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Graded spikes differentially signal neurotransmitter input in cerebrospinal fluid contacting neurons of the mouse spinal cord.


ABSTRACT: The action potential and its all-or-none nature is fundamental to neural communication. Canonically, the action potential is initiated once voltage-activated Na+ channels are activated, and their rapid kinetics of activation and inactivation give rise to the action potential's all-or-none nature. Here we demonstrate that cerebrospinal fluid contacting neurons (CSFcNs) surrounding the central canal of the mouse spinal cord employ a different strategy. Rather than using voltage-activated Na+ channels to generate binary spikes, CSFcNs use two different types of voltage-activated Ca2+ channel, enabling spikes of different amplitude. T-type Ca2+ channels generate small amplitude spikes, whereas larger amplitude spikes require high voltage-activated Cd2+-sensitive Ca2+ channels. We demonstrate that these different amplitude spikes can signal input from different transmitter systems; purinergic inputs evoke smaller T-type dependent spikes whereas cholinergic inputs evoke larger spikes that do not rely on T-type channels. Different synaptic inputs to CSFcNs can therefore be signaled by the spike amplitude.

SUBMITTER: Johnson E 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9860393 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Graded spikes differentially signal neurotransmitter input in cerebrospinal fluid contacting neurons of the mouse spinal cord.

Johnson Emily E   Clark Marilyn M   Oncul Merve M   Pantiru Andreea A   MacLean Claudia C   Deuchars Jim J   Deuchars Susan A SA   Johnston Jamie J  

iScience 20221230 1


The action potential and its all-or-none nature is fundamental to neural communication. Canonically, the action potential is initiated once voltage-activated Na<sup>+</sup> channels are activated, and their rapid kinetics of activation and inactivation give rise to the action potential's all-or-none nature. Here we demonstrate that cerebrospinal fluid contacting neurons (CSFcNs) surrounding the central canal of the mouse spinal cord employ a different strategy. Rather than using voltage-activate  ...[more]

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