Control over the frequency and pattern of neuronal spike discharge depends on Ca2+-gated K+ channels that reduce cell excitability by hyperpolarizing the membrane potential. The Ca2+-dependent slow afterhyperpolarization (sAHP) is one of the most prominent inhibitory responses in the brain, with sAHP amplitude linked to a host of circuit and behavioral functions, yet the channel that underlies the sAHP has defied identification for decades. Here, we show that intermediate-conductance Ca2+-dependent K+ (IKCa) channels underlie the sAHP generated by trains of synaptic input or postsynaptic stimuli in CA1 hippocampal pyramidal cells. These findings are significant in providing a molecular identity for the sAHP of central neurons that will identify pharmacological tools capable of potentially modifying the several behavioral or disease states associated with the sAHP.
The cerebellum receives sensory information by mossy fiber input from a multitude of sources that require differential signal processing. A compartmentalization of function begins with the segregation of mossy fibers across 10 distinct lobules over the rostrocaudal axis, with tactile receptor afferents prevalent in anterior lobules and vestibular input in caudal lobules. However, it is unclear how these unique signals might be differentially processed at the circuit level across the cerebellum. As granule cells receive mossy fiber input, they represent a key stage at which postsynaptic mechanisms could influence signal processing. Granule cells express an A-type current mediated by Kv4 potassium channels that modify the latency and frequency of spike output. The current study examined the potential for a Cav3 calcium-Kv4 channel complex to regulate the response of granule cells to mossy fiber input in lobules 2 and 9 of the rat cerebellum. Similar A-type currents were recorded in both regions, but the Cav3 calcium current was expressed at a substantially higher density in lobule 9 cells, acting to increase A-type current availability through its influence on Kv4 voltage for inactivation. The difference in excitability imparted by Cav3-Kv4 interactions proves to allow lobule 2 granule cells to respond more effectively to tactile stimulus-like burst input and lobule 9 cells to slow shifts in input frequency characteristic of vestibular input. The expression pattern of Cav3 channels and its control of Kv4 availability thus provides a novel means of processing widely different forms of sensory input across cerebellar lobules.
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