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1.
J Biotechnol ; 389: 1-12, 2024 May 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38697361

RESUMEN

Aging is associated with the slowdown of neuronal processing and cognitive performance in the brain; however, the exact cellular mechanisms behind this deterioration in humans are poorly elucidated. Recordings in human acute brain slices prepared from tissue resected during brain surgery enable the investigation of neuronal changes with age. Although neocortical fast-spiking cells are widely implicated in neuronal network activities underlying cognitive processes, they are vulnerable to neurodegeneration. Herein, we analyzed the electrical properties of 147 fast-spiking interneurons in neocortex samples resected in brain surgery from 106 patients aged 11-84 years. By studying the electrophysiological features of action potentials and passive membrane properties, we report that action potential overshoot significantly decreases and spike half-width increases with age. Moreover, the action potential maximum-rise speed (but not the repolarization speed or the afterhyperpolarization amplitude) significantly changed with age, suggesting a particular weakening of the sodium channel current generated in the soma. Cell passive membrane properties measured as the input resistance, membrane time constant, and cell capacitance remained unaffected by senescence. Thus, we conclude that the action potential in fast-spiking interneurons shows a significant weakening in the human neocortex with age. This may contribute to the deterioration of cortical functions by aging.

2.
PLoS Biol ; 21(2): e3002001, 2023 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36745683

RESUMEN

Accumulating evidence indicates that there are substantial species differences in the properties of mammalian neurons, yet theories on circuit activity and information processing in the human brain are based heavily on results obtained from rodents and other experimental animals. This knowledge gap may be particularly important for understanding the neocortex, the brain area responsible for the most complex neuronal operations and showing the greatest evolutionary divergence. Here, we examined differences in the electrophysiological properties of human and mouse fast-spiking GABAergic basket cells, among the most abundant inhibitory interneurons in cortex. Analyses of membrane potential responses to current input, pharmacologically isolated somatic leak currents, isolated soma outside-out patch recordings, and immunohistochemical staining revealed that human neocortical basket cells abundantly express hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated cation (HCN) channel isoforms HCN1 and HCN2 at the cell soma membrane, whereas these channels are sparse at the rodent basket cell soma membrane. Antagonist experiments showed that HCN channels in human neurons contribute to the resting membrane potential and cell excitability at the cell soma, accelerate somatic membrane potential kinetics, and shorten the lag between excitatory postsynaptic potentials and action potential generation. These effects are important because the soma of human fast-spiking neurons without HCN channels exhibit low persistent ion leak and slow membrane potential kinetics, compared with mouse fast-spiking neurons. HCN channels speed up human cell membrane potential kinetics and help attain an input-output rate close to that of rodent cells. Computational modeling demonstrated that HCN channel activity at the human fast-spiking cell soma membrane is sufficient to accelerate the input-output function as observed in cell recordings. Thus, human and mouse fast-spiking neurons exhibit functionally significant differences in ion channel composition at the cell soma membrane to set the speed and fidelity of their input-output function. These HCN channels ensure fast electrical reactivity of fast-spiking cells in human neocortex.


Asunto(s)
Neocórtex , Humanos , Ratones , Animales , Canales Catiónicos Regulados por Nucleótidos Cíclicos/farmacología , Canales Catiónicos Regulados por Nucleótidos Cíclicos/fisiología , Canales Regulados por Nucleótidos Cíclicos Activados por Hiperpolarización , Neuronas/fisiología , Interneuronas/fisiología , Mamíferos
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