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J Neurophysiol 90: 245-258, 2003. First published March 12, 2003; doi:10.1152/jn.01012.2002
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Spike Frequency Adaptation and Signaling Properties of Identified Neurons in Rodent Deep Spinal Dorsal Horn

S. P. Schneider

Department of Physiology and Neuroscience Program, Michigan State University, E. Lansing, Michigan 48824-3320

Submitted 6 November 2002; accepted in final form 6 March 2003


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Using whole cell recordings, I analyzed the intrinsic discharge properties for 285 neurons in Rexed's laminae III–V of isolated hamster spinal cord preparations. Neurons were characterized by their responses to step-wise and ramp-hold depolarizing current applied through the recording pipettes. Tonic cells (133/285; 47%) fired repetitively during step-wise current application. Firing decayed linearly (–0.14 to –4.3 imp · s1 · s1) or was bimodal, with an initial exponential phase ({tau} {approx} 450 ms) followed by a linear decline (–0.02 to –6.3 imp · s1 · s1); discharge frequency was unrelated to current trajectory. Phasic-firing cells (108/285; 38%) responded with a burst discharge having an initial rapid, exponential decrease ({tau} {approx} 30 ms) and subsequent linear decline (–1 to –78 imp · s1 · s1). Phasic cells were activated preferentially by fast current ramps (slope, 70 pA/s–2.2 nA/s) with the number and frequency of impulses increasing with current slope. Delayed-firing cells (44/285; 15%), responded to current steps with an accelerating firing following a substantial latent period (0.5–4 s) and discharged during current ramps with slopes less than {approx}100 pA/s. Intracellular staining revealed a significant association between electrophysiological profile and neuronal morphology. A majority of presumed projection cells (22/30; 73%) exhibited tonic firing to step-wise activation. The preponderance of phasic and delayed firing cells, 93% (42/45) and 71% (12/17), respectively, were interneurons with local or intersegmental terminations. Differential sensitivity to static and time-varying components of membrane current suggest differences in neuronal signaling properties that may have important implications for integration of mechanosensory information in the deep spinal dorsal horn.


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
The deep spinal dorsal horn, traditionally designated Rexed's laminae III–VI, is a major termination zone for hair, tactile, and muscle receptors with rapidly conducting myelinated axons (rev. by Brown 1981Go) and is therefore important for initial transformation of mechanical sensory information from the body. The region also serves as the origin for segmental reflex pathways (Hongo et al. 1989Go) and several ascending tracts that transmit noxious and innocuous sensory information (see rev. by Willis and Coggeshall 1991Go), indicating an involvement in diverse somatosensory and motor functions.

Integration of mechanosensory information in the deep dorsal horn is influenced by complex factors that include neuronal electrophysiological properties and synaptic mechanisms underlying cell-to-cell connectivity. Experiments using both in vivo and in vitro spinal cord preparations have presented clear evidence that dorsal horn neurons display considerable heterogeneity in their responses to direct membrane depolarization. King et al. (1988Go) first reported that neurons in laminae III–VI respond to depolarizing current with sustained, repetitive firing. Subsequent studies identified a population of cells with rapidly adapting discharge (Jiang et al. 1995Go; Lopez-Garcia and King 1994Go; Russo and Hounsgaard 1996bGo), reportedly associated with activation of a low-threshold, transient calcium conductance (Murase and Randic 1983Go; Russo and Hounsgaard 1996bGo; Ryu and Randic 1990Go). More recently, another class of neurons was described that responds to membrane depolarization with accelerated firing after a substantial time delay from the stimulus onset, involving activation of high-threshold L-type calcium channels and a slowly inactivating potassium conductance (Morisset and Nagy 1998Go; Russo and Hounsgaard 1996aGo).

In spite of this work, fundamental questions remain about the functional importance of neuronal properties to sensory processing at the first spinal relay. Past investigations have used a variety of paradigms to classify firing patterns of dorsal horn neurons. Most studies categorized neuronal firing during the first second or less of discharge (King et al. 1988Go; Lopez-Garcia and King 1994Go; Thomson et al. 1989Go; Yoshimura and Jessell 1989Go). Studies of deep dorsal horn neurons that examined discharge patterns during extended activation produced evidence of unsuspected complexity (e.g., Jiang et al. 1995Go; Russo and Hounsgaard 1996aGo). However, without the use of a consistent testing protocol, it is difficult to assess what proportion of intrinsic circuitry is represented by each response class and, hence, the relative contribution to integrative function. Second, little is known about the role of physiologically defined neurons within the functional architecture of laminae III–V. This is important because the region contains a substantial population of interneurons that contribute to local and segmental processing of sensory input (Mannen 1975Go; Mannen and Suguira 1976Go; Ramon y Cajal 1995Go; Scheibel and Scheibel 1968Go; Schneider 1992Go; Schneider et al. 1995Go) in addition to projection cells (Brown and Fyffe 1981Go; Brown et al. 1976Go; Carstens and Trevino 1978Go; Geisler et al. 1979Go). Third, the functional significance of multiple, physiological classes relative to somatosensory processing is unclear. Because mechanosensory afferents (see, e.g., rev. by Burgess and Perl 1973Go) signal both dynamic and steady-state information (e.g., rate and amount of skin indentation, motion parallel to the surface), membrane depolarizations of laminae III–V neurons during cutaneous stimulation are considerably more complex than those activated by current pulses. It is therefore important to explore how neurons defined by step-wise activation behave when depolarizations are imposed that vary in the time domain. This information could give important clues about how different physiological classes function in the analysis of complex mechanosensory information.

