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High-Pass Filtering of Input Signals by the I(h) Current in a Non-Spiking Neuron, the Retinal Rod Bipolar Cell

Hyperpolarization–activated cyclic nucleotide–sensitive (HCN) channels mediate the I(f) current in heart and I(h) throughout the nervous system. In spiking neurons I(h) participates primarily in different forms of rhythmic activity. Little is known, however, about its role in neurons operating with...

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Autores principales: Cangiano, Lorenzo, Gargini, Claudia, Della Santina, Luca, Demontis, Gian Carlo, Cervetto, Luigi
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2129120/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18091997
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001327
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author Cangiano, Lorenzo
Gargini, Claudia
Della Santina, Luca
Demontis, Gian Carlo
Cervetto, Luigi
author_facet Cangiano, Lorenzo
Gargini, Claudia
Della Santina, Luca
Demontis, Gian Carlo
Cervetto, Luigi
author_sort Cangiano, Lorenzo
collection PubMed
description Hyperpolarization–activated cyclic nucleotide–sensitive (HCN) channels mediate the I(f) current in heart and I(h) throughout the nervous system. In spiking neurons I(h) participates primarily in different forms of rhythmic activity. Little is known, however, about its role in neurons operating with graded potentials as in the retina, where all four channel isoforms are expressed. Intriguing evidence for an involvement of I(h) in early visual processing are the side effects reported, in dim light or darkness, by cardiac patients treated with HCN inhibitors. Moreover, electroretinographic recordings indicate that these drugs affect temporal processing in the outer retina. Here we analyzed the functional role of HCN channels in rod bipolar cells (RBCs) of the mouse. Perforated–patch recordings in the dark–adapted slice found that RBCs exhibit I(h), and that this is sensitive to the specific blocker ZD7288. RBC input impedance, explored by sinusoidal frequency–modulated current stimuli (0.1–30 Hz), displays band–pass behavior in the range of I(h) activation. Theoretical modeling and pharmacological blockade demonstrate that high–pass filtering of input signals by I(h), in combination with low–pass filtering by passive properties, fully accounts for this frequency–tuning. Correcting for the depolarization introduced by shunting through the pipette–membrane seal, leads to predict that in darkness I(h) is tonically active in RBCs and quickens their responses to dim light stimuli. Immunohistochemistry targeting candidate subunit isoforms HCN1–2, in combination with markers of RBCs (PKC) and rod–RBC synaptic contacts (bassoon, mGluR6, Kv1.3), suggests that RBCs express HCN2 on the tip of their dendrites. The functional properties conferred by I(h) onto RBCs may contribute to shape the retina's light response and explain the visual side effects of HCN inhibitors.
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spelling pubmed-21291202007-12-19 High-Pass Filtering of Input Signals by the I(h) Current in a Non-Spiking Neuron, the Retinal Rod Bipolar Cell Cangiano, Lorenzo Gargini, Claudia Della Santina, Luca Demontis, Gian Carlo Cervetto, Luigi PLoS One Research Article Hyperpolarization–activated cyclic nucleotide–sensitive (HCN) channels mediate the I(f) current in heart and I(h) throughout the nervous system. In spiking neurons I(h) participates primarily in different forms of rhythmic activity. Little is known, however, about its role in neurons operating with graded potentials as in the retina, where all four channel isoforms are expressed. Intriguing evidence for an involvement of I(h) in early visual processing are the side effects reported, in dim light or darkness, by cardiac patients treated with HCN inhibitors. Moreover, electroretinographic recordings indicate that these drugs affect temporal processing in the outer retina. Here we analyzed the functional role of HCN channels in rod bipolar cells (RBCs) of the mouse. Perforated–patch recordings in the dark–adapted slice found that RBCs exhibit I(h), and that this is sensitive to the specific blocker ZD7288. RBC input impedance, explored by sinusoidal frequency–modulated current stimuli (0.1–30 Hz), displays band–pass behavior in the range of I(h) activation. Theoretical modeling and pharmacological blockade demonstrate that high–pass filtering of input signals by I(h), in combination with low–pass filtering by passive properties, fully accounts for this frequency–tuning. Correcting for the depolarization introduced by shunting through the pipette–membrane seal, leads to predict that in darkness I(h) is tonically active in RBCs and quickens their responses to dim light stimuli. Immunohistochemistry targeting candidate subunit isoforms HCN1–2, in combination with markers of RBCs (PKC) and rod–RBC synaptic contacts (bassoon, mGluR6, Kv1.3), suggests that RBCs express HCN2 on the tip of their dendrites. The functional properties conferred by I(h) onto RBCs may contribute to shape the retina's light response and explain the visual side effects of HCN inhibitors. Public Library of Science 2007-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC2129120/ /pubmed/18091997 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001327 Text en Cangiano et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cangiano, Lorenzo
Gargini, Claudia
Della Santina, Luca
Demontis, Gian Carlo
Cervetto, Luigi
High-Pass Filtering of Input Signals by the I(h) Current in a Non-Spiking Neuron, the Retinal Rod Bipolar Cell
title High-Pass Filtering of Input Signals by the I(h) Current in a Non-Spiking Neuron, the Retinal Rod Bipolar Cell
title_full High-Pass Filtering of Input Signals by the I(h) Current in a Non-Spiking Neuron, the Retinal Rod Bipolar Cell
title_fullStr High-Pass Filtering of Input Signals by the I(h) Current in a Non-Spiking Neuron, the Retinal Rod Bipolar Cell
title_full_unstemmed High-Pass Filtering of Input Signals by the I(h) Current in a Non-Spiking Neuron, the Retinal Rod Bipolar Cell
title_short High-Pass Filtering of Input Signals by the I(h) Current in a Non-Spiking Neuron, the Retinal Rod Bipolar Cell
title_sort high-pass filtering of input signals by the i(h) current in a non-spiking neuron, the retinal rod bipolar cell
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2129120/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18091997
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001327
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