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First published online on July 15, 2003.
Copyright © 2003 by The Physiological Society
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jphysiol.2003.046847v1
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Received May 9, 2003
Revised June 4, 2003
Accepted after revision July 14, 2003

Glutamatergic, cholinergic and GABAergic neurons contribute to the septohippocampal pathway and exhibit distinct electrophysiological properties: novel implications for hippocampal rhythmicity

Florence Sotty1, Marc Danik1, Frederic Manseau1, Francois Laplante1, Remi Quirion1, and Sylvain Williams2*

1 Douglas Hospital/McGill University
2 Douglas Hospital, McGill University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: wilsyl{at}douglas.mcgill.ca.

The medial septum diagonal band complex (MSDB) contains cholinergic and non-cholinergic neurons known to play key roles in learning and memory processing, and in the generation of hippocampal theta rhythm. Electrophysiologically, several classes of neurons have been described in the MSDB, but their chemical identity remains to be fully established. By combining electrophysiology to single-cell RT-PCR, we have identified 4 classes of neurons in the MSDB in vitro. The first class displayed slow-firing, little or no Ih, and expressed choline acetyl-transferase mRNA (ChAT). The second class was fast-firing, had an important Ih and expressed glutamic acid decarboxylase 67 mRNA (GAD67), sometimes co-localized with ChAT mRNAs. A third class exhibited fast- and burst-firing, an important Ih, expressed GAD67 mRNA also occasionally co-localized with ChAT mRNAs. The ionic mechanism underlying the bursts involved a low-threshold spike and a prominent Ih current, conductances often associated with pacemaker activity. Interestingly, we identified a fourth class that expressed transcripts solely for one or two of the vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT1 and VGLUT2), but not ChAT or GAD. Some putative glutamatergic neurons displayed electrophysiological properties similar to ChAT-positive slow-firing neurons such as the occurrence of a very small Ih, however nearly half of glutamatergic neurons exhibited cluster firing with intrinsically generated voltage-dependent subthreshold membrane oscillations. Neurons belonging to each of the four described classes were found among septohippocampal neurons by retrograde labelling. We provide results suggesting that slow-firing cholinergic, fast-firing and burst-firing GABAergic, and cluster-firing glutamatergic neurons, may each uniquely contribute to hippocampal rhythmicity in vivo.


Key words: Glutamate • Rhythm • Septohippocampal







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