplitudes (0.12 and 0.9 nA) into cortical neurons in
vitro results in adaptation of action potential discharge rate
followed by a marked decrease in neuronal responsiveness to the lower
amplitude sinewave. The bottom part of the figure is a
schematic representation of the protocol used for the current
injections: low-high-low intensity, and it does not correspond to the
actual intensity or frequency. The frequency of the injected sinewave
was always 2 Hz. Data in A and B were
collected using methods that are described in the companion paper
(Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000 ).
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Intracellular injection of sinusoidal current in vivo, which
was adjusted in frequency and amplitude to mimic the response of visual
cortical neurons to visual stimuli, also resulted in a long-lasting
(14.0 ± 10.5 sec) postadaptation reduction of the action
potential discharge in 74% of the cells, in a very similar way to the
postadaptation observed after a high-contrast visual stimulus (Fig.
1B). Furthermore, high-frequency firing evoked by
current injection induced a decrease in neuronal responsiveness that
was sufficient to reduce the response to subsequent visual stimulation
(Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000
, their Fig. 13). These observations suggest
that intrinsic mechanisms may play an important role in the generation
of contrast adaptation.
The possible intrinsic mechanisms that underlie contrast adaptation
were therefore investigated with intracellular recording techniques in
visual cortical neurons maintained in slices in vitro.
Intracellular recordings were obtained from 173 neurons located in
layers 2/3 or 4 of coronal slices of the ferret visual cortex (area
17). A representative sample (n = 24) of cortical neurons exhibited an average resting membrane potential of
64.6 ± 5.4 mV, overshooting action potentials and an apparent input resistance of 49.6 ± 23.9 M
.
To mimic high-contrast visual stimulation and its consequence on the
response to low-contrast stimulation with in vitro
techniques, we injected a low-high-low intensity pattern of 2 Hz
sinusoidal currents in 24 cortical neurons. The first cycle of the
high-intensity current induced 7-15 action potentials (average of
14-30 Hz), whereas the lower intensity current evoked 3-6 spikes
(6-12 Hz).
Similarly to what was observed in vivo, adaptation of action
potential discharge took place during the injection of high (±0.4 to ± 1.2 nA)-intensity current for 20 sec with time constants of <1-10 sec (Figs. 1C,
2). Returning the current amplitude to the control level revealed a pronounced decrease in neuronal
excitability that persisted for 12-75 sec (Figs. 1C,
2A,B), similar to cells that exhibit
postadaptation suppression of action potential activity (which we
refer to as "postadapting" cells) in vivo (Fig.
1A).

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Figure 2.
The time course and strength of firing rate
adaptation varies widely between cortical neurons. A,
Spikes per cycle versus time in response to the injection of a low- and
high-amplitude sinewave current. During high-current intensity
injection, the rate of action potential generation decreases with an
exponential time constant of 3.87 sec. B, Example of the
raw recording and injected current corresponding to the histogram shown
in A. Spikes have been truncated. C, Plot
of the rate of the decay (fit by a single exponential) in 24 cortical
neurons. The firing rates have been normalized such that 100%
corresponds to the firing rate at the beginning of the high-intensity
current injection. Notice the wide variation in both the degree and
time course of adaptation. Fast time constants of decay (in the order
of milliseconds) could not be measured with this method, because only
one value (spikes/cycle) every 0.5 sec was used for the exponential
fitting.
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The retention of adaptation and the postadaptation decrease in firing
with simple sinewave current injection in vitro (Fig. 1C) indicates that this preparation can be used to
investigate the ionic mechanisms of the general phenomenon of neuronal
adaptation during and after prolonged activation.
Cortical neurons vary in their amplitude and speed
of adaptation
The time constant of adaptation during the high-intensity current
injection was measured in 24 cortical cells by fitting a single
exponential function (Fig. 2A). The amplitude of
adaptation was estimated as the firing rate at the end of the current
injection relative to that at the beginning and expressed as a
percentage [100 × (spikes per cycle at the end of high
intensity)/(spikes per cycle at the beginning of high intensity)].
Cortical neurons varied widely in the rate and amplitude of adaptation
during high-amplitude sinusoidal current injection (Fig.
2C). Five of the 24 cells showed little or no decay in their
firing rate, whereas several other cells decreased their firing to
<40% of their initial discharge. Between these extremes there was a
continuum for both the time course and amplitude of adaptation. The
firing rate decayed to an average of 54.7 ± 26.5% of the initial
value (median, 50.0%; n = 24). The mean value for the
adaptation decay time constant was 3.3 ± 2.5 sec
(n = 19 cells exhibiting a significant decay; median,
3.0 sec). This corresponds to a slow adaptation of action potential
discharge, which has to be distinguished from a faster and more
commonly studied (Koike et al., 1970
; Stafstrom et al., 1984
; Ahmed et
al., 1998
) type of adaptation that displays time constant of the order
of tens of milliseconds.
The time constant of the decay and the rate of adaptation were
independent from the number of spikes in the first cycle. The firing
rate adaptation was not associated with any appreciable change in
action potential threshold. Thus, the injection of depolarizing ramps
(180 msec at 5.5 nA/sec) revealed that the threshold for action
potential generation was the same before and after the performance of
the high-intensity adaptation protocol (n = 6; data not shown).
