Abstract

Disinhibition-induced bursting activity in cultures of fetal rat spinal cord is mainly controlled by intrinsic spiking with subsequent recurrent excitation of the network through glutamate synaptic transmission, and by autoregulation of neuronal excitability. Here we investigated the contribution of the electrogenic Na/K pump to the autoregulation of excitability using extracellular recordings by multielectrode arrays (MEAs) and intracellular whole cell recordings from spinal interneurons. The blockade of the electrogenic Na/K pump by strophanthidin led to an immediate and transient increase in the burst rate together with an increase in the asynchronous background activity. Later, the burst rate decreased to initial values and the bursts became shorter and smaller. In single neurons, we observed an immediate depolarization of the membrane during the interburst intervals concomitant with the rise in burst rate. This depolarization was more pronounced during disinhibition than during control, suggesting that the pump was more active. Later a decrease in burst rate was observed and, in some neurons, a complete cessation of firing. Most of the effects of strophanthidin could be reproduced by high K+-induced depolarization. During prolonged current injections, spinal interneurons exhibited spike frequency adaptation, which remained unaffected by strophanthidin. These results suggest that the electrogenic Na/K pump is responsible for the hyperpolarization and thus for the changes in excitability during the interburst intervals, although not for the spike frequency adaptation during the bursts.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call