The CD26-Related Dipeptidyl Aminopeptidase-like Protein DPPX Is a Critical Component of Neuronal A-Type K Channels importance of the somatodendritic I SA in regu- lating firing frequency was recently highlighted by the demonstration that the pacemaker frequency of individ (original) (raw)
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Experimental Neurology, 2008
Tyrosine hydroxylase SK Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by loss of dopaminergic (DAergic) neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). It is widely believed that replacing lost SNc DA neurons is a key to longer-term effective treatment of PD motor symptoms, but generating new SNc DA neurons in PD patients has proven difficult. Following loss of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive (TH+) SNc neurons in the rodent 6-hydroxy-DA (6-OHDA) model of PD, the number of TH+ neurons partially recovers and there is evidence this occurs via phenotype "shift" from TH− to TH+ cells. Understanding how this putative phenotype shift occurs may help increase SNc DAergic neurons in PD patients. In this study we characterize the electrophysiology of SNc TH− and TH+ cells during recovery from 6-OHDA in mice. Three distinct phenotypes were observed: (1) TH− were fast discharging with a short duration action potential (AP), short afterhyperpolarization (AHP) and no small conductance Ca 2+ -activated K + (SK) current; (2) TH+ were slow discharging with a long AP, long AHP and prominent SK current; and (3) cells with features "intermediate" between these TH− and TH+ phenotypes. The same 3 phenotypes were present also in the normal and D2 DA receptor knock-out SNc suggesting they are more closely related to the biology of TH expression than recovery from 6-OHDA. Acute inhibition of SK channel function shifted the electrophysiological phenotype of TH+ neurons toward TH− and chronic (2 weeks) inhibition of SK channel function in normal mice shifted the neurochemical phenotype of SNc from TH+ to TH− (i.e. decreased TH+ and increased TH− cell numbers). Importantly, chronic facilitation of SK channel function shifted the neurochemical phenotype of SNc from TH− to TH+ (i.e. increased TH+ and decreased TH− cell numbers). We conclude that SK channel function bidirectionally regulates the DA phenotype of SNc cells and facilitation of SK channels may be a novel way to increase the number of SNc DAergic neurons in PD patients.
Tuning pacemaker frequency of individual dopaminergic neurons by Kv4.3L and KChip3.1 transcription
The EMBO journal, 2001
The activity of dopaminergic (DA) substantia nigra (SN) neurons is essential for voluntary movement control. An intrinsic pacemaker in DA SN neurons generates their tonic spontaneous activity, which triggers dopamine release. We show here, by combining multiplex and quantitative real-time single-cell RT- PCR with slice patch-clamp electrophysiology, that an A-type potassium channel mediated by Kv4.3 and KChip3 subunits has a key role in pacemaker control. The number of active A-type potassium channels is not only tightly associated with the pacemaker frequency of individual DA SN neurons, but is also highly correlated with their number of Kv4.3L (long splice variant) and KChip3.1 (long splice variant) mRNA molecules. Consequently, the variation of Kv4alpha and Kv4beta subunit transcript numbers is sufficient to explain the full spectrum of spontaneous pacemaker frequencies in identified DA SN neurons. This linear coupling between Kv4alpha as well as Kv4beta mRNA abundance, A-type ch...
Refining the Identity and Role of Kv4 Channels in Mouse Substantia Nigra Dopaminergic Neurons
ABSTRACTSubstantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) dopaminergic (DA) neurons display a peculiar electrical phenotype characterized in vitro by a spontaneous tonic regular activity (pacemaking activity), a broad action potential and a biphasic post-inhibitory response. Several studies in rodents have underlined the central role played by the transient A-type current (IA) in the control of pacemaking activity and post-inhibitory rebound properties, thereby influencing both DA release and the physiological response of SNc neurons to incoming inhibitory inputs. Kv4.3 potassium channels were considered to be fully responsible for IA in these neurons, their density being tightly related to pacemaking frequency. In spite of this crucial electrophysiological role, we show that Kv4.3-/- transgenic mice exhibit minor alterations in locomotion and motor learning, although no compensation by functionally overlapping ion channels is observed in Kv4.3-/- SNc DA neurons. Using antigen retrieval immunohi...
Dopamine Neuron Responses Depend Exponentially on Pacemaker Interval
Journal of Neurophysiology, 2008
Midbrain dopamine neuron activity results from the integration of the responses to metabo- and ionotropic receptors with the postsynaptic excitability of these intrinsic pacemakers. Interestingly, intrinsic pacemaker rate varies greatly between individual dopamine neurons and is subject to short- and long-term regulation. Here responses of substantia nigra dopamine neurons to defined dynamic-clamp stimuli were measured to quantify the impact of cell-to-cell variation in intrinsic pacemaker rate. Then this approach was repeated in single dopamine neurons in which pacemaker rate was altered by activation of muscarinic receptors or current injection. These experiments revealed a dramatic exponential dependence on pacemaker interval for the responses to voltage-gated A-type K+ channels, voltage-independent cation channels and ionotropic synapses. Likewise, responses to native metabotropic (GABAb and mGluR1) inhibitory synapses depended steeply on pacemaker interval. These results show t...
