artículo científico
Knock-down of synapsin alters cell excitability and action potential waveform by potentiating BK and voltage-gated Ca2+ currents in Helix serotonergic neurons
Fecha
2015Registro en:
0306-4522
10.1016/j.neuroscience.2015.10.046
Autor
Brenes García, Oscar Gerardo
Vandael, David Henry F.
Carbone, Emilio
Montarolo, Pier Giorgio
Ghirardi, Mirella
Institución
Resumen
Synapsins (Syns) are an evolutionarily conserved
family of presynaptic proteins crucial for the fine-tuning of
synaptic function. A large amount of experimental evidences
has shown that Syns are involved in the development
of epileptic phenotypes and several mutations in Syn
genes have been associated with epilepsy in humans and
animal models. Syn mutations induce alterations in circuitry
and neurotransmitter release, differentially affecting excitatory
and inhibitory synapses, thus causing an excitation/
inhibition imbalance in network excitability toward hyperexcitability
that may be a determinant with regard to the development
of epilepsy. Another approach to investigate
epileptogenic mechanisms is to understand how silencing
Syn affects the cellular behavior of single neurons and is
associated with the hyperexcitable phenotypes observed
in epilepsy. Here, we examined the functional effects of
antisense-RNA inhibition of Syn expression on individually
identified and isolated serotonergic cells of the Helix land
snail. We found that Helix synapsin silencing increases cell
excitability characterized by a slightly depolarized resting
membrane potential, decreases the rheobase, reduces the
threshold for action potential (AP) firing and increases the
mean and instantaneous firing rates, with respect to control
cells. The observed increase of Ca2+ and BK currents in
Syn-silenced cells seems to be related to changes in the
shape of the AP waveform. These currents sustain the faster
spiking in Syn-deficient cells by increasing the after hyperpolarization
and limiting the Na+ and Ca2+ channel inactivation
during repetitive firing. This in turn speeds up the
depolarization phase by reaching the AP threshold faster.
Our results provide evidence that Syn silencing increases
intrinsic cell excitability associated with increased Ca2+
and Ca2+-dependent BK currents in the absence of excitatory
or inhibitory inputs.