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. 2014 Jul 16;112(8):2026–2035. doi: 10.1152/jn.00180.2014

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3.

Properties of evoked GABA currents in KC somata. A: brief pressure application of GABA (100 μM) to a recorded KC [K-gluconate-based intracellular solution (K-gluc. int. soln.), Vh = −73 mV] evokes a transient inward current that is inhibited by PTX (example currents show the average of 4 consecutive responses evoked at 30-s intervals). B: pooled data (n = 4) showing that GABA-evoked responses are insensitive to the GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline (50 μM) and the GABAC receptor antagonist TPMPA (100 μM). Bicuculline, TPMPA, and PTX were applied sequentially to the same KC recordings. C: example GABA responses evoked at different Vh (−73, −58, and −43 mV) and pooled data (n = 4) showing the reversal potential of GABA-evoked currents with K-gluc. int. soln. D: example responses showing the size and kinetics of GABA-evoked currents (100 ms and 1-s applications) recorded with CsCl int. soln. (Vh = −65 mV). E: an example response evoked by longer application of GABA (same KC recording as D) showing the time course of current desensitization. F: example response (average of 4 traces) showing that local application of l-glutamate evokes a small, slow response in KCs (CsCl int. soln., Vh = −65 mV; note difference in scale bar from D). G: pooled data showing the peak amplitude of KC responses evoked by local application of GABA (100 μM, n = 7) and l-glutamate (1 mM, n = 2). *P < 0.05, statistical significance.