I attempted to fill these gaps by performing comprehensive, systematic analyses of spike-frequency adaptation for an extensive population of deep dorsal horn neurons and making comparisons with axonal geometry. The aims were accomplished using tight-seal, whole cell recordings in isolated preparations of spinal cord from young Syrian hamsters that permitted high-quality, intracellular labeling of axonal projections during the recording process (Schneider 1992Go; Schneider et al. 1995Go). Responses to static and time-variant membrane depolarization were investigated using standardized current commands of sufficient duration to reveal differences in steady-state firing. I describe here three classes of deep dorsal horn neurons distinguished by spike-frequency adaptation and discharge timing that evidenced differential sensitivity to rate of membrane depolarization. Recordings were obtained from interneurons and a smaller population of presumptive projection cells in spinal laminae III–V. Some aspects of the results have previously appeared in abstract form (Schneider and McNaughton 1995Go).


    METHODS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Tissue preparation

All procedures involving the use of animals were in accordance with Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (National Institutes of Health Publication No. 865-23, Bethesda, MD) and were approved by the All-University Committee on Animal Use and Care. Three- to 4-wk-old male Syrian hamsters (40–55 g) were anesthetized with urethan (1.5 mg/g ip) (Bagust et al. 1982Go; Schneider 1992Go). After animals were rendered unresponsive to noxious pinching of a skin fold, the vertebral column and thoracolumbar spinal cord were removed and placed in ice-cold (4–8°C) dissection solution containing (in mM) 216 sucrose, 2.5 KCl, 0.25 CaCl2, 10 MgCl2, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 26 NaHCO3, and 10 glucose (pH 7.35–7.45, 290–310 mosm/l) equilibrated with 95% O2-5% CO2. Animals were subsequently killed by exanguination after severing the descending aorta.

Spinal cord slices

After dissecting vertebrae and meninges, a 5- to 6-mm block of spinal cord from approximately T10–L5 was glued to a block of 8% agar with cyanoacrylate, mounted on the stage of a Vibratome (TPI, St. Louis, MO) and immersed in cold dissection solution. Two or three sections (350- to 500-µm thick) were cut slowly (<1 mm/min) in the sagittal plane with a stainless steel razor blade at the maximum available vibration frequency. Sections were collected in an oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) containing (in mM) 125 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 2.5 CaCl2, 1.5 MgCl2, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 26 NaHCO3, and 10 glucose (pH 7.35–7.45; 290–310 mosm/l) and incubated for 1 h at room temperature. For some experiments, 500-µm-thick sections were prepared in the transverse plane using similar procedures.

Individual slices were transferred to a recording chamber (volume, 1.5 ml) mounted on a fixed-stage microscope and superfused with ACSF (5–6 ml/min, 25°C). Slices were held in place under a grid of parallel nylon monofilaments and viewed with a x10 objective. Under transillumination, the substantia gelatinosa (Rexed's lamina II) was visible as a thin translucent band and served as a convenient landmark to visually guide placement of recording pipettes within deeper spinal laminae.

Spinal cord hemisections

A series of experiments was also performed on thoracolumbar spinal cord sectioned once in the median sagittal plane from animals of the same age and weight range as those from which slices were obtained. These experiments investigated the extent to which neuronal properties are altered by the slicing procedure and provided more complete reconstruction of lengthy axons than is practical in tissue slices. After dissection, tissue blocks were placed in a recording chamber perfused with ACSF (8–10 ml/min, 25°C) and oriented with the medial surface upward. A pressor foot constructed from an electron microscope grid (0.5-mm grid size) was placed in contact with the cord surface to improve mechanical stability.

Electrophysiological recording

Recording pipettes were fabricated from borosilicate glass (N-51A; Drummond Scientific, Broomall, PA) and filled with internal solution containing (in mM) 130 K-gluconate, 5 NaCl, 1 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 11 EGTA, 10 HEPES, 2 ATP (equine, magnesium salt), and 0.1 GTP (lithium salt; pH 7.3, 280–285 mosm/l; DC resistances, 5–7 M{Omega}). In some experiments, pipettes were backfilled with internal solution containing 2% biocytin (free base, Sigma Chemical, St. Louis, MO) to label cells for morphological analyses. Tight-seal (1–2.5 G{Omega}), whole cell patch-clamp recordings in current-clamp mode (Blanton et al. 1989Go) were obtained blindly from neurons in laminae III–V, ~100–250 µm from the slice surface. Signals were amplified (0–5 kHz bandwidth) using Axoclamp 2 or Axopatch 1D amplifiers (Axon Instruments, Union City, CA), passed through a digital data recorder and stored on magnetic tape or computer analyzed on-line with a Digidata 1200 interface and pClamp 6 software (Axon Instruments). Junctional current was nulled prior to establishment of gigohm seals. Series resistance ranged from 15 to 40 M{Omega} after attaining cell-attached recording configuration and was compensated before collecting data. Whole cell recordings were more successful (1–3 cells per experiment) and maintained for longer periods than previous sharp micropipette studies of deep dorsal horn neurons in this preparation (Schneider 1992Go; Schneider et al. 1995Go). Search times were reduced and fewer tracks were required to obtain usable data from a given experiment.