In the companion paper, we report that the adaptation of the firing
rate of dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) neurons during
high-contrast visual stimulation is considerably less than in cortical
cells (Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000
). We examined here the possibility
that similar differences between cortical and dLGN neurons may also be
expressed in vitro with sinusoidal current injection.
Intracellular injection of sinusoidal current into 11 electrophysiologically identified thalamocortical cells in the
A-laminae of the LGNd (Pape and McCormick, 1995
) demonstrated an
average reduction to only 77.3 ± 11.5% (median, 77.8%; Fig. 3), with no cells decaying to >60%. LGN
cells therefore exhibited a significantly less pronounced amplitude of
adaptation than cortical neurons (t = 2.68;
p = 0.011). The average time constant of decay in dLGN
neurons was 6.4 ± 3.4 sec (median, 5.1), which is significantly slower than for cortical neurons (t = 2.83;
p = 0.008).

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Figure 3.
Thalamocortical neurons in the dorsal lateral
geniculate nucleus in vitro exhibit significantly less
adaptation than cortical neurons. A, B,
Intracellular injection of sinusoidal current into a thalamocortical
neuron in the dLGN results in adaptation to ~80% with a time
constant of 8.43 sec. B, Raw recording and injected
current corresponding to the histogram shown in A.
C, Comparison of the time courses and amplitudes of
adaptation during the high-intensity current injection in 11 thalamocortical neurons. The decay in the number of spikes per cycle
have been normalized as in Figure 2C.
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Properties of the postadaptation period: variability between
different neurons
In cortical cells, the adaptation period (20 sec of high-intensity
sinusoid) was followed in all cases by a long-lasting AHP (Fig.
2B), even if spike-frequency adaptation during the
high-intensity current injection was not apparent. This AHP was
associated with a reduction or suppression of the response to the
low-intensity sinusoidal current.
Protocols in which no low-intensity sinusoids followed the
high-intensity were used to study the AHP in isolation (see Fig. 5).
This AHP had an average peak amplitude of 10.8 ± 4.0 mV (range, 4-16.8 mV; n = 24) and a duration that varied between
12 and 75 sec (mean, 32.4 ± 16.3 sec, median, 27 sec;
n = 24). For lack of a better term we call this
hyperpolarization a slow AHP, but it should be stressed that it is
considerably longer than the slow AHP previously described in
hippocampal neurons (<10 sec; for review, see Sah, 1996
).
Significant correlations were found between the adaptation of the
firing rate during the high-intensity period and the duration (r = 0.51; p = 0.01), amplitude
(r = 0.68; p < 0.001), and increase in
membrane conductance (r = 0.64; p < 0.001) of the subsequent slow AHP (Fig.
4A-C). These
correlations suggest that spike-frequency adaptation during the
high-intensity current injection and the AHP that follows share common
signals or mechanisms for their generation.

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Figure 4.
Relationship between adaptation strength during
high-intensity current injection and slow AHP duration and peak
amplitude and change in input conductance during the slow AHP after
high-intensity current injection. The percentage of reduction in the
number of spikes during adaptation is significantly correlated with the
duration of the AHP (A; r = 0.51;
p = 0.01), the peak amplitude of the AHP
(B; r = 0.68; p = 0.0002), and the input conductance at 20 sec during the AHP
(C; r = 0.64; p = 0.0008). The input conductance has been normalized with respect to
control (preadaptation) value. We found changes in input conductance
measured 20 sec after the AHP peak to better correlate with the
adaptation of the firing than those measured at the peak, probably
because of a better isolation of the Na+-dependent
K+ current at this time. Each data point represents
a different cell. Experimental protocol for induction of spike
adaptation was similar to that of Figure 5.
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|
One possible explanation for the heterogeneity in adaptation strength
and AHP size is that they are differently expressed in different
morphological classes of neurons. Although this possibility will need
to be examined extensively in the future, we noted that firing rate
adaptation during high-intensity sinusoidal current injection in
morphologically identified layer 4 spiny stellate cells
(n = 6), which averages 36.8 ± 7.8%, was
significantly stronger (p < 0.0001, t test) than in morphologically identified layer 2/3
pyramidal neurons (n = 7), for which the firing rate
adapted only to 89.1 ± 8.7%. Likewise, the amplitude and
duration of the AHP after high-intensity current injection were both
significantly larger in spiny stellate cells: spiny stellate cells had
an AHP amplitude of 12.76 ± 3.2 mV, versus 7.7 ± 2.3 mV in
layer 2/3 pyramidal cells; the AHP lasted 37.1 ± 15.4 sec in
spiny stellate cells, compared to 17.4 ± 5.8 sec in layer 2/3
pyramids. These differences may be the consequence of differential
distribution of conductances between layers or cell types, of different
mechanisms for intracellular ion regulation and coupling to ionic
channels, or of the morphological differences themselves.
Ionic basis for firing rate adaptation and slow AHP
The intracellular injection of high-amplitude sinewaves at 2 Hz
for 20 sec were used to examine the voltage and ion dependence of the
slow firing rate adaptation and of the subsequent slow AHP and to
uncover the underlying currents. Previous investigations have
emphasized the role of Ca2+-activated
K+ currents in spike-frequency adaptation
and AHP (for review, see Sah, 1996
). Here, block of transmembrane
Ca2+ currents by removing
Ca2+ from the bathing medium and replacing
it with either Mn2+ (n = 11) or Co2+ (n = 2) not
only did not block the slow AHP, but actually lengthened it (Fig.
