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Title: Development of spontaneous synaptic transmission in the rat spinal cord. Author: Gao BX, Cheng G, Ziskind-Conhaim L. Journal: J Neurophysiol; 1998 May; 79(5):2277-87. PubMed ID: 9582204. Abstract: Dorsal root afferents form synaptic connections on motoneurons a few days after motoneuron clustering in the rat lumbar spinal cord, but frequent spontaneous synaptic potentials are detected only after birth. To increase our understanding of the mechanisms underlying the differentiation of synaptic transmission, we examined the developmental changes in properties of spontaneous synaptic transmission at early stages of synapse formation. Spontaneous postsynaptic currents (PSCs) and tetrodotoxin (TTX)-resistant miniature PSCs (mPSCs) were measured in spinal motoneurons of embryonic and postnatal rats using whole cell patch-clamp recordings. Spontaneous PSC frequencies were higher than mPSC frequencies in both embryonic and postnatal motoneurons, suggesting that even at embryonic stages, when action-potential firing rate was low, presynaptic action potentials played an important role in triggering spontaneous PSCs. After birth, the twofold increase in spontaneous PSC frequency was attributed to an increase in action-potential-independent quantal release rather than to a higher rate of action-potential firing. In embryonic motoneurons, the fluctuations in peak amplitude of spontaneous PSCs were normally distributed around single peaks with modal values similar to those of mPSCs. These data indicated that early in synapse differentiation spontaneous PSCs were primarily composed of currents generated by quantal release. After birth, mean mPSC amplitude increased by 50% but mean quantal current amplitude did not change. Synchronous, multiquantal release was apparent in postnatal motoneurons only in high-K+ extracellular solution. Comparison of the properties of miniature excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic currents (mEPSCs and mIPSCs) demonstrated that mean mEPSC frequency was higher than mIPSC frequency, suggesting that either excitatory synapses outnumbered inhibitory synapses or that the probability of excitatory transmitter release was higher than the release of inhibitory neurotransmitters. The finding that mIPSC duration was several-fold longer than mEPSC duration implied that despite their lower frequency, inhibitory currents could modulate motoneuron synaptic integration by shunting incoming excitatory inputs for prolonged time intervals.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]