Gated currents generate single spike activity in amacrine cells of the tiger salamander retina.
- 1 March 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 83 (5), 1509-1512
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.83.5.1509
Abstract
Amacrine cells form the neural networks mediating the second level of lateral interactions in the vertebrate retina. Members of a prominent class of amacrine cells, found in most vertebrates, respond at both the onset and termination of steps of illumination with a single, large transient depolarization. We show here how specific relationships between membrane currents control this single spike activity. Using whole-cell patch clamp on living retinal slices, we studied the membrane currents in amacrine cells. The currents elicited by depolarizing voltage steps could be separated into three main ionic components: a transient inward voltage-gated sodium current, a relatively small sustained inward voltage-gated calcium current, and a calcium-dependent outward current. A specific relationship between the sodium and potassium current alone appears to preclude repetitive spike activity. Potassium current is activated at potentials positive to -20 mV, but the sodium inactivation, between -60 and -20 mV, does not intersect potassium activation. Therefore, a steady depolarizing current step elicits an initial spike but then the membrane cannot be sufficiently hyperpolarized by potassium current to remove sodium inactivation and the cell remains refractory.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
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