A Reinterpretation of the Relationship between Persistent and Resurgent Sodium Currents

Samuel P. Brown, Ryan J. Lawson, Jonathan D. Moreno, Joseph L. Ransdell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

The resurgent sodium current (INaR) activates on membrane repolarization, such as during the downstroke of neuronal action potentials. Due to its unique activation properties, INaR is thought to drive high rates of repetitive neuronal firing. However, INaR is often studied in combination with the persistent or noninactivating portion of sodium currents (INaP). We used dynamic clamp to test how INaR and INaP individually affect repetitive firing in adult cerebellar Purkinje neurons from male and female mice. We learned INaR does not scale repetitive firing rates due to its rapid decay at subthreshold voltages and that subthreshold INaP is critical in regulating neuronal firing rate. Adjustments to the voltage-gated sodium conductance model used in these studies revealed INaP and INaR can be inversely scaled by adjusting occupancy in the slow-inactivated kinetic state. Together with additional dynamic clamp experiments, these data suggest the regulation of sodium channel slow inactivation can fine-tune INaP and Purkinje neuron repetitive firing rates.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2396232024
JournalJournal of Neuroscience
Volume44
Issue number29
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 17 2024

Keywords

  • dynamic clamp
  • intrinsic excitability
  • membrane excitability
  • persistent sodium
  • resurgent sodium
  • sodium channel

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