Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience (Apr 2015)

Duration of Purkinje cell complex spikes increases with their firing frequency

  • Pascal eWarnaar,
  • Joao eCouto,
  • Mario eNegrello,
  • Marc eJunker,
  • Aleksandra eSmilgin,
  • Alla eIgnashchenkova,
  • Michele eGiugliano,
  • Peter eThier,
  • Erik eDe Schutter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2015.00122
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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AbstractClimbing fiber (CF) triggered complex spikes (CS) are massive depolarization bursts in the cerebellar Purkinje cell, showing several high frequency spikelet components (±600 Hz). Since its early observations, the CS is known to vary in shape. In this study we describe CS waveforms, extracellularly recorded in awake primates (Macaca mulatta) performing saccades. Every Purkinje cell analyzed showed a range of CS shapes with profoundly different duration and number of spikelets. The initial part of the CS was rather constant but the later part differed greatly, with a pronounced jitter of the last spikelets causing a large variation in total CS duration. Waveforms did not effect the following pause duration in the simple spike (SS) train, nor were SS firing rates predictive of the waveform shapes or vice versa. The waveforms did not differ between experimental conditions nor was there a preferred sequential order of CS shapes throughout the recordings. Instead, part of their variability, the timing jitter of the CS’s last spikelets, strongly correlated with interval length to the preceding CS: shorter CS intervals resulted in later appearance of the last spikelets in the CS burst, and vice versa. A similar phenomenon was observed in rat Purkinje cells recorded in vitro upon repeated extracellular stimulation of CFs at different frequencies in slice experiments. All together these results strongly suggest that the variability in the timing of the last spikelet is due to CS frequency dependent changes in Purkinje cell excitability.

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