Affiliation:
1. Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology, Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden; and
2. Department of Pharmacology, Liaoning Medical University, Jinzhou, PR China
Abstract
Postinhibitory rebound (PIR) can play a significant role for producing stable rhythmic motor patterns, like locomotion, by contributing to burst initiation following the phase of inhibition, and PIR may also be a target for modulatory systems acting on the network. The current aim was to explore the PIR in one type of interneuron in the lamprey locomotor network and its dependence on low voltage-activated (LVA) calcium channels, as well as its modulation by 5-HT and dopamine. PIR responses in commissural interneurons, mediating reciprocal inhibition and left-right alternation in the network, were significantly larger than in motoneurons. The L-type calcium channel antagonist nimodipine reduced PIR amplitude by ∼50%, whereas the L-channel agonist BAY K 8644 enhanced PIR amplitude, suggesting that LVA calcium channels of the L-subtype (CaV1.3) participate in the PIR response. The remainder of the response was blocked by nickel, indicating that T-type (CaV3) LVA calcium channels also contribute. No evidence was obtained for the involvement of a hyperpolarization-activated current. Furthermore, 5-HT, acting via 5-HT1Areceptors, reduced PIR, as did dopamine, acting via D2receptors. Coapplication of nimodipine caused no further PIR reduction, indicating that these modulators target CaV1.3 channels specifically. These results suggest that PIR may play a prominent role in the generation of alternating network activity and that the CaV1.3 and CaV3 subtypes of LVA calcium channels together underlie the PIR response. 5-HT and dopamine both target PIR via CaV1.3 channels, which may contribute significantly to their modulatory influence on locomotor network activity.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
28 articles.
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