5B). In 11 cells studied with
Mn2+ substitution, the duration of the AHP
increased from 19.9 ± 8.0 sec in control to 48.0 ± 14.5 sec
in 0 mM
[Ca2+]o (paired
t test; t = 7.14; p < 0.0001; Fig. 6D).

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Figure 5.
The slow AHP is reduced by lowering
[Na+]o but not
[Ca2+]o in the bathing medium.
A, Intracellular injection of sinusoidal current results
in the generation of a prolonged AHP that is associated with an
increase in membrane conductance. The time course of the slow firing
adaptation during the 20 sec of sinusoidal current injection is shown
in the scattergram below. The inset represents the
expanded voltage during the second of the 40 cycles of sinusoidal
current injection. B, Replacement of
Ca2+ in the bathing medium with
Mn2+ not only does not abolish the slow AHP, but
actually enhances it. Note that Ca2+-dependent
K+ currents may be too fast to be visible with this
time scale. The time course of firing adaptation is also slowed (see
scattergram). C, Reducing the extracellular
concentration of Na+ from 152 to 26 mM
results in a substantial reduction in the amplitude of the slow AHP as
well as a marked decrease in the rate of spike-frequency adaptation.
D, Washing in normal Na+ enhances the
AHP and adaptation. Note that in each case the amplitude of the
sinusoidal current injection was adjusted to generate ~9-11 action
potentials during the initial cycle of the sinusoidal
current.
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Figure 6.
Blockage of Ca2+ currents
results in a slowing of firing rate adaptation and in an enhancement of
AHP duration. A, Spikes per cycle versus time before and
after block of Ca2+ currents through the
substitution of Ca2+ with 2 mM
Mn2+. The number of spikes per cycle have been
normalized with respect to the number in the first cycle and averaged
for five different cells. The error bars represent the SEM. A single
exponential has been fitted for both conditions. The average time
constant of the decay was 1.56 sec in control and 13.78 sec in 0 mM [Ca2+]o.
B, Plot of the input resistance during the AHP in 2.5 and 0 mM [Ca2+]o. The
changes in input resistance have been averaged for the same five cells
as in A, the error bars representing the SEM. The
decrease in input resistance has a time course similar to that of the
AHP. In 0 mM
[Ca2+]o, the decrease in input
resistance is less at time 0 but larger afterwards with a slower return
to control value. C, D, Bath application of medium
containing 0 mM Ca2+ and 2 mM Mn2+ results in a lengthening of the
duration of the AHP (D) as well as a lengthening
of the time constant of firing rate adaptation
(C). In both cases there was a statistically
significant difference (p = 0.002). Results
from five different cells are shown.
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The consequences of 20 sec of high-intensity sinewave injections were
also studied with the calcium chelator BAPTA (25-100 mM)
in the recording electrode (n = 5). The slow AHP was
not suppressed after the infusion of BAPTA into the neurons for 5-40
min, and its duration was 43.6 ± 15.0 sec, which is similar to
that obtained in 0 mM
[Ca2+]o.
The block of transmembrane Ca2+ currents
also resulted in a substantial lengthening of the decay time constant
of firing rate adaptation during the injection of the high-intensity
sine waves (Figs. 5B,
6A,C; the intensity of the current
injection was adjusted to keep the initial firing rate similar to the
control value). Figure 6 shows the effects of eliminating extracellular
calcium in five cells. The decay of the number of spikes per cycle
during high-intensity current injection was consistently slower in 0 mM
[Ca2+]o (Fig.
6A). Accordingly, the exponential time constant of
the decay became longer in every case (Fig. 6C).
Once transmembrane Ca2+ currents were
blocked, [Na+]o
was reduced from 152 to 42-26 mM by substituting
choline-Cl for NaCl in the bathing medium. In low
[Na+]o, action
potentials were still generated, although their amplitude was reduced
and their duration increased (Fig. 5C, inset). In these
conditions the size and duration of the AHP were reduced (Fig.
5C, top panel). In parallel, the strength of the
firing rate adaptation during high-intensity current injection was
decreased (Figs. 5C, bottom panel,
7C). Returning
[Na+]o to normal
reinstated the slow AHP as well as spike-frequency adaptation during
the period of sinusoidal current injection (Fig. 5D). The
reduction of the slow AHP was not attributable to the action of choline
on muscarinic receptors because the block of the slow AHP in low
[Na+]o was not
prevented by including the muscarinic antagonist scopolamine (10 µM) in the bath (n = 2).

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Figure 7.
Reducing [Na+]o
results in the block of the slow AHP and in the appearance of a slow
ADP. A, The intracellular injection of sinusoidal
current (2 Hz) results in the generation of a slow AHP in normal
solution, but of a slow ADP after the reduction of
[Na+]o from 152 to 42 mM.
B, Plot of spikes per cycle versus time for the two
conditions represented in A reveals that reducing sodium
concentration results in a marked decrease in the strength of slow
firing rate adaptation. C, Spikes per cycle versus time
in control and low sodium. The number of spikes per cycle have been
normalized with respect to that in the first cycle and averaged for
five different cells. The error bars represent the SEM. A single
exponential has been fitted for both conditions. The average time
constant of the decay is 4.7 sec in control solution and very slow
(several minutes) and almost linear in low sodium. D,
Plot of the apparent input resistance during the AHP (normal sodium)
and ADP (low sodium). The changes in input resistance have
been averaged for the same five cells as in C. The
apparent input resistance of the cell decreases during the AHP, but
increases during the ADP.
