Premium
Plateau potentials and membrane oscillations in parasympathetic preganglionic neurones and intermediolateral neurones in the rat lumbosacral spinal cord
Author(s) -
Derjean D.,
Bertrand S.,
Nagy F.,
Shefchyk S. J.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.2004.076802
Subject(s) - bursting , neuroscience , tonic (physiology) , chemistry , spinal cord , reflex , depolarization , bay k8644 , anatomy , agonist , biophysics , biology , receptor , biochemistry
Whole‐cell patch recordings were made from parasympathetic preganglionic neurones (P‐PGNs) and unidentified intermediolateral (IML) neurones in thick slices of the lower lumbar and sacral spinal cord of 14‐ to 21‐day‐old rats. The P‐PGNs and IML neurones examined were similar in terms of soma sizes, input resistance and capacitance, and displayed a sag conductance as well as rebound firing. In the absence of drugs, the neurones responded with either tonic or adapting firing to depolarizing current steps. However, in the presence of the group I metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist ( RS )‐3,5‐dihydroxyphenylglycine (DHPG), almost half of the neurones displayed accelerating firing rates during the constant current injection, followed by a sustained after‐discharge. In the presence of TTX, plateau potentials were observed. The firing changes and plateaux were blocked by nifedipine, an L‐type Ca 2+ channel blocker, and ( S )‐(−)‐Bay K8644 was able to produce these firing changes and plateaux in the absence of DHPG, demonstrating the involvement of an L‐type Ca 2+ conductance. Ca 2+ ‐activated nonspecific cationic conductances also appear to contribute to the firing changes. A few neurones displayed membrane oscillations and burst firing in the presence of DHPG. The results suggest that the firing characteristics of both P‐PGNs and other neurones likely to be involved in caudal spinal reflex control are not static but, rather, quite dynamic and under metabotropic glutamate receptor modulatory control. Such changes in firing patterns may be involved in normal pelvic parasympathetic reflex function during micturition, defaecation and sexual reflexes, and may contribute to the abnormal output patterns seen with loss of descending brainstem input and visceral or perineal sensory disturbances.