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Spontaneous Bursting Activity in the Developing Entorhinal Cortex

Authors :
Alexei V. Egorov
Maxim Sheroziya
Klaus Unsicker
Oliver von Bohlen und Halbach
Source :
The Journal of Neuroscience. 29:12131-12144
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Society for Neuroscience, 2009.

Abstract

Periodic spontaneous activity represents an important attribute of the developing nervous system. The entorhinal cortex (EC) is a crucial component of the medial temporal lobe memory system. Yet, little is known about spontaneous activity in the immature EC. Here, we investigated spontaneous field potential (fp) activity and intrinsic firing patterns of medial EC layer III principal neurons in brain slices obtained from rats at the first two postnatal weeks. A fraction of immature layer III neurons spontaneously generated prolonged (2–20 s) voltage-dependent intrinsic bursting activity. Prolonged bursts were dependent on the extracellular concentration of Ca2+([Ca2+]o). Thus, reduction of [Ca2+]oincreased the fraction of neurons with prolonged bursting by inducing intrinsic bursts in regularly firing neurons. In 1 mm[Ca2+]o, the percentages of neurons showing prolonged bursts were 53%, 81%, and 29% at postnatal day 5 (P5)–P7, P8–P10, and P11–P13, respectively. Prolonged intrinsic bursting activity was blocked by buffering intracellular Ca2+with BAPTA, and by Cd2+, flufenamic acid (FFA), or TTX, and was suppressed by nifedipine and riluzole, suggesting that the Ca2+-sensitive nonspecific cationic current (ICAN) and the persistent Na+current (INap) underlie this effect. Indeed, a 0.2–1 s suprathreshold current step stimulus elicited a terminated plateau potential in these neurons. fp recordings at P5–P7 showed periodic spontaneous glutamate receptor-mediated events (sharp fp events or prolonged fp bursts) which were blocked by FFA. Slow-wave network oscillations become a dominant pattern at P11–P13. We conclude that prolonged intrinsic bursting activity is a characteristic feature of developing medial EC layer III neurons that might be involved in neuronal and network maturation.

Details

ISSN :
15292401 and 02706474
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3a011fbfa899b5b073b5e51b7c97a1dc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.1333-09.2009