Abstract

Medullary slices of the fetal rat at gestational day 16 were cultivated (organotypic culture) for up to 20 days and current clamp experiments were performed on outgrowing neurons. CO 2-sensitivity was tested by changing the P CO 2 in the bath solution (equilibrating CO 2 fraction from 0.02 to 0.09). Two groups of CO 2-sensitive neurons were found; one with and the other without intrinsic CO 2-chemosensitivity. Neurons with intrinsic CO 2-sensitivity maintained their spontaneous activity and chemosensitivity after blockade of synaptic transmission. These neurons exhibited action potentials that were preceeded by a spontaneous interspike depolarization and followed by an afterhyperpolarization (beating neurons). Increasing P CO 2 either decreased (inhibited neurons, n=55) or increased the spike frequency of these neurons (stimulated neurons, n=31). The reduced activity of CO 2-inhibited neurons was associated with membrane hyperpolarization and/or decreases in the slope of interspike depolarization. In contrast CO 2-stimulated neurons were depolarized and the slope of their interspike depolarization was augmented during acidosis. In addition, we demonstrated a strong voltage dependence of CO 2-induced effects on membrane potential and spike frequency. Neurons with non-beating activity did not show a spontaneous interspike depolarization and their spike generation and CO 2-sensitivity appeared to be entirely produced through synaptic inputs. The CO 2-mediated changes in electrical properties of these neurons closely resemble those of various CNS neurons, including respiratory neurons, in whole animal or neonatal brainstem-spinal cord preparations.

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