Sequential activation of multiple persistent inward currents induces staircase currents in serotonergic neurons of medulla in ePet-EYFP mice

Author:

Cheng Yi1,Zhang Qiang2,Dai Yue12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Adolescent Health Assessment and Exercise Intervention of Ministry of Education, School of Physical Education and Health Care, East China Normal University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China

2. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Multidimensional Information Processing, School of Communication and Electronic Engineering, East China Normal University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China

Abstract

Persistent inward currents (PICs) are widely reported in rodent spinal neurons. A distinctive pattern observed recently is staircase-like PICs induced by voltage ramp in serotonergic neurons of mouse medulla. The mechanism underlying this pattern of PICs is unclear. Combining electrophysiological, pharmacological, and computational approaches, we investigated the staircase PICs in serotonergic neurons of medulla in ePet-EYFP transgenic mice (postnatal days 1–7). Staircase PICs induced by 10-s voltage biramps were observed in 70% of serotonergic neurons ( n = 73). Staircase PICs activated at −48.8 ± 5 mV and consisted of two components, with the first PIC of 45.8 ± 51 pA and the second PIC of 197.3 ± 126 pA ( n = 51). Staircase PICs were also composed of low-voltage-activated sodium PIC (Na-PIC; onset −46.2 ± 5 mV, n = 34), high-voltage-activated calcium PIC (Ca-PIC; onset −29.3 ± 6 mV, n = 23), and high-voltage-activated tetrodotoxin (TTX)- and dihydropyridine-resistant sodium PIC (TDR-PIC; onset −16.8 ± 4 mV, n = 28). Serotonergic neurons expressing Na-PIC, Ca-PIC, and TDR-PIC were evenly distributed in medulla. Bath application of 1–2 μM TTX blocked the first PIC and decreased the second PIC by 36% ( n = 23, P < 0.05). Nimodipine (25 μM) reduced the second PIC by 38% ( n = 34, P < 0.001) without altering the first PIC. TTX and nimodipine removed the first PIC and reduced the second PIC by 59% ( n = 28, P < 0.01). A modeling study mimicked the staircase PICs and verified experimental conclusions that sequential activation of Na-PIC, Ca-PIC, and TDR-PIC in order of voltage thresholds induced staircase PICs in serotonergic neurons. Further experimental results suggested that the multiple components of staircase PICs play functional roles in regulating excitability of serotonergic neurons in medulla. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Staircase persistent inward currents (PICs) are mediated by activation of L-type calcium channels in dendrites of mouse spinal motoneurons. A novel mechanism is explored in this study. Here we report that the staircase PICs are mediated by sequentially activating sodium and calcium PICs in serotonergic neurons of mouse medulla.

Funder

The National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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