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First published online on September 8, 2003.
Copyright © 2003 by The Physiological Society
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jphysiol.2003.050799v1
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Received July 4, 2003
Revised August 5, 2003
Accepted after revision September 4, 2003

Spontaneous voltage oscillations in striatal projection neurons in a corticostriatal slice

Ramiro Vergara1, Cally Rick2, Salvador Hernandez-Lopez2, Jose Antonio Laville3, Jaime N Guzman3, Elvira Galarraga3, D James Surmeier2, and Jose Bargas4*

1 Insituto de Fisiologia Celular UNAM
2 Northwestern University at Chicago
3 Instituto de Fisiologia Celular UNAM
4 Instituto de Fisiologia Celular-UNAM

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jbargas{at}ifc.unam.mx.

In a corticostriatal slice, brief, suprathreshold, repetitive cortical stimulation evoked long-lasting plateau potentials in neostriatal neurons. Plateau potentials were often followed by spontaneous voltage transitions between two preferred membrane potentials. While the induction of plateau potentials was disrupted by non-NMDA and NMDA glutamate receptor antagonists, the maintenance of spontaneous voltage transitions was only blocked by NMDA-receptor and L-type Ca2+ channel antagonists. The frequency and duration of depolarized events, resembling up-states described in vivo, were increased by NMDA and L-type Ca2+ channel agonists as well as by GABAA receptor and K+ channel antagonists. NMDA created a region of negative slope conductance and a positive slope crossing indicative of membrane bistability in the current-voltage relationship. NMDA- induced bistability was partially blocked by L-type Ca2+ channel antagonists. Although evoked by synaptic stimulation, plateau potentials and voltage oscillations could not be evoked by somatic current injection - suggesting a dendritic origin. These data shows that NMDA and L-type Ca2+ conductances of spiny neurons are capable of rendering them bistable. This may help to support prolonged depolarizations and voltage oscillations under certain conditions.


Key words: Cellular oscillations • NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) • Striatum







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