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In similarity to the effects of lowering
[Na+]o in 0 mM
[Ca2+]o solution,
lowering [Na+]o in
the presence of 2 mM
[Ca2+]o also
resulted in a block of the slow AHP. However, in these conditions, the
slow AHP was usually replaced by a pronounced slow ADP
(n = 10; Figs. 7A,
8B). The slow ADP
appeared to be a Ca2+-dependent event
because it was blocked after reduction of
[Ca2+]o to 0 mM (n = 6). Figure 8,
A and C, illustrates one recording in which a
slow AHP is visible in normal bath solution. Lowering [Na+]o unveils a
slow ADP (Fig. 8B), which disappears almost
completely after returning to normal sodium levels. However, after
recovery, the slow AHP was followed by a slow ADP. Block of
transmembrane Ca2+ currents with the bath
application of low
[Ca2+]o (0.5 mM) and elevated
Mg2+ (10 mM)
resulted in an increase in the amplitude and duration of the slow AHP
and a block of the slow ADP (Fig. 8D).

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Figure 8.
Both a slow afterhyperpolarization and a slow
afterdepolarization can follow the repetitive discharge of action
potentials in cortical neurons. A, Intracellular
injection of sinusoidal current into this cortical neuron results in a
slow AHP. B, Reducing
[Na+]o to 26 mM results in
the replacement of the slow AHP by a large and prolonged ADP.
C, Returning to normal
[Na+]o reinstates the slow AHP,
although it is now followed by a remnant ADP that could activate action
potentials (the cell was slightly depolarized after the first
sinusoidal current injection by DC injection). D,
Blocking transmembrane Ca2+ currents through the
bath application of 0.5 mM Ca2+ and 10 mM Mg2+ results in a block of the slow
ADP, leaving a large, slow AHP. For each of the four conditions the
second cycle of the sinusoidal current injection is expanded to
illustrate action potentials.
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|
In the presence of 2 mM
[Ca2+]o, the rate
of adaptation of action potential discharge also was markedly reduced
after reduction of extracellular sodium concentration (Fig.
7B,C). In some cases, reduction of
[Na+]o while
keeping 2 mM
[Ca2+]o even
resulted in an increase of firing rate, which reached a peak several
seconds after the beginning of the sinusoidal current injections (Fig.
7B), presumably because of the same mechanisms that generate
the slow ADP.
The afterhyperpolarization is mediated by a
K+ current
Two mechanisms could account for the sodium-dependent slow AHP.
The first one is the activation of a sodium-dependent current, which
should be associated with changes in membrane conductance. The other is
the activation of electrogenic ionic pumps, such as the
Na+/K+
ATPase, which should not be associated with changes in conductance (Gustafsson and Wigström, 1983
; Thompson and Prince, 1986
).
Whether or not the slow afterhyperpolarization was associated with an increase in membrane conductance was examined with a hybrid
current-voltage clamp mode in which cells were induced to generate
prolonged series of action potentials in current-clamp mode and then
voltage-clamped to various membrane potentials (Fig.
9). In Figure 9A-C,
recordings were performed in 0 Ca2+ and 2 mM Mn2+ to isolate
the slow AHP. The slow AHP after a sinusoidal current injection is
shown in current-clamp mode in Figure 9A. The outward current underlying it was subsequently recorded in voltage-clamp mode
(Fig. 9B) and the conductance tested during this period
(Fig. 9C). The conductance thus measured in five cells
increased to 162.5 ± 30.0% during the tail current with respect
to rest.

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Figure 9.
The slow AHP is associated with an increase in
membrane conductance. A, Intracellular injection of
sinusoidal current results in the generation of a prolonged AHP
(current clamp). B, In hybrid current and voltage clamp,
the injection of a similar series of sinusoidal current is associated
with the generation of a prolonged outward current. C,
The intracellular injection of hyperpolarizing voltage steps reveals
that the outward current is associated with a 46% increase in membrane
conductance. D, Apparent input resistance measured 10 sec after the end of sinusoidal injection in normal solution, expressed
as a percentage of the resistance observed before the sinusoidal
current injection. E, F, Change in apparent input
resistance 10 sec after current injection varies with recordings
conditions. The decrease is larger on average in low calcium-containing
medium (E) than in normal solution
(D). In low sodium (26 mM), there is
an increase in apparent input resistance
(F).
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|
When in current-clamp mode, the intracellular injection of
hyperpolarizing current pulses also revealed that the slow AHP is often
associated with a substantial increase in membrane conductance (Figs.
5, 6B, 7D, 9A), even after
compensation for the change in membrane potential (n = 7; data not shown). In normal solution this increase in conductance
lasted 10-20 sec, whereas in low calcium the membrane conductance
remained increased for >30 sec (n = 8; Fig.
6B). On the other hand, the slow afterdepolarization after reduction of
[Na+]o was
associated with a decrease in apparent input conductance in
current-clamp recordings (n = 10; Fig. 7D,
8B).
As a consequence, the change in apparent input resistance in current
clamp, 10 sec after the peak of the AHP with respect to rest, showed
different distributions between control (89.7 ± 17.2%;
n = 23; Fig. 9D), low calcium (73.9 ± 17.7%; n = 5; Fig. 9E), and low sodium
(121.2 ± 20.8%; n = 5; Fig. 9F).