Electrical stimulation and data analysis

Neuronal firing patterns and steady-state current-voltage relations were examined during application of constant current pulses through the recording pipette. Rheobase (IRh) was measured by determining the minimum current needed to evoke spike discharges. Small hyperpolarizing voltage changes in response to anodal current were used to measure membrane time constant ({tau}m) and neuronal input resistance (Rin). The slowest time constant of the voltage response was used as an estimate of {tau}m. Discharge patterns were characterized in relation to magnitude of stimulating current expressed as multiples of IRh (xT). Instantaneous firing frequency was computed from interspike interval measurements using custom software running in Axobasic (Axon Instruments). Plots of firing frequency as a function of current were fitted using commercial graphical software (SigmaPlot version 4.0; SPSS, Chicago, IL) employing the Marquardt-Levenburg algorithm. Statistical differences between data groups were analyzed with t-test (2-tailed probability), {chi}2 (1 sample), or one-way ANOVA with Neuman-Keul posttest comparisons (GBStat, Dynamic Microsystems, Silver Spring, MD). Numerical data are presented as means ± SD.

Identification of neurons and axon projections

Neurons were filled with biocytin contained in the internal solution by passive diffusion. After experiments slices were fixed overnight in cold (4°C) phosphate-buffered 4% paraformaldehyde/4% sucrose (pH 7.4), and washed for 12–48h(4°C) in 0.1 M phosphate-buffered 30% sucrose (pH 7.35). Tissue was frozen-sectioned (40 µm thickness) parallel to the slice surface, pretreated with ethanol (Metz et al. 1989Go) and processed according to the ABC method using standard procedures. Sections were mounted serially on gelatin-coated glass slides, dehydrated, cleared, and coverslipped. On occasion biocytin-filled neurons were prepared for fluorescence histochemistry by incubating tissue slices in avidin D conjugated with Texas Red (12 µg/ml; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). Stained neurons were examined under transmitted light or epifluorescence (Ex: 595 nm) and photographed. Representative examples were reconstructed using a drawing tube attachment (x100).


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
The results described in this paper were obtained from 285 dorsal horn neurons recorded for 10 min to 3 h from both slice (n = 195) and hemisected (n = 90) preparations. Intrinsic electrophysiological properties are summarized in Table 1. At a bath temperature of 25°C, resting membrane potential averaged –55 ± 6 mV (n = 277), amplitude of action potentials was 64 ± 16 mV (n = 120), 10–90% rise time was 0.6 ± 0.2 ms (n = 120), spike half-width was 1.0 ± 0.3 ms (n = 120), Rin was 377 ± 246 M{Omega} (n = 94), and {tau}m was 56 ± 32 ms (n = 83). Cell capacitance (C), calculated as {tau}m/Rin, was 167 ± 75 pF. Estimates of Rin and {tau}m are 6- to 10-fold higher than values reported for deep dorsal horn neurons in previous micropipette studies (Jiang et al. 1995Go; King et al. 1988Go; Schneider 1992Go), probably because of reduced current shunt afforded by the whole cell recording configuration (Staley et al. 1992Go). There were no significant differences in spike morphology (rise time or half-width), {tau}m, and IRh for neurons recorded in spinal slices and hemisections. Neurons generated overshooting action potentials, although spike amplitude was significantly greater (P < 0.01) for cells in hemisections than in slices [67 ± 16 mV (n = 72) and 59 ± 14 mV (n = 48), respectively]. Neurons in slice preparations had greater Rin [468 ± 281 M{Omega} (n = 47) vs. 287 ± 163 M{Omega} (n = 47), P < 0.01] and lower cell capacitance [129 ± 44 pF (n = 43) vs. 210 ± 80 pF (n = 38), P < 0.0001] than those in hemisections, suggesting that neuronal dendrites lying close to the surface may have been pruned by the sectioning procedure. Neurons recorded from slices also were slightly hyperpolarized relative to those in hemisections [–56 ± 6 mV (n = 187) vs.–54 ± 6 mV (n = 90), P < 0.05] and exhibited less spontaneous activity. Not surprisingly, measurements of some membrane properties were temperature dependent. Elevating the bath temperature to 30–35°C decreased Rin (25 ± 12%, n = 6), {tau}m (26 ± 15%, n = 6), spike amplitude (25 ± 7%, n = 5), and half-width (26 ± 6%, n = 5) but was without consistent effect on resting membrane potential or pattern of discharge activated by direct membrane depolarization. (Sustained elevation of bath temperature was associated with reduced tissue viability and was therefore avoided.)


