65 research outputs found

    Searching for plasticity in dissociated cortical cultures on multi-electrode arrays

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    We attempted to induce functional plasticity in dense cultures of cortical cells using stimulation through extracellular electrodes embedded in the culture dish substrate (multi-electrode arrays, or MEAs). We looked for plasticity expressed in changes in spontaneous burst patterns, and in array-wide response patterns to electrical stimuli, following several induction protocols related to those used in the literature, as well as some novel ones. Experiments were performed with spontaneous culture-wide bursting suppressed by either distributed electrical stimulation or by elevated extracellular magnesium concentrations as well as with spontaneous bursting untreated. Changes concomitant with induction were no larger in magnitude than changes that occurred spontaneously, except in one novel protocol in which spontaneous bursts were quieted using distributed electrical stimulation

    Persistently modified h-channels after complex febrile seizures convert the seizure-induced enhancement of inhibition to hyperexcitability.

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    Febrile seizures are the most common type of developmental seizures, affecting up to 5% of children. Experimental complex febrile seizures involving the immature rat hippocampus led to a persistent lowering of seizure threshold despite an upregulation of inhibition. Here we provide a mechanistic resolution to this paradox by showing that, in the hippocampus of rats that had febrile seizures, the long-lasting enhancement of the widely expressed intrinsic membrane conductance Ih converts the potentiated synaptic inhibition to hyperexcitability in a frequency-dependent manner. The altered gain of this molecular inhibition-excitation converter reveals a new mechanism for controlling the balance of excitation-inhibition in the limbic system. In addition, here we show for the first time that h-channels are modified in a human neurological disease paradigm

    Regulation of hyperpolarization-activated HCN channels by cAMP through a gating switch in binding domain symmetry

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    Recent X-ray structures show that the binding domains of tetrameric ligand-gated channels form either a 4-fold symmetric gating ring or a 2-fold symmetric dimer of dimers. To determine how such structures function to coordinate the binding of multiple ligands during channel activation, we examined the action of cAMP to enhance the opening of the hyperpolarization-activated HCN2 channels, whose cytoplasmic C terminus forms a gating ring in the presence of cAMP. Using tandem dimers and tetramers; in which cAMP binding to selected HCN2 subunits was prevented by a point mutation or deletion, we provide the first direct determination of the energetic effects on gating of each of four ligand binding events and demonstrate the importance of the gating ring for cAMP regulation. We suggest that cAMP binding enhances channel opening by promoting assembly of the gating ring from an unliganded state in which the four subunits interact as a 2-fold symmetric dimer of dimers.status: publishe

    Lipoxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid as second messengers for presynaptic inhibition of Aplysia sensory cells.

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    Biochemical and biophysical studies on Aplysia sensory neurons indicate that inhibitory responses to the molluscan peptide FMRFamide are mediated by lipoxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid. These compounds are a new class of second messengers in neurons
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