These observations suggest that the variability of changes in
conductance shown by neurons in control solution (Fig. 9D)
may be attributed to a differential distribution or density for the
membrane conductances sustaining the slow ADP and the slow AHP.
To determine the type of ionic channels that were opening during the
slow AHP, we measured the reversal potential of the current underlying
the slow AHP in either current-clamp or voltage-clamp mode (Fig.
10). The average reversal potential of
the slow AHP current was determined to be
108.9 ± 12.4 mV in
2.5 mM
[K+]o
(n = 10). Increasing
[K+]o from 2.5 to
7.5 mM resulted in a shift of the reversal
potential to more depolarized levels (average of
86.7 ± 2.8 mV;
n = 3), giving a 45 mV/10-fold change in
[K+]o. This value
is somewhat less than expected from the Nernst equation (61 mV/10-fold
change at 35° C). In the cell shown in Figure 10, the reversal
potential of the tail current after 20 sec of sinusoidal current
injection was measured in both 2.5 and 10 mM
[K+]o after
transmembrane Ca2+ currents were blocked
by bathing the slices in 0.1 mM
Ca2+ and 1.9 mM
Mn2+. The reversal potential of this tail
current shifted from
113 to
77 mV, a 36 mV change that is as
predicted by the Nernst equation.

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Figure 10.
The slow AHP is mediated by a
K+ current. A, Outward tail currents
were recorded after 20 sec of sinusoidal current injection in current
clamp while holding the cell at different holding potential (hybrid
current-voltage clamp) in 2.5 mM
[K+]o. B, Same protocol
in 10 mM [K+]o.
C, Amplitude of peak tail current after repetitive
firing for 20 sec as a function of holding potential. The slow AHP
current exhibits a reversal potential of 113 mV in 2.5 mM
[K+]o. Increasing
[K+]o to 10 mM results in
a shift in the reversal potential to 77 mV, indicating that the slow
AHP current is carried by K+.
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We have not yet found any evidence to support a role for a
Na+/K+ ionic
pump in the generation of the slow AHP. Local application of
strophanthidin in concentrations (200 µM in micropipette)
exceeding those previously reported to block the
Na+/K+ pump
in hippocampal pyramidal cells (Thompson and Prince, 1986
) or in the
bath (10 µM) did not block the slow AHP after repetitive firing in cortical neurons (n = 7; data not shown).
The increase in conductance during the slow AHP recorded in low or 0 mM
[Ca2+]o, and the
reversal potential in different potassium levels for the underlying
current indicate that the slow AHP and the slow firing rate adaptation
are largely attributable to the activation of a sodium-dependent
potassium conductance.
Block of voltage-dependent Na+ currents
abolishes the slow AHP
The slow AHP generated by 40 cycles of sinewave current injections
in 0 mM
[Ca2+]o was
immediately abolished by block of fast action potentials through either
the local (10 µM) or bath (1 µM)
application of the Na+ channel blocker
tetrodotoxin (TTX) (n = 4; data not shown). However, the interpretation of this experiment is complicated by the fact that
tetrodotoxin blocks all action potential generation in these cells.
Therefore it changes the trajectory of the membrane voltage, and it
could reduce the influx of Ca2+ as well as
Na+. To control for this possibility, we
recorded cells in the presence of the K+
channel blocker tetraethylammonium (TEA) so that they generated robust
Ca2+-mediated action potentials before and
after the application of TTX (Fig.
11A;
n = 5). Under these circumstances, the local
application of tetrodotoxin (10-20 µM in the
micropipette) resulted in a strong reduction in the amplitude of the
slow AHP and could be associated with the appearance of a slow ADP
(Fig. 11A; TEA + TTX). Similarly, the simultaneous
bath application of TEA (2-5 mM) and TTX (1-2 µM) resulted in an abolition of fast
Na+-dependent action potentials, the
generation of repetitive Ca2+ spikes, and
the reduction or elimination of the slow AHP (n = 3;
data not shown). These effects are similar to those that occurred in
low-sodium solution with normal calcium concentration.

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Figure 11.
The slow AHP is not supported by the generation
of Ca2+ spikes alone and is blocked by TTX.
A, In the presence of TEA (4 mM in the
bath), intracellular injection of sinusoidal current results in the
activation of fast Na+ and slow
Ca2+-mediated action potentials (left
trace). Block of voltage-gated Na+ channels
with local application of TTX (20 µM) results in an
abolition of the slow AHP and in its replacement by a slow
afterdepolarization (right trace) despite the firing of
Ca2+ spikes. Expanded traces illustrate action
potential features before and after application of TTX.
B, Depolarizing voltage steps (10 sec) are followed by a
slowly decaying outward current. C, Local application of
TTX (10 µM) blocks the slow outward tail current.
D, The traces obtained after the application of TTX
(C) were subtracted from the ones obtained before
TTX application (B). These traces are consistent
with the depolarization activating a TTX-sensitive inward current and a
slowly developing outward current. The four vertical
lines indicate the time at which the current values were
measured to build the I-V graph shown in
E. E, I-V representation
of the putative inward and outward currents activated during and after
depolarizing voltage steps exhibit a very similar voltage dependence.
The apparent input resistance of the cell in B-E was 38 M , which is normal for cortical pyramidal cells (McCormick et al.,
1985 ).