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TABLE 1. Electrophysiological properties of hamster lamina III–V neurons categorized by pattern of discharge induced by step-wise depolarizing current

 

Discharge patterns

As shown by the examples in Fig. 1, three categories of neurons were distinguished on the basis of discharge timing and characteristics of spike frequency adaptation in response to step-wise depolarizing current (5-s duration) applied through recording pipette at resting potential. Electrophysiological properties for each class are compared in Table 1. It should be noted that neuronal properties summarized in Table 1 pertain to both slices and hemisections and the subsequent presentation of results do not distinguish between the two preparations.



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FIG. 1. Discharge characteristics of lamina III–V neurons. Representative examples from three physiological categories: A, tonic; B, phasic; C, delayed-firing. Voltage traces in a show responses to subthreshold (middle) and suprathreshold (top) pulses of depolarizing current applied through the recording pipette (bottom). (Variability in spike amplitude is caused by computer sampling rate.) {downarrow} in Ba (middle), a transient depolarizing potential associated with phasic cell discharge. Discharge of delayed-firing cell in Ca shows a characteristic pause preceding the 1st spike during which the membrane potential slowly depolarized forming a "ramp" (arrows, · · ·). Dot-raster displays in b show responses of another neuron from each category to a graded series of increasing current pulses (time course is represented schematically below the plots). Each dot represents 1 action potential. Note that duration and timing of phasic and delay cell discharges are dependent on the strength of stimulating pulses. [Resting membrane potentials (Vm): Aa, –52 mV; Ab, –50 mV; Ba, –50 mV; Bb, –60 mV; Ca, –58 mV; Cb, –58 mV].

 

Tonic cells

Almost half of the neurons recorded [n = 133, 47% of sample (76 in slices; 57 in hemisections)] discharged continuously during application of depolarizing current at near-threshold strength (e.g., Figs. 1A and 2, A–C), resembling deep dorsal horn neurons described previously in rat (Jiang et al. 1995Go; King et al. 1988Go). Tonic cells had a mean Rin of 428 ± 279 M{Omega} (n = 47) and mean {tau}m of 65 ± 39 ms (n = 39). IRh measured at resting potential was 45 ± 41 pA (n = 92).



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FIG. 2. Quantitative analyses of spike-frequency adaptation. Plots of instantaneous firing frequency for representative neurons from each response class are fitted with regression models calculated using the Marquardt-Levenburg algorithm. Responses to 2 or 3 different current intensities are illustrated in each panel. Curve fits in A were generated using a linear model described by f = f0 + at, as indicated above each plot. The fits in BF were generated using a combination of exponential and linear functions of the form f = aebt + f0 + ct. Time constant (1/b) is indicated for the exponential phase. In E, the 190-pA response was fitted with a combination of exponential-linear and linear functions. A–C: tonic cells fired action potentials repetitively for the duration of current pulses. Data plotted for neuron in A are shown in dot-raster form in Fig. 1Ab. (A, Vm = –50 mV; B, Vm = –50 mV; C, Vm = –50 mV). D–F: phasic cells typically discharged a rapidly adapting burst of spikes that could be prolonged by increasing the stimulus current. The rate of spike-frequency adaptation was considerably greater than tonic cells. (D, Vm = –57 mV; E, Vm = –62 mV; F, Vm = –55 mV). G–I: delayed-firing cells responded with an accelerating discharge after a substantial latent period. Increasing pulse strength decreased the delay period and increased overall discharge frequency. Data plotted for G are from response illustrated in Fig. 1Cb. (G, Vm = –58 mV; H, Vm = –57 mV; I, Vm = –64 mV).

 

The initial discharge frequency of tonic cells averaged 25 ± 14 imp/s (n = 20) measured at a pulse strength of 2T. Firing was maximal at the onset of the current and was graded with pulse strength (0.5 ± 0.3 imp · s1 · pA1). In about half of tonic cells (48%, n = 26), plots of instantaneous firing frequency were well-fitted by a single linear regression (R2 {approx} 0.55–0.92; Fig. 2A). For these neurons, firing slowed during current application (2–5T) by 32 ± 20% (n = 19) to 15 ± 7 imp/s (n = 48), a decrease of –0.14 to –4.3 imp · s1 · s1. As shown in Fig. 2A, both the magnitude (percent decrease) and rate of adaptation increased with increasing pulse strength. For the remaining neurons (n = 28), adaptation was biphasic (Fig. 2, B and C), resembling behavior of motoneurons activated by steady depolarizing current (Granit et al. 1963Go; Kernell and Monster 1982Go; Sawczuk et al. 1995Go). During the initial 0.5–2 s of stimulating current (1.5–5T), plots of firing frequency could be fitted by a single exponential with a time constant of 450 ± 365 ms (range, 47 ms to 2.1 s, n = 23). This period was followed by a slower, linear decline in firing (R2 {approx} 0.52–0.99) in which discharge decreased at a rate of 1.0 ± 1.4 imp · s1 · s1 (n = 22). The time constant of the exponential phase decreased with increasing current (–35 ± 62 ms/pA, n = 15; e.g., Fig. 2, B and C). The magnitude of adaptation was 51 ± 18% (n = 29) which was significantly greater (P < 0.01) than for tonic cells with monophasic linear firing behavior.

