SPIKE CONDUCTION PROPERTIES OF T-SHAPED C-NEURONS IN THE RABBIT NODOSE GANGLION

Citation
C. Ducreux et al., SPIKE CONDUCTION PROPERTIES OF T-SHAPED C-NEURONS IN THE RABBIT NODOSE GANGLION, Pflugers Archiv, 424(3-4), 1993, pp. 238-244
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00316768
Volume
424
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
238 - 244
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-6768(1993)424:3-4<238:SCPOTC>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
The electrical activity of C-type neurons was recorded intracellularly in the rabbit nodose ganglion maintained in vitro. The initial segmen t of their axon is spirally wound close to the cell body and a primary branching point divides it into a central process (CP) projecting to the nucleus of solitary tract in the medulla oblongata and a periphera l process (PP) which conveys sensory inputs from the viscera. Stimulat ion of the CP induced either somatic (''S'') spikes or low-amplitude a xonal (''A'') spikes (''A1'' or ''A2''). In some cases abrupt changes in the latency of ''S'' or ''A'' spikes (jumps) were observed by gradu ally increasing the stimulus intensity. They are discussed in relation to a secondary branching on the central axon located inside or near t he ganglion. Collision experiments showed that antidromic ''A'' spikes are blocked at the primary bifurcation of the axon (T-shaped neuron). Stimulation of the PP induced either ''S'' spikes or high amplitude ' 'A'' spikes (''A3'' or ''A4''). Orthodromic spikes could be blocked ei ther before or after the primary bifurcation. When blocking occurs aft er the bifurcation on the stem axon, the spike can invade the central axon without invading the soma. The study of the refractory periods of the two processes and the application of high frequency stimulation s howed that the PP allows higher frequencies than the soma and the CP, and thus that branching and the CP act as low-pass filters. These data support the view that the primary branching point and the CP of these T-shaped cells represent a strategic area to modulate visceral affere nt messages.