Development of inward currents in chick sensory and autonomic neuronal precursor cells in culture
Open Access
- 1 October 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 8 (10) , 3722-3732
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.08-10-03722.1988
Abstract
The development of ionic inward currents was studied in cultured neuronal precursors from chick sensory dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and compared with neuronal precursors from the cholinergic ciliary ganglia (CG) using whole cell patch-clamp recording. Neuronal precursors devoid of neuron-specific surface markers were isolated during the period of neuronal birth, i.e., at embryonic day (E) 6 from DRG and at E4.5 from CG. All neuronal precursor cells from DRG, as well as CG, showed outward K+ currents directly after they had attached to the substrate. During the first 5 hr in culture, half of the DRG cells had no inward currents at all, whereas the other half displayed a rapidly and fully inactivating Ca2+ current, which was activated with small depolarizing pulses from a holding potential of -80 mV to a -50 mV membrane potential (low-voltage-activated current, LVA). At these early stages, no other inward currents were resolved. TTX-blockable Na+ currents and slowly inactivating classical Ca2+ currents, which were activated with larger depolarizing pulses to a -20 mV membrane potential (high-voltage- activated currents, HVA) appeared concurrently after 15–20 hr in culture. In contrast, more than half of the CG cells showed LVA currents, as well as Na+ currents, as early as during the first 5 hr in culture. The HVA Ca2+ currents from the majority of the cells could be recorded only after 10–15 hr in culture. In both types of precursor- derived neurons, the LVA Ca2+ current preceded the classical HVA Ca2+ current. However, the temporal relation of the first Na+ currents to the first HVA Ca2+ currents seemed to be different in the 2 preparations. In DRG cells, Na+ and HVA Ca2+ currents appeared at the same time, whereas in CG cells, the HVA Ca2+ current showed a time lag with respect to the Na+ current. In addition, the relative amplitudes of the currents differed in the CG and DRG cells. This shows that as early as E4–6, shortly after their terminal mitosis, neurons from distinct peripheral ganglia in chick vary in the development of their basic ionic currents.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
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