A synergistic combination of in vitro electrophysiology and multicompartmental modeling of rat CA1 pyramidal neurons identified TRPM4 channels as major drivers of cholinergic modulation of the firing rate during a triangular current ramp, which emulates the bump in synaptic input received while traversing the place field. In control, fewer spikes at lower frequencies are elicited on the down-ramp compared to the up-ramp due to long-term inactivation of the Na channel. The cholinergic agonist carbachol (CCh) removes or even reverses this spike rate adaptation, causing more spikes to be elicited on the down-ramp than the up-ramp. CCh application during Schaffer collateral stimulation designed to simulate a ramp produces similar shifts in the center of mass of firing to later in the ramp. The non-specific TRP antagonist flufenamic acid and the TRPM4-specific blockers CBA and 9-phenanthrol, but not the TRPC-specific antagonist SKF96365, reverse the effect of CCh; this implicates the Ca-activated nonspecific cation current, I, carried by TRPM4 channels. The cholinergic shift of the center of mass of firing is prevented by strong intracellular Ca buffering but not by antagonists for IP and ryanodine receptors, ruling out a role for known mechanisms of release from intracellular Ca stores. Pharmacology combined with modeling suggest that [Ca] in a nanodomain near the TRPM4 channel is elevated through an unknown source that requires both muscarinic receptor activation and depolarization-induced Ca influx during the ramp. Activation of the regenerative inward TRPM4 current in the model qualitatively replicates and provides putative underlying mechanisms for the experimental observations.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10365838 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.84387 | DOI Listing |
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