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Journal Article

Endogenous intracellular calcium buffering and the activation/inactivation of HVA calcium currents in rat dentate gyrus granule cells

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Köhr,  Georg
Department of Molecular Neurobiology, Max Planck Institute for Medical Research, Max Planck Society;
Directly responsible to the Managing Director, Max Planck Institute for Medical Research, Max Planck Society;
Georg Köhr Group, Max Planck Institute for Medical Research, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Köhr, G., & Mody, I. (1991). Endogenous intracellular calcium buffering and the activation/inactivation of HVA calcium currents in rat dentate gyrus granule cells. Journal of General Physiology, 98(5), 1-27. Retrieved from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2229099/.


Abstract
J Gen Physiol. 1991 November 1; 98(5): 941−967. PMCID: PMC2229099 Copyright notice Endogenous intracellular calcium buffering and the activation/inactivation of HVA calcium currents in rat dentate gyrus granule cells Small right arrow pointing to: This article has been cited by other articles in PMC. Abstract Granule cells acutely dissociated from the dentate gyrus of adult rat brains displayed a single class of high−threshold, voltage−activated (HVA) Ca2+ channels. The kinetics of whole−cell Ca2+ currents recorded with pipette solutions containing an intracellular ATP regenerating system but devoid of exogenous Ca2+ buffers, were fit best by Hodgkin− Huxley kinetics (m2h), and were indistinguishable from those recorded with the nystatin perforated patch method. In the absence of exogenous Ca2+ buffers, inactivation of HVA Ca2+ channels was a predominantly Ca(2+)−dependent process. The contribution of endogenous Ca2+ buffers to the kinetics of inactivation was investigated by comparing currents recorded from control cells to currents recorded from neurons that have lost a specific Ca(2+)−binding protein, Calbindin−D28K (CaBP), after kindling−induced epilepsy. Kindled neurons devoid of CaBP showed faster rates of both activation and inactivation. Adding an exogenous Ca2+ chelator, 1,2−bis−(2−aminophenoxy)ethane−N,N,N',N'−tetraacetic acid (BAPTA), to the intracellular solution largely eliminated inactivation in both control and kindled neurons. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that endogenous intraneuronal CaBP contributes significantly to submembrane Ca2+ sequestration at a concentration range and time domain that regulate Ca2+ channel inactivation