Phasic cells

Phasic cells constituted a group of lamina III–V neurons [n = 108, 38% of sample (86 in slices; 22 in hemisections)] in which direct depolarization elicited firing characterized by pronounced spike frequency adaptation (Fig. 1B) (see also Lopez-Garcia and King 1994Go; Russo and Hounsgaard 1996bGo; Thomson et al. 1989Go). The average peak discharge frequency measured at 2T was 140 ± 63 imp/s (n = 25), significantly greater than for tonic neurons at similar currents (P < 0.0001), and was graded with pulse strength (range, 1.5–4T). Action potentials were often superimposed on a transient depolarizing membrane potential (9 ± 4 mV, n = 17) that was followed by a sag in membrane voltage (Fig. 1Ba, middle).

Phasic cells could also be distinguished from tonic neurons by their electrophysiological properties (see Table 1). The mean resting potential of this class was –57 ± 5.7 mV (n = 104), slightly hyperpolarized relative to tonic cells. They exhibited significantly lower {tau}m (44 ± 20 ms, n = 33) and higher IRh (75 ± 58 pA, n = 61) than tonic cells. Phasic cell Rin averaged less than tonic neurons (302 ± 183 vs. 428 ± 279 M{Omega}), although the difference was not statistically significant (P > 0.05), and there was no difference in cell capacitance between the two classes. When stimulated at higher pulse strengths (2–4T), a few phasic cells (n = 9) exhibited significantly (P < 0.05) slower firing adaptation (time constant 368 ± 292 ms; n = 6) compared with the others (not shown). In these cells, average initial firing frequency (2T) was 30 ± 14 imp/s (n = 6) significantly less than phasic neurons with rapid adaptation (P < 0.0001) but not different from tonic cells (P = 0.5). Such neurons may represent a transitional type with properties intermediate to the two groups.

Spike-frequency adaptation of phasic cells exhibited multiple phases (Fig. 2, DF). Frequency plots could be fitted by a single exponential (mean {tau} =30 ± 30 ms, n = 19) followed by a linear regression (R2 {approx} 0.91–0.99) with slope of –20 ± 19 imp · s1 · s1 (n = 24; e.g., Fig. 2D). Increasing the pulse strength above threshold (1.2–2T) evoked a later period of low-level, sustained firing (Figs. 1Bb and 2E) in two-thirds of phasic cells (73/108). During this period, discharge frequency decayed slowly (–1.4 ± 1.0 imp · s1 · s1, n = 10) to a steady-state level of 10 ± 8 imp/s (n = 32). As can be seen by comparing Fig. 2, C and E, the adapted firing level was significantly lower (P < 0.01) and the overall magnitude of spike-frequency adaptation (89 ± 10%, n = 32) was greater (P < 0.0001) than for tonic cells at comparable activating currents.

To determine whether the differences between tonic and phasic cells could be accounted for by variations in resting membrane potential, responses to step activation were studied while injecting constant depolarizing current through the pipette (n = 5). As shown by the experiments illustrated in Fig. 3 (A–C), depolarizing phasic cells by 10-mV prolonged firing and reduced the peak discharge frequency. However, the time constant of adaptation was relatively unaffected (Fig. 3, B and C). By contrast, hyperpolarizing tonic cells (n = 2) had the effect of decreasing average discharge frequency without altering the rate of adaptation (Fig. 3D), arguing that differences in spike frequency adaptation between the two classes were not simply due to variations in resting membrane potential. The three-dimensional plot in Fig. 3E demonstrates that tonic and phasic neurons were reliably differentiated by the testing procedures employed. It can be seen that phasic cells overall had a higher initial discharge frequency (fini) and greater firing adaptation (% f decrease) than tonic cells when tested at resting potential over a similar range of pulse strengths (stimulus, xT). The distribution of data points in Fig. 3E is consistent with the finding that phasic and tonic cells exhibit fundamentally different responses to step-wise membrane depolarization but also suggests that response properties of the two classes may form a continuum.



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FIG. 3. Distinguishing tonic neurons from phasic neurons. A: discharge of a phasic neuron (top) activated by 5-s pulses of depolarizing current (bottom) from 3 levels of holding membrane potential. Firing duration was prolonged at more depolarized membrane potentials. B and C: plots of instantaneous frequency for 2 other phasic cells illustrating effect of depolarizing the membrane potential on quantitative assessment of firing adaptation (B, Vm = –67 mV; C, Vm = –50 mV). Curve fits were generated using f = aebt + f0 + ct (B) and step-wise exponential-linear and linear functions (C). Initial discharge frequency was decreased (*), and duration of discharge was prolonged at more depolarized membrane potentials. Stimulating pulses were 150 and 250 pA for B and C, respectively. D: response of a representative tonic cell with linear spike-frequency adaptation at resting and hyperpolarized membrane potentials. Curve fits were generated using f = f0 + at. Hyperpolarizing the neuron decreased overall firing frequency without significantly altering the rate of adaptation (60-pA stimulating pulses; D, Vm = –56 mV). E: classification of phasic and tonic cells by spike-frequency adaptation. Three-dimensional plot relating initial frequency (fini) to percent decrease in discharge frequency (finifend/fini x 100) and the stimulus intensity (xT) for phasic ({bullet}, n = 31) and tonic (, n = 48) neurons. Overall, phasic cells exhibited higher initial firing frequency and greater spike frequency adaptation than tonic cells for similar activating currents.