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To further examine the possible role of TTX-sensitive currents in the
generation of the slow AHP, we examined the ionic currents activated by
subthreshold voltage steps before and after the application of TTX
(Fig. 11B). Stepping from a holding potential of
75
mV to membrane potentials of up to
50 mV for 10 sec in 0 [Ca2+]o and 2 mM
[Mn2+]o resulted
in the activation of a slow outward current that slowly deactivated
after return to
75 mV (Fig. 11B). The local
application of tetrodotoxin (10 µM) resulted in
a block of this slowly activating outward current (Fig. 11C;
n = 5). Subtracting the current traces obtained after
the application of TTX from those obtained before reveals traces that
are consistent with the generation of an inward current (blocked by
TTX) superimposed on the generation of a slowly developing outward
current. Plotting the amplitude of both the apparent inward and outward
currents versus the step potential reveals a similar voltage dependence
(Fig. 11D,E). The properties of the apparent inward
current, including its rapid activation with depolarization, its
amplitude (0.1-1 nA at
65 to
50 mV), and its block by tetrodotoxin
are consistent with its mediation by the persistent
Na+ current (Stafstrom et al., 1985
;
Schwindt et al., 1989
) (for review, see Crill, 1996
). The properties of
the outward current that follow the cessation of the depolarizing
voltage step are consistent with its mediation by a
Na+-dependent
K+ current (Schwindt et al., 1989
).
Functional effects of the slow AHP
During presentation of a high-contrast sinewave grating, cortical
neurons in vivo receive barrages of synaptic potentials that
vary from being "sinusoidal" for simple cells, to a more-or-less steady depolarization for complex neurons (Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000
).
Similarly, the intracellular injection of either sinusoidal (Fig.
12A, left), constant
(Fig. 12A, right; n = 10) or
"noisy" stimuli that lead to a general depolarization of the cell
(Nowak et al., 1997
; Liu et al., 1999
) (data not shown) in
vitro all resulted in substantial spike adaptation and in the
generation of a slow AHP.

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Figure 12.
The slow AHP leads to a prolonged decrease in
neuronal responsiveness. A, The AHP evoked by the
injection of a sinusoidal current for 20 sec is compared with the AHP
induced by a square pulse of 20 sec duration (top
trace). In both cases, the depolarizing intensity is 0.5 nA
(bottom trace). The sinusoidal injection was 0.5 to
0.5 nA at 2 Hz. Both the total number of spikes and the frequency were
higher with a square pulse as the hyperpolarizing part of the sinusoids
prevented firing (middle trace). B,
Intracellular injection of a depolarizing current pulse every 2 sec was
used to test the excitability of this neuron. The intracellular
injection of a sinusoidal current results in a prolonged AHP, which is
associated with a marked decrease in the number of action potentials
generated in response to each depolarizing current pulse.
C, Examples of neuronal responses to the depolarizing
current pulses at the times indicated after the end of sinusoidal
current injection. Control data were obtained just before injection of
the sinusoidal current.
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|
Functionally, the slow AHP was associated with a marked decrease in
response of the neuron to the intracellular injection of depolarizing
current pulses (Fig. 12B,C; n = 10),
such that current pulses that were able to generate a train of action
potentials before adaptation could become completely subthreshold or
generated only one action potential. As the AHP lessened, the neuronal
response slowly recovered, with an average recovery time of 13.95 ± 13.62 sec (n = 10) in normal solution (Fig.
12B,C). This decrease in excitability presumably
results from both the hyperpolarization of the membrane potential as
well as the increase in membrane conductance associated with the slow AHP.
Examination of the frequency versus current
(f-I) relationship revealed that
hyperpolarization of cortical neurons with the intracellular injection
of current resulted in a rightward shift of the f-I curve
(n = 7; Fig.
13A). Similarly, the
f-I relationship studied before and after adaptation to
prolonged sinusoidal current injections showed a displacement to the
right (n = 6), even for slow AHPs of relatively small
amplitudes (the cell in Fig. 13B had an AHP of only 4 mV).
These results indicate that after adaptation, the hyperpolarization of
the membrane potential is sufficient to result in a significant shift
in the f-I relationship of cortical neurons. This result is
qualitatively similar to the rightward shift in contrast-response
functions for visual cortical neurons after contrast adaptation
(Movshon and Lennie, 1979
; Dean, 1983
; Albrecht et al., 1984
; Ohzawa et
al., 1985
; Sclar et al., 1989
; Bonds, 1991
).

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Figure 13.
Shifts of the frequency versus current
(f-I) relationship with different
membrane potentials (A) and during the slow AHP
(B). A, Frequency versus
intensity curves at three different membrane potentials. Membrane
potential was maintained at different values by means of intracellular
injection of DC. Firing was induced by 300 msec depolarizing pulses of
intensities indicated. The sigmoidal functions are the result of
fitting a Boltzmann equation to the data. Error bars correspond to the
SD for three to eight repetitions of the current pulse. Points without
an error bar exhibited an SD of zero. The inset on the
right shows the response to a 0.5 nA pulse at the three
different membrane potentials. B, f-I
plot for different amplitude of sinusoidal current injections in a
neuron before (solid dots) and after (open
dots) injection of a high-intensity (± 1.2 nA) sinusoidal
current for 20 sec. Frequency is the average frequency of discharge in
the five cycles before high intensity and the five cycles after it.
