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. 1987 May 1;7(5):1384–1400. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.07-05-01384.1987

Depolarization- and transmitter-induced changes in intracellular Ca2+ of rat cerebellar granule cells in explant cultures

JA Connor, HY Tseng, PE Hockberger
PMCID: PMC6568833  PMID: 2883269

Abstract

Digital imaging of the Ca indicator fura-2 has been used to study the responses of developing granule cells in culture to depolarization and transmitter action. Unstimulated cells bathed in Krebs saline exhibited cytoplasmic Ca ion concentrations, [Ca2+], that were generally in the 30–60 nM range. Exposure of cells to high-potassium (25 mM) saline depolarized the membrane potential and produced an immediate rise in [Ca2+] that recovered within 2–3 min in normal saline. The response grew progressively larger over the first 20 d in culture. Transient increases in [Ca2+] to levels greater than 1 microM were observed after 12–14 d in vitro, at which time the cells displayed intense electrical activity when exposed to high K. At this stage, the increases were attenuated by blocking action potential activity with TTX. In TTX- treated or immature cells, in which the transient phase of the Ca change was relatively small, a second exposure to high K typically produced a much larger Ca response that the initial exposure. The duration of this facilitation of the response persisted for periods longer than 5 min. Application of the neurotransmitter GABA induced a transient increase in membrane conductance, with a reversal potential near resting potential (approx. -60 mV), and caused an intracellular Ca2+ increase that outlasted the exposure to GABA by several minutes. Glutamate, or kainate, induced an increase in membrane conductance but with a reversal potential more positive than spike threshold. These agents also elevated intracellular Ca2+, but unlike the case with GABA, this Ca response reversed rapidly upon removal of the transmitter. The facilitatory effect of repeated exposures to high-K saline, as well as the persistent Ca elevation following a brief GABA application, suggests that granule cells possess the capability of displaying activity-dependent changes in Ca levels in culture.


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