Effects of calcium-activated potassium channel modulators on afterhyperpolarizing potentials in identified motor and mechanosensory neurons of the medicinal leech.
2021
Calcium-activated potassium (KCa) channels contribute to multiple neuronal properties including spike frequency and afterhyperpolarizing potentials (AHPs). KCa channels are classified as KCa1.1, KCa2, or KCa3.1 based on single-channel conductance and pharmacology. Ca2+-dependent AHPs in vertebrates are categorized as fast, medium, or slow. Fast and medium AHPs are generated by KCa1.1 and KCa2 channels, respectively. The KCa subtype responsible for slow AHPs is unclear. Prolonged, Ca2+-dependent AHPs have been described in several leech neurons. Unfortunately, apamin and other KCa blockers often prove ineffective in the leech. An alternative approach is to utilize KCa modulators, which alter channel sensitivity to Ca2+. Vertebrate KCa2 channels are targeted selectively by the positive modulator CyPPA and the negative modulator NS8593. Here we show that AHPs in identified motor and mechanosensory leech neurons are enhanced by CyPPA and suppressed by NS8593. Our results indicate that KCa2 channels underlie prolonged AHPs in these neurons and suggest that KCa2 modulators may serve as effective tools to explore the role of KCa channels in leech physiology.
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