Note that the f-I relationship is shifted to the right
along the current axis after adaptation.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
Contrast adaptation is associated with a slow (
of seconds)
reduction ("fading") in the perceived contrast during prolonged viewing of a high-contrast stimulus (Blakemore et al., 1973
; Hammett et
al., 1994
) and a decrease in evoked discharge of visual cortical neurons (Maffei et al., 1973
; Vautin and Berkley, 1977
; Albrecht et
al., 1984
; Ohzawa et al., 1985
; Marlin et al., 1988
). Contrast adaptation is followed by a prolonged (tens of seconds) period of
reduced contrast sensitivity (Blakemore and Campbell, 1969
; Dealy and
Tolhurst, 1974
; Swift and Smith, 1982
; Georgeson and Harris, 1984
;
Lorenceau, 1987
; Berkley, 1990
; Määtänen and Koenderink, 1991
; Hammett et al., 1994
) and reduction in evoked discharge in visual cortical neurons (Maffei et al., 1973
; Movshon and
Lennie, 1979
; Dean, 1983
; Albrecht et al., 1984
; Ohzawa et al., 1985
;
Saul and Cynader, 1989
; Sclar et al., 1989
; Allison et al., 1993
),
which is associated with a membrane hyperpolarization (Carandini and
Ferster, 1997
; Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000
) (but see, Ahmed et al.,
1997
).
Both components of contrast adaptation may result, at least in part,
from the intrinsic properties of cortical neurons; in other words, the
propensity of these cells to exhibit a slow spike-frequency adaptation
during prolonged stimulus presentation and a long-lasting hyperpolarization after stimulus presentation (Sanchez-Vives et al.,
2000
). Thalamocortical neurons in the lateral geniculate nucleus
exhibit significantly less slow spike-frequency adaptation than
cortical neurons (present study) and significantly less contrast adaptation (Shou et al., 1996
; Sanchez-Vives et al., 2000
). Our present
results, obtained with in vitro techniques, suggest that both slow adaptation and slow AHP in cortical neurons are mediated largely through the activation of a
Na+-activated
K+ current.
Ionic basis of the slow AHP and slow firing rate adaptation
The prolonged activation of cortical neurons is followed by a slow
(12-75 sec) AHP that is most likely mediated by a
K+ conductance, because it is associated
with an increase in conductance (Fig. 9) and reversed at the expected
reversal potential of K+ in 2.5 mM
[K+]o and was
sensitive to changes in
[K+]o (Fig. 10).
Although the activation of a
Na+/K+ ionic
pump may contribute to this slow AHP (Thomas, 1972
; Glynn and Karlish,
1975
; Gustafsson and Wigström, 1983
; Thompson and Prince, 1986
),
it is not a major contributor, because we could reverse the slow AHP
with hyperpolarization and application of the
Na+/K+ pump
blocker strophanthidin did not prevent the occurrence of the slow AHP.
Previous studies have emphasized the importance of
Ca2+-sensitive
K+ currents in both the generation of
spike-frequency adaptation and slow AHPs in many different types of
neurons (Madison and Nicoll, 1984
; Pennefather et al., 1985
; Constanti
and Sim, 1987
; Llinás and Lopez-Barneo, 1988
; Schwindt et al., 1988
,
1992
; Avoli and Olivier, 1989
; Sah, 1996
; Pineda et al., 1998
). In the
present study, we found that the block of transmembrane
Ca2+ currents resulted in a slowing of the
rate of firing rate adaptation, indicating a role for
Ca2+-activated
K+ currents in the slow spike-frequency
adaptation (Figs. 5, 6).
However, after block of transmembrane Ca2+
currents, the amplitude of the AHP that follows these prolonged trains
of action potentials did not change, and its duration actually
increased (Figs. 5, 6). This prolonged AHP, as well as the remaining
spike-frequency adaptation, were reduced after reduction of
[Na+]o (Fig. 5,
7). This suggests that both the slowest component of firing rate
adaptation and the slow AHP are mediated by a
Na+-activated
K+ current
(IK(Na)).
Several investigations have demonstrated prolonged
afterhyperpolarizations after repetitive action potential generation
that may be mediated by Na+-activated
K+ currents (Constanti and Sim, 1987
;
Schwindt et al., 1989
; Kubota and Saito, 1991
; Safronov and Vogel,
1996
; Kim and McCormick, 1998
). The possibility that these currents are
residual Ca2+-activated
K+ currents that are activated by
Na+-dependent intracellular
Ca2+ release (Lowe et al., 1976
) has been
controlled for by chelating intracellular
Ca2+ with appropriate buffers (Schwindt et
al., 1989
; present study).
Na+-dependent
K+ channels were first recorded in heart
cells (Kameyama et al., 1984
) and later in a variety of different
neurons, including pyramidal cells from the rodent primary visual
cortex (Egan et al., 1992a
). In both whole-cell and excised membrane patches, these large conductance K+
channels are activated by increases in
[Na+]i in the
range of 10-20 mM (Egan et al., 1992b
; Dryer, 1994
; Koh et
al., 1994
; Safronov and Vogel, 1996
; Bischoff et al., 1998
). Intracellular levels of Na+ in neurons are
4-16 mM (Grafe et al., 1982
; Galvan et al., 1984
), whereas
prolonged discharge of action potential results in increases in
[Na+]i on the
order of only a few millimolar concentration (Bergman, 1970
;
Grafe et al., 1982
). These results predict, therefore, that IK(Na) would only be weakly activated
by prolonged neuronal activity. Nevertheless, significant activation of
Na+-activated
K+ channels is likely to occur with low
increases of
[Na+]i if
additional factors are taken into account. First, increases in
[Na+]i may be
tightly localized in the submembrane space (e.g., axon hillock) and may
locally reach levels high enough to strongly activate
Na+-dependent
K+ channels (Koh et al., 1994
). Second,
the sensitivity of Na+-activated
K+ to increases in
[Na+]i may be
under the regulation of intracellular factors and therefore larger in
intact cells than in cell-free membrane patches (Haimann et al., 1992
;
Rodrigo, 1993
).