European journal of pharmacology, 2016
Although small-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) (SK) channels and various types of voltage-gated Ca(2+) (Cav) channels have been described in midbrain dopaminergic neurons, the nature of their interactions is unclear. More particularly, the role of various Cav channel types in either promoting irregularity of firing (by generating an inward current during SK channel blockade) or promoting regularity of firing (by providing the source of Ca(2+) for the activation of SK channels) has not been systematically explored. We addressed this question using intracellular and extracellular recordings from substantia nigra, pars compacta (SNc), dopaminergic neurons in rat midbrain slices. Neurons were pharmacologically isolated from their differences. When examining the ability of various Cav channel blockers to inhibit the SK-mediated afterhyperpolarization (AHP), we found that only the N-type Cav channel blocker ω-conotoxin-GVIA was able to reduce the apamin-sensitive AHP, but only partially...
Neuropeptide secreted from a pacemaker activates neurons to control a rhythmic behavior
Current biology : CB, 2013
Background: Rhythmic behaviors are driven by endogenous biological clocks in pacemakers, which must reliably transmit timing information to target tissues that execute rhythmic outputs. During the defecation motor program in C. elegans, calcium oscillations in the pacemaker (intestine), which occur about every 50 s, trigger rhythmic enteric muscle contractions through downstream GABAergic neurons that innervate enteric muscles. However, the identity of the timing signal released by the pacemaker and the mechanism underlying the delivery of timing information to the GABAergic neurons are unknown. Results: Here, we show that a neuropeptide-like protein (NLP-40) released by the pacemaker triggers a single rapid calcium transient in the GABAergic neurons during each defecation cycle. We find that mutants lacking nlp-40 have normal pacemaker function, but lack enteric muscle contractions. NLP-40 undergoes calcium-dependent release that is mediated by the calcium sensor, SNT-2/synaptotagmin. We identify AEX-2, the G-protein-coupled receptor on the GABAergic neurons, as the receptor for NLP-40. Functional calcium imaging reveals that NLP-40 and AEX-2/GPCR are both necessary for rhythmic activation of these neurons. Furthermore, acute application of synthetic NLP-40-derived peptide depolarizes the GABAergic neurons in vivo. Conclusions: Our results show that NLP-40 carries the timing information from the pacemaker via calcium-dependent release and delivers it to the GABAergic neurons by instructing their activation. Thus, we propose that rhythmic release of neuropeptides can deliver temporal information from pacemakers to downstream neurons to execute rhythmic behaviors.
Journal of Neuroscience, 2012
Understanding DP block is important because it has been correlated with the clinical efficacy of chronic antipsychotic drug treatment. Here we describe how voltage-gated sodium (Na V ) channels regulate DP block and pacemaker activity in DA neurons of the substantia nigra using rat brain slices. The distribution, density, and gating of Na V currents were manipulated by blocking native channels with tetrodotoxin and by creating virtual channels and anti-channels with dynamic clamp. Although action potentials initiate in the axon initial segment and Na V channels are distributed in multiple dendrites, selective reduction of Na V channel activity in the soma was sufficient to decrease pacemaker frequency and increase susceptibility to DP block. Conversely, increasing somatic Na V current density raised pacemaker frequency and lowered susceptibility to DP block. Finally, when Na V currents were restricted to the soma, pacemaker activity occurred at abnormally high rates due to excessive local subthreshold Na V current. Together with computational simulations, these data show that both the slow pacemaker rate and the sensitivity to DP block that characterizes DA neurons result from the low density of somatic Na V channels. More generally, we conclude that the somatodendritic distribution of Na V channels is a major determinant of repetitive spiking frequency.
Journal of Neurophysiology, 2010
Herrik KF, Christophersen P, Shepard PD. Pharmacological modulation of the gating properties of small conductance Ca 2ϩ -activated K ϩ channels alters the firing pattern of dopamine neurons in vivo. (DA) neurons are autonomous pacemakers that occasionally fire bursts of action potentials, discharge patterns thought to reflect tonic and phasic DA signaling, respectively. Pacemaker activity depends on the concerted and cyclic interplay between intrinsic ion channels with small conductance Ca 2ϩ -activated K ϩ (SK) channels playing an important role. Bursting activity is synaptically initiated but neither the transmitters nor the specific ion conductances involved have been definitively identified. Physiological and pharmacological regulation of SK channel Ca 2ϩ sensitivity has recently been demonstrated and could represent a powerful means of modulating the expression of tonic/phasic signaling in DA neurons in vivo. To test this premise, we characterized the effects of intravenous administration of the novel positive and negative SK channel modulators NS309 and NS8593, respectively, on the spontaneous activity of substantia nigra pars compacta DA neurons in anesthetized C57BL/6 mice. NS309, dose-dependently decreased DA cell firing rate, increased the proportion of regular firing cells, and eventually stopped spontaneous firing. By contrast, systemic administration of the negative SK channel modulator NS8593 increased firing rate and shifted the pattern toward increased irregularity/bursting; an effect similar to local application of the pore blocking peptide apamin. The altered firing patterns resulting from inhibiting SK currents persisted independently of changes in firing rates induced by administration of DA autoreceptor agonists/antagonists. We conclude that pharmacological modulation of SK channel Ca 2ϩ -sensitivity represents a powerful mechanism for switching DA neuron firing activity between tonic and phasic signaling modalities in vivo.