Korean J Physiol Pharmacol.
1997 Aug;1(4):355-366.
Spontaneous electrical activity in cerebellar Purkinje neurons of
postnatal rats
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Physiology and Chonnam Research Institute of Medical Sciences,
Chonnam University Medical School 5 Hak-Dong, Dong-Gu, Kwanaiu 501-190, Korea.
Abstract
-
Although cerebellar Purkinje cells display spontaneous electrical
activity in vivo and in slice experiments, the mechanism of the
spontaneous activity generation has not been clearly understood. The
aim of this study was to investigate whether cerebellar Purkinje cells
of postnatal rats generate spontaneous electrical activity without
synaptic inputs. Dissociated cerebellar Purkinje cells were used for
reducing synaptic inputs in the present study. Cerebellar Purkinje
cells with dendrites were dissociated from postnatal rats using
enzymatic treatment followed by mechanical trituration. Spontaneous
electrical activities were recorded from dissociated cells without any
stimulus using whole-cell patch clamp configuration. Two types,
spontaneously firing or quiescent, of dissociated Purkinje cells were
observed in postnatal rats. Both types of cells were identified as
Purkinje cells using immunocytochemical staining technique with
anti-calbindin after recording. Spontaneously active cells displayed
two patterns of firing, repetitive and burst firings. Two thirds of
dissociated Purkinje cells displayed repetitive firing and the rest of
them did burst firing under same recording condition. Repetitive firing
activities were maintained even after further isolation using either
physical or pharmacological techniques. Neither high magnesium solution
nor excitatory synaptic blockers, AP-5 and DNQX, block the spontaneous
activity. These results demonstrate that spontaneous electrical
activity of isolated cerebellar Purkinje cells in postnatal rats is
generated by intrinsic membrane properties rather than synaptic inputs.