Ionic basis of the slow ADP
In addition to the generation of AHPs after prolonged activation
of cortical neurons, we also observed, in low
Na+ and occasionally in control
conditions, a prolonged ADP that was associated with an apparent
decrease in membrane conductance (Figs. 7, 8). This ADP was abolished
by block of transmembrane Ca2+ currents
and therefore presumably is activated by increases in intracellular
calcium, in similarity to the ADP described by Schwindt et al. (1988)
.
Hippocampal and cortical pyramidal cells possess Ca2+-activated nonselective cation
conductances that are strongly voltage-dependent and that may generate
prolonged ADPs (Friedman et al., 1992
; Haj-Dahmane and Andrade, 1998
).
The voltage-dependent nature of this afterdepolarizing current may
allow it to generate an apparent decrease in membrane conductance when
neurons are injected with constant current pulses in current-clamp
recording mode (Haj-Dahmane and Andrade, 1998
). However, we cannot rule out other possible underlying mechanisms, such as the closure of a
K+ channel.
The increased duration of the slow AHP after block of calcium influx
suggests that the slow ADP participates in membrane potential repolarization in normal conditions. On a long time scale, the membrane
potential and firing rate of cortical neurons appears to be under the
influence of at least three separate slow ionic currents: a
Ca2+-activated
K+ current, a
Na+-activated
K+ current, and a current generating the
slow ADP.
Although the adaptation we observed in vitro was very
similar to that observed in vivo (Sanchez-Vives et al.,
2000
), the amplitude in vitro of both the adaptation and the
slow AHP was larger. This difference may be explained by differences in
the cell types examined (in vitro was limited to layers 2/3
and 4 neurons), the lack of spontaneous activity in vitro,
or differences in the presence of modulatory neurotransmitters
(Foehring et al., 1989
).
Cellular mechanisms of contrast adaptation
A simple cellular model for the phenomenon of contrast adaptation
can be proposed: presentation of a high-contrast stimulus results in
the increased activation of synaptic and action potentials in cortical
neurons, resulting in an increase in intracellular concentration of
sodium and calcium ions, which then leads to the activation of calcium-
and sodium-dependent potassium currents. The activation of these
outward currents has two main consequences: a decrease in firing rate
during high-contrast stimulation, such that the same stimulus produces
less activity within a few seconds of presentation (perhaps the
neuronal basis for the "fading" effect), and the production of a
long-lasting hyperpolarization after high-contrast stimulation, such
that more contrast is required to bring the neurons membrane potential
to firing threshold (perhaps the neuronal basis for the decreased
contrast sensitivity).
This simple model, however, does not explain the small part of contrast
adaptation that is specific to the properties of the adapting stimulus
(e.g., spatial frequency; Movshon et al., 1979
; Albrecht et al., 1984
;
Saul and Cynader, 1989
; Carandini et al., 1997
). We hypothesize that
the intrinsically generated hyperpolarization might account for the
large, general decrease in neuronal responsiveness, whereas decreases
in the activity of presynaptic neurons that are strongly activated by
the adapting stimulus might provide the stimulus specific aspect of
contrast adaptation.
This model of contrast adaptation does not exclude the participation of
synaptic mechanisms. In addition, because neurons are highly connected,
changes produced by intrinsic membrane properties in some neurons can
be propagated as changes in synaptic drive in other neurons. Synaptic
interactions also are likely to lead to the amplification (Douglas and
Martin, 1991
) of the changes that were initiated by intrinsic membrane properties.
In conclusion, we suggest that the membrane potential of cortical
neurons is constantly being adjusted through the activation of
Na+- and
Ca2+-dependent
K+ currents, in an effort to regulate
neuronal excitability. This regulation of neuronal excitability will
have numerous important consequences on cortical processing, including
alterations in the spatial and temporal dynamics of receptive field
properties (Barlow, 1990
, 1997
; Gilbert, 1998
). These potential and
important effects remain to be explored.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 23, 1999; revised Feb. 22, 2000; accepted March 16, 2000.
This work was supported by grants from National Science Foundation and
the National Institute of Health. We thank Drs. Ehud Kaplan, Jean
Bullier, and Joshua Brumberg for their comments on this manuscript and
Drs. Anita Luthi and Uhnoh Kim for helpful discussions. Additional
information about these and related findings may be obtained at
http://www.mccormicklab.org.
Correspondence should be addressed to David McCormick, Section of
Neurobiology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New
Haven, CT 06510. E-mail: david.mccormick{at}yale.edu.
Dr. Sanchez-Vives' present address: Instituto de Neurociencias,
Universidad Miguel Hernández, Apartado 18, 03550 San Juan de Alicante, Spain. E-mail: mavi.sanchez{at}umh.es.
 |
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