4.6 Article

Fast IPSCs in rat thalamic reticular nucleus require the GABAA receptorβ1 subunit

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 572, Issue 2, Pages 459-475

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.106617

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [NS0647, NS072280, F32 NS010768, R01 NS034774, NS10768-01, R37 NS034774, NS34774] Funding Source: Medline

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Synchrony within the thalamocortical system is regulated in part by intranuclear synaptic inhibition within the reticular nucleus (RTN). Inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) in RTN neurons are largely characterized by slow decay kinetics that result in powerful and prolonged suppression of spikes. Here we show that some individual RTN neurons are characterized by highly variable mixtures of fast, slow and mixed IPSCs. Heterogeneity arose largely through differences in the contribution of an initial decay component (tau(D) similar to 10 ms) which was insensitive to loreclezole, suggesting involvement of the GABA(A) receptor beta(1) subunit. Single-cell RT-PCR revealed the presence of beta(1) subunit mRNA only in those neurons whose IPSCs were dominated by a rapid and prominent initial decay phase. These data show that brief beta(1)-dependent, loreclezole-insensitive IPSCs are present in a subpopulation of RTN neurons, and suggest that striking differences in IPSC heterogeneity within single neurons can result from of the presence or absence of a single GABA(A) receptor subunit.

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