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Potassium currents dynamically set the recruitment and firing properties of F-type motoneurons in neonatal mice.

Félix LeroyBoris Lamotte d'IncampsDaniel Zytnicki
Published in: Journal of neurophysiology (2015)
In neonatal mice, fast- and slow-type motoneurons display different patterns of discharge. In response to a long liminal current pulse, the discharge is delayed up to several seconds in fast-type motoneurons and their firing frequency accelerates. In contrast, slow-type motoneurons discharge immediately, and their firing frequency decreases at the beginning of the pulse. Here, we identify the ionic currents that underlie the delayed firing of fast-type motoneurons. We find that the firing delay is caused by a combination of an A-like potassium current that transiently suppresses firing on a short time scale and a slowly-inactivating potassium current that inhibits the discharge over a much longer time scale. We then show how these intrinsic currents dynamically shape the discharge threshold and the frequency-input function of fast-type motoneurons. These currents contribute to the orderly recruitment of motoneurons in neonates and might play a role in the postnatal maturation of motor units.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • preterm infants
  • signaling pathway
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • metabolic syndrome
  • adipose tissue
  • skeletal muscle
  • low birth weight