Abstract

Spontaneously occurring action potentials and postsynaptic potentials were recorded intracellularly from mouse spinal cord (SC) neurons and dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons in mixed SC and DRG cell cultures. In some SC cells, excitatory postsynaptic potentials were evoked by electrical stimulation of a nearby SC or DRG cell. SC and DRG neurons had distinguishing morphologic and electrophysiologic properties. SC neurons usually were elliptical or stellate and had several branched processes whereas DRG cells were most commonly round and had on the average only one process, but occasionally 3 or 4. Calculations from cell measurements revealed that SC neurons had less soma surface area and more process surface area than DRG cells, with a similar total surface area for each class. Lower resting membrane potentials were recorded from SC neurons, but when the capability for action potential generation was tested at comparable steady membrane potentials, most SC and less than half of DRG neurons fired repetitively to electrical stimulation. During the depolarizing and repolarizing phases of SC cell action potentials the rates of change of membrane potential were lower than for DRG cells, which had rapidly rising action potentials and a markedly negative afterpotential. An initially delayed repolarization phase was characteristic of the DRG cell action potential. Cell cultures were prepared by trypsin dissociation of spinal cords with attached spinal ganglia from fetuses of 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 17 days gestational age. Cell cultures grown on plastic or collagen were studied electrophysiologically at times from 16 to 94 days.

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