Continuous (tonic) charge transfer through ionotropic receptors of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABARs) is an important mechanism of inhibitory signalling in the brain. The conventional view has been that tonic GABA-ergic inhibitory currents are mediated by low concentrations of ambient GABA. Recently, however, it was shown that the GABA-independent, spontaneously opening GABARs (s-GABARs), may contribute significantly to the tonic GABAR current. One of the common approaches to temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) therapy is an increase of GABA concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid to augment tonic current through GABARs. Such an increase, however, generates multiple side effects, which impose significant limitations on the use of correspondent drugs. In contrast, activation/deactivation of s-GABARs in a GABA-independent manner may provide a mechanism of regulation of tonic conductance without modification of extracellular GABA concentration, thus avoiding connected side effects. Although s-GABARs have been detected in our earlier work, it is unclear whether they modulate neural signalling, or, due to their independence from the neurotransmitter, they provide just a stable background effect without much impact on neural crosstalk dynamics. Here, we focused on the causal relationship between s-GABAR activity and signal integration in the rat's dentate gyrus granule cells to find that s-GABARs play an important role in neural signal transduction. s-GABARs shape the dynamics of phasic inhibitory responses, regulate the action potential generation machinery and control the coincidence detection window pertinent to excitatory input summation. Our results demonstrate that tonic inhibition delivered by s-GABARs contributes to the key mechanisms that ensure implementation of neural signal filtering and integration, in a GABA-independent manner. This makes s-GABAR a new and important actor in the regulation of long-term neural plasticity and a perspective target for TLE therapy.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6057890PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41419-018-0856-7DOI Listing

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