TY - JOUR T1 - The Switch of Subthalamic Neurons From an Irregular to a Bursting Pattern Does Not Solely Depend on Their GABAergic Inputs in the Anesthetic-Free Rat JF - The Journal of Neuroscience JO - J. Neurosci. SP - 8665 LP - 8675 DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.22-19-08665.2002 VL - 22 IS - 19 AU - Nadia Urbain AU - Nicolas Rentéro AU - Damien Gervasoni AU - Bernard Renaud AU - Guy Chouvet Y1 - 2002/10/01 UR - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/22/19/8665.abstract N2 - The subthalamic nucleus (STN) powerfully controls basal ganglia outputs and has been implicated in movement disorders observed in Parkinson's disease because of its pathological mixed burst firing mode and hyperactivity. A recent study suggested that reciprocally connected glutamatergic STN and GABAergic globus pallidus (GP) neurons act in vitro as a generator of bursting activity in basal ganglia. In vivo, we reported that GP neurons increased their firing rate in wakefulness (W) compared with slow-wave sleep (SWS) without any change in their random pattern. In contrast, STN neurons exhibited similar firing rates in W and SWS, with an irregular pattern in W and a bursty one in SWS. Thus, the pallidal GABAergic tone might control the STN pattern. This hypothesis was tested by mimicking such variations with microiontophoresis of GABA receptor ligands. GABA agonists specifically decreased the STN firing rate but did not affect its firing pattern. GABAA (but not GABAB) antagonists strongly enhanced the STN mean discharge rate during all vigilance states up to three to five times its basal activity. However, such applications did not change the typical W random pattern. When applied during SWS, GABAAantagonists strongly reinforced the spontaneous bursty pattern into a particularly marked one with instantaneous frequencies reaching 500–600 Hz. SWS–W transitions occurring during ongoing antagonist iontophoresis invariably disrupted the bursty pattern into a random one. Thus GABAA receptors play a critical, but not exclusive, role in regulating the excitatory STN influence on basal ganglia outputs. ER -