 

Delayed-firing cells

A third class of laminae III–V neurons exhibited responses that were characterized by an exceptionally long delay to the first action potential, resembling responses reported previously in mammalian (Dekin et al. 1987Go; Morrisset and Nagy 1998; Storm 1988Go) and invertebrate neurons (Byrne et al. 1979Go; Getting 1983Go). Delayed-firing cells were infrequently encountered in these preparations [n = 44, 15% of sample (33 in slices; 11 in hemisections)]. For reasons that are not entirely clear, whole cell recordings from these cells were more difficult to maintain than those from phasic or tonic neurons, thereby limiting the time available for study. Estimated values of Rin, {tau}m, and IRh for delay cells were 407 ± 231 M{Omega} (n = 11), 58 ± 20 ms (n = 11), and 66 ± 54 pA (n = 30), respectively, indistinguishable from tonic and phasic neurons (Table 1), suggesting that the unusual firing properties of these cells are not attributable to cell damage.

Figure 1C shows a representative response to rectangular current pulses. At resting potentials between –50- and –60-mV latency to the first spike ranged from 0.5 to 4 s, considerably longer than {tau}m (Table 1), and was maximal for near-threshold activation (1–1.2T). The membrane potential showed a gradual depolarization (0.6–6.8 mV/s) preceding the first impulse (e.g., Figs. 1C and 4A), similar to the behavior reported for hippocampal CA1 cells (Storm 1988Go). The slope of the depolarization increased and firing delay decreased (e.g., Figs. 1C and 2, G and H) a pulse strength was increased. As shown in Fig. 4, delayed excitation was dependent on resting potential; depolarizing the neuron by 5–10 mV decreased the response delay and increased discharge frequency (n = 4).



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FIG. 4. Voltage dependence of delayed-firing cell responses. A: discharge of a representative delay cell activated by 5-s depolarizing pulses from three levels of holding membrane potential. B: plot of instantaneous frequency for the discharges recorded in A. Note that depolarizing the cell from rest decreased the latency of the 1st spike ({uparrow}) and increased firing frequency, producing a continuous repetitive discharge for duration of the current pulse.

 

Discharge of delayed-firing cells accelerated (40 ± 24%, n = 14) during application of depolarizing current (Figs. 1Ca and 2, G and H) and firing tended to be irregular compared with tonic and phasic cells, (e.g., compare scatter of instantaneous firing plots shown in Fig. 2G with A and E). This distinction was more evident for neurons recorded from spinal slices than from hemisections, perhaps due to differences in spontaneous activity between the two preparations. Some cells (n = 7) exhibited adaptation at higher pulse strengths (1.2–2.5T), as illustrated by the decrease in instantaneous firing shown in Fig. 2H after 3 s of activation by 120-pA current. For a few delay cells (Fig. 2I, n = 6), firing patterns underwent a pronounced shift at higher stimulus currents (>1.5T), suggesting that factors regulating firing in the other two classes were also present. Plots of instantaneous discharge frequency versus time for delayed-cells could not be fit consistently using standard regression analyses.

Responses to ramp-hold current injection

Having established systematic differences in responses to step-wise membrane depolarization, the next goal was to find out how lamina III–V neurons respond to time-varying membrane depolarizations. The approach was to depolarize neurons with computer-generated families of current commands (3-s duration) consisting of a variable slope "ramp" ({approx}10 pA/s to 2.2 nA/s) followed by a constant "hold" period (duration, 1.4–2.9 s). Current ramps applied to the somatic membrane produced voltage trajectories that were well-fit by a linear regression model (slope, 6–350 mV/s; R2 = 0.88 ± 0.06) over the range of the ramp phase (Fig. 5).



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FIG. 5. Linear trajectory of postsynaptic membrane potential during ramp phase of ramp-hold stimuli. A: tonic cell (Vm = –64 mV). B: phasic cell (Vm = –50 mV). a–d, recordings of membrane potential are shown at high gain (action potentials truncated) during ramp phase of ramp-hold current waveforms. Bottom trace shows the series of ramp currents injected through the recording pipette used to generate the voltage responses. Regression lines superimposed on traces in a–d were calculated with pClamp software employing the Chebyshev technique (A, R2 = 0.91–0.94; B, R2 = 0.80–0.95).

