Development of Inward Rectification and Control of Membrane Excitability in Mesencephalic V Neurons

Abstract
The present study was performed to assess the postnatal development and functional roles of inward rectifying currents in rat mesencephalic trigeminal (Mes V) neurons, which are involved in the genesis and control of oral-motor activities. Whole cell voltage-clamp recordings obtained from Mes V neurons in brain stem slices identified fast ( I KIR) and slow ( I h) inward rectifying currents, which were specifically blocked by BaCl2 (300–500 μM) or 4-( N-ethyl- N-phenylamino)-1,2-dimethyl-6-(methylamino) pyrimidinium chloride (ZD 7288, 10 μM), respectively. The whole cell current density for these channels increased between postnatal days 2 to 12 (P2-P12), and the time courses for I h activation and deactivation were each well described by two time constants. Application of ZD 7288 produced membrane hyperpolarization in the majority of cells and prolonged afterhyperpolarization repolarization. Additionally, in the presence of ZD 7288, spike frequency was decreased and adaptation was more pronounced. Interestingly, these neurons exhibited a voltage-dependent membrane resonance (hcontributes to stabilizing resting membrane potential and controlling cell excitability. The presence of I himparts the neuron with the unique property of low-frequency membrane resonance; the ability to discriminate between synaptic inputs based on frequency content.

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