4.6 Article

Upregulated h-current in hyperexcitable CA1 dendrites after febrile seizures

Journal

FRONTIERS IN CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 2, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/neuro.03.002.2008

Keywords

epilepsy; h-current; dendrite

Categories

Funding

  1. Epilepsy Foundation/Milken Family Foundation [EFA-36656]
  2. NIH [NS38580]

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Somatic recordings from CA1 pyramidal cells indicated a persistent upregulation of the h-current (I-h) after experimental febrile seizures. Here, we examined febrile seizure-induced long-term changes in I-h and neuronal excitability in CA1 dendrites. Cell-attached recordings showed that dendritic I-h was significantly upregulated, with a depolarized half-activation potential and increased maximal current. Although enhanced I-h is typically thought to be associated with decreased dendritic excitability, whole-cell dendritic recordings revealed a robust increase in action potential firing after febrile seizures. We turned to computational simulations to understand how the experimentally observed changes in I-h influence dendritic excitability. Unexpectedly, the simulations, performed in three previously published CA1 pyramidal cell models, showed that the experimentally observed increases in I-h resulted in a general enhancement of dendritic excitability, primarily due to the increased I-h-induced depolarization of the resting membrane potential overcoming the excitability-depressing effects of decreased dendritic input resistance. Taken together, these experimental and modeling results reveal that, contrary to the exclusively anti-convulsive role often attributed to increased I-h in epilepsy, the enhanced I-h can co-exist with, and possibly even contribute to, persistent dendritic hyperexcitability following febrile seizures in the developing hippocampus.

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