 

Phasic cells (n = 23; 17 in slices, 6 in hemisections) responded with a brief burst of impulses when the membrane potential was depolarized rapidly but relatively poorly when the slope of the command current was slowed. This property was unique among lamina III–V neurons in these preparations. Ramp commands ({approx}60–200 pA/s; 1–1.25T) that imposed voltage trajectories of 13–34 mV/s at resting potentials between –55 and –65 mV activated in phasic cells a depolarizing potential whose amplitude was graded with the ramp slope (Fig. 6A2). The amplitude and time course of this response were similar to the transient depolarization induced by rectangular current pulses. Increasing the ramp slope further ({approx}70 pA/s to 2.2 nA/s) resulted in a transient discharge in which the number and frequency of action potentials were positively correlated with the current trajectory (Fig. 7, A–C). Maximum discharge frequency (64–133 imp/s) was reached at ramp slopes between 500 pA/s and 1.4 nA/s (producing depolarizations of 35–170 mV/s; Fig. 5B). Increasing the magnitude of the hold phase (range, 1.25–2.5T) prolonged the firing of some phasic cells, activating impulses at a frequency that was similar to step-wise current stimulation (not shown).



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FIG. 6. Comparison of responses of lamina III–V neurons to step-wise (A1 and B1) vs. ramp-hold (A2 and B2) current activation. A: phasic cell (Vm = –64 mV). A1: plot of instantaneous firing frequency to step currents (70 and 90 pA) applied through the recording pipette. Curve fits generated using exponential-linear and linear functions as in Fig. 2, D and E. Values of fitted functions for the 90-pA response are given. A2: 4 superimposed voltage responses of the same neuron (top) to application of graded ramp-hold current stimuli (bottom). Current ramps having slopes between 36 and 67 pA/s activated a transient depolarization ({downarrow}). Further increase in ramp slope to 400 pA/s produced a rapidly adapting burst discharge on the rising phase of the depolarization. B: delayed firing cell (Vm = –56 mV). B1: plot of instantaneous firing showing characteristic response to activation by step-wise current. B2: responses of the same cell during incremental ramp-hold activation. Current ramp with slope of 84 pA/s (a) activated an accelerating discharge during the hold phase. Application of current ramps with increasing slopes (b, 122 pA/s; c, 225 pA/s; d, 1.35 nA/s) activated weaker responses and revealed a slow membrane depolarization ({downarrow}, c and d) similar to the response activated by step-wise currents (see Figs. 1Ca and 4A).

 


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FIG. 7. Responses of lamina III–V neurons to ramp-hold command currents. Panels show plots of instantaneous firing frequency for 9 neurons representative of phasic (A–C), tonic (D–F), and delayed-firing (G–I) categories. Ramp slope was varied incrementally while keeping the magnitude of the hold phase constant at near-threshold. For reference, the time course for families of ramp-hold stimuli are represented schematically below each plot. Note that responses of phasic cells were positively correlated with trajectory of the activating current, with the very highest discharge frequency reserved for ramps having slopes between 800 and 1.4 nA/s. In contrast, the responses of tonic cells were unrelated to the ramp trajectory over the same range. A majority of delayed-firing cells (e.g., G and H) showed small but significant decreases in firing as ramp slope increased. A delay cell whose responses to ramp-hold commands were unrelated to the ramp trajectory is shown in I for comparison.

 

The robust rate sensitivity of phasic cells was not shared by tonic neurons. This class typically responded to ramp-hold commands (1–1.25T) with repetitive firing during the steady-state phase of the stimulus (n = 20; 13 in slices, 7 in hemisections; examples shown in Fig. 7, D–F). At higher currents (1.25–6T), firing increased and tonic cells discharged during the ramp phase ({approx}40–100 pA/s), but discharge frequency was unrelated to trajectory of the current or membrane depolarization as illustrated by the relatively flat appearance of frequency plots depicted in Fig. 7. Two of the tonic cells tested with ramp-hold commands exibited rapid initial firing adaptation ({tau} <400 ms, e.g., Fig. 2C) to rectangular pulses. For these cells, responses to current ramps were positively correlated with current trajectory (not shown), providing another suggestion that tonic and phasic neurons may form a functional continuum.

The responses of delayed-firing cells to ramp-hold commands were similar to tonic neurons, but with several differences (see Fig. 7, G–I). Like tonic cells, ramp-hold stimuli delivered at near-threshold intensities (1–1.2T) activated repetitive firing during the hold phase (n = 16; 10 in slices, 6 in hemisections; Fig. 6B2). However, discharge frequency slowed (Figs. 6B2 and 7, G and H) as the ramp slope increased (11/13 cells, 85%). This was associated with a gradual membrane depolarization (slope, 7–27 mV/s) that resembled the ramp-like membrane response observed with rectangular pulses (cf. Figs. 1Ca, 4A, and 6B2, {downarrow}). At higher stimulating currents (1.2–5T), impulses were activated during the ramp phase for slopes less than {approx}30 pA/s. Figure 8 compares responses of tonic and delay cells as a function of current trajectory. Increasing ramp slope over 100-fold caused a small but significant decrease (unpaired t-test, P < 0.005, 2-tailed) in discharge frequency of delayed-firing cells (Fig. 8B1) compared with those in the tonic class (Fig. 8A1). Increase in ramp slope also caused an increase in response latency of delay cells relative to onset of the hold phase (Fig. 8B2) but not for tonic cells (Fig. 8A2) as indicated by the positive slope of plots in B2.



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FIG. 8. Differentiating tonic neurons (A) from delayed-firing neurons (B) using ramp-hold commands. Mean firing frequency and response latency are plotted as functions of ramp slope for representative populations of tonic neurons (n = 7) and delay neurons (n = 8). Command currents were delivered at near-threshold intensity (1–1.25T). Response latency is calculated from the end of the current ramp to the first discharge in the response. For tonic cells, increasing ramp slope produced little or no change in mean discharge frequency (A1) or response latency (A2). In comparison, discharge frequency (B1) decreased and response latency (B2) increased with increasing ramp slope for delayed-firing cells.

 

To reiterate, tonic cells appeared to respond to the absolute magnitude of the depolarizing stimulus; their discharge frequency being unrelated to current trajectory during the ramp phase. In comparison, phasic cells were activated selectively by fast current ramps, exceeding {approx}70 pA/s for threshold stimuli. When stronger depolarizing current was applied, discharges could be activated during the hold phase, although at lower rates than tonic cells under similar conditions. Like tonic neurons, cells in the delay class fired during the hold phase but became less responsive to the stimulus as the ramp slope increased.

Morphological features

An extensive population of neurons (n = 117; 52 from slice experiments, 65 from hemisections) was recovered after intracellular staining and histological processing. Labeled cell bodies were distributed throughout Rexed's laminae III–V and exhibited major and minor diameters of 18.4 ± 6.0 and 11.4 ± 3.5 µm (n = 99), respectively. Soma configuration was uncorrelated with firing pattern, and there were no significant differences in spike amplitude, Rin, {tau}m, or IRh between labeled neurons and those recorded with standard pipette internal solution.

Labeled neurons were classified into two principle groups based on axon trajectory and branching pattern as summarized in Table 2. The majority of cells (74%, n = 87) were interneurons with extensive, longitudinally oriented terminations within laminae III–V in agreement with previous morphological studies of hamster deep dorsal horn interneurons (Schneider 1992Go; Schneider et al. 1995Go). Interneurons could be further subdivided into two groups. Sixty-seven (77%) gave rise to local axons with highly branched terminations overlapping the cell body and dendrites (Fig. 9, A and E). Twenty others (23%) were deep axon cells having ventral-going stem axons that bifurcated into lengthy rostrocaudal fibers with collateral branches in laminae IV–VI, (Fig. 9, B and F). The remaining cells (26%, n = 30) gave rise to sparsely branched axons that projected ventromedially toward laminae VII and X (Fig. 9D) or entered the dorsolateral white matter (Fig. 9C). These neurons were classified as presumptive projection cells.


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TABLE 2. Morphological identification of laminae III–V neurons comprising the three electrophysiological classes

 


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FIG. 9. Examples of biocytin-stained neurons in laminae III–V with characterized firing behavior. All examples are shown in the sagittal plane with dorsal upward. Micrographs in A and B illustrate morphology of local axon and deep axon interneurons, respectively (see text for details). Corresponding higher power images of stained axon terminations in regions indicated by rectangles are shown in Aa and Ba. Images were captured from single, 40-µm-thick sections.{bullet}, the boundary between Rexed's laminae II and III. C–F: camera lucida drawings of 4 other neurons reconstructed from serial sagittal sections. - - -, approximate dorsal and ventral boundaries of laminae III and IV. *, main stem axons; <-, axonal branches. Cell body and dendrites are drawn in shading. Neurons in C and D were classified as presumptive projection cells on the basis of initial axonal trajectory (see text). Process indicated () in C was traced into the dorsal columns. Neuron depicted in E was classified as a local axon interneuron, whereas the cell shown in F has morphology representative of deep axon cells with inter-segmentally projecting daughter fibers. Scale bar in C applies to D–F.

 

As summarized in Table 2, interneurons could display tonic, phasic, or delay firing characteristics with no consistent differences in the response properties of cells with local versus deep axons ({chi}2; P = 0.7). Relative to interneurons, presumptive projection cells were significantly more homogeneous ({chi}2; P < 0.001), with about three-fourths (22/30) of this type displaying tonic firing to step current application. A strong association between firing pattern and axonal projection was noted for one class of cell. It was found that the preponderance of neurons exhibiting phasic firing patterns (93%, 42/45) presented morphology typical of interneurons with most of these (79%, 33/42) being of the local axon type.


    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
The accompanying paper presents new findings that shed additional light on sensory integration in the spinal dorsal horn. First, neurons characterized by differences in spike frequency adaptation demonstrated a clear differential sensitivity to the rate at which the postsynaptic membrane is depolarized. Second, the data show evidence of systematic differences in the functional diversity of interneurons and projection cells in spinal laminae III–V. Together, the findings are evidence that dynamic and steady-state components of afferent sensory information may be processed initially by separate populations of neurons, a possibility that should be considered by future models of dorsal horn function.

Functional properties of deep dorsal horn neurons

The differences in firing properties of deep dorsal horn neurons do not appear to be related to the procedures used to isolate the tissue. Intrinsic properties of lamina III–V neurons were found to be relatively independent of the preparation from which they were recorded. However, neurons in hemisections had slightly depolarized resting potentials, greater spike amplitude, lower Rin, greater cell capacitance, and greater spontaