Artículos de revistas
Competition between persistent Na+ and muscarine-sensitive K+ currents shapes perithreshold resonance and spike tuning in CA1 pyramidal neurons
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, Volumen 11,
16625102
10.3389/fncel.2017.00061
Autor
Soto Vera, Jorge Ignacio
Alcayaga Urbina, Julio
Sanhueza, Magdalena
Institución
Resumen
© 2017 Vera, Alcayaga and Sanhueza. Neurons from many brain regions display intrinsic subthreshold theta-resonance, responding preferentially to theta-frequency oscillatory stimuli. Resonance may contribute to selective communication among neurons and to orchestrate brain rhythms. CA1 pyramidal neurons receive theta activity, generating place fields. In these neurons the expression of perithreshold frequency preference is controversial, particularly in the spiking regime, with evidence favoring either non-resonant (integrator-like) or resonant behavior. Perithreshold dynamics depends on the persistent Na+ current I NaP developing above −70 mV and the muscarine-sensitive K+ current IM activating above −60 mV. We conducted current and voltage clamp experiments in slices to investigate perithreshold excitability of CA1 neurons under oscillatory stimulation. Around 20% of neurons displayed perithreshold resonance that is expressed in spiking. The remaining neurons (∼80%) acted as low-pass