Barium Plateau Potentials of CA1 Pyramidal Neurons Elicit All-or-none Extracellular Alkaline Shifts Via the Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPase
Overview
Physiology
Authors
Affiliations
In many brain regions, synchronous neural activity causes a rapid rise in extracellular pH. In the CA1 region of hippocampus, this population alkaline transient (PAT) enhances responses from postsynaptic, pH-sensitive N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. Recently, we showed that the plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase (PMCA), a ubiquitous transporter that exchanges internal Ca(2+) for external H(+), is largely responsible for the PAT. It has also been shown that a PAT can be generated after replacing extracellular Ca(2+) with Ba(2+). The cause of this PAT is unknown, however, because the ability of the mammalian PMCA to transport Ba(2+) is unclear. If the PMCA did not carry Ba(2+), a different alkalinizing source would have to be postulated. Here, we address this issue in mouse hippocampal slices, using concentric (high-speed, low-noise) pH microelectrodes. In Ba(2+)-containing, Ca(2+)-free artificial cerebrospinal fluid, a single antidromic shock to the alveus elicited a large (0.1-0.2 unit pH), "all-or-none" PAT in the CA1 cell body region. In whole cell current clamp of single CA1 pyramidal neurons, the same stimulus evoked a prolonged plateau potential that was similarly all-or-none. Using this plateau as the voltage command in other cells, we recorded Ba(2+)-dependent surface alkaline transients (SATs). The SATs were suppressed by adding 5 mM extracellular HEPES and abolished when carboxyeosin (a PMCA inhibitor) was in the patch pipette solution. These results suggest that the PAT evoked in the presence of Ba(2+) is caused by the PMCA and that this transporter is responsible for the PAT whether Ca(2+) or Ba(2+) is the charge carrying divalent cation.
Neuronal Glutamatergic Synaptic Clefts Alkalinize Rather Than Acidify during Neurotransmission.
Stawarski M, Hernandez R, Feghhi T, Borycz J, Lu Z, Agarwal A J Neurosci. 2020; 40(8):1611-1624.
PMID: 31964719 PMC: 7046337. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1774-19.2020.
Zhao P, Gan G, Peng S, Wang S, Chen B, Adelman R Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2015; 56(3):1916-23.
PMID: 25736794 PMC: 4364639. DOI: 10.1167/iovs.14-15738.