Abstract

1. Dentate gyrus granule cells acutely dissociated from hippocampal slices obtained from chronic temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) patients displayed a high-voltage activated (HVA) Ca2+ conductance with a pronounced Ca2+-dependent inactivation. 2. Inactivation time constants and peak HVA Ca2+ current (ICa) amplitudes did not differ between perforated patch and whole-cell recordings without added exogenous Ca2+ buffers, indicating that the Ca2+-dependent characteristics of ICa inactivation were well preserved in whole-cell recordings. 3. Inactivation time constants correlated with whole-cell ICa, and were increased when Ca2+ was replaced with Ba2+ in the external solution or 5 mM BAPTA was added to the pipette solution. 4. In recordings without added exogenous Ca2+ buffers, the time course of ICa inactivation was comparable between human TLE and kindled rat granule cells. Conversely, the time course of ICa in human TLE granule cells loaded with 5 mM intracellular BAPTA resembled that observed in buffer-free recordings from control rat neurones. 5. The loss of a putative intraneuronal Ca2+ buffer, the Ca2+-binding protein calbindin (CB), from human granule cells during TLE may result in the pronounced Ca2+-dependent ICa inactivation. This process could serve a neuroprotective role by significantly decreasing Ca2+ entry during prolonged trains of action potentials known to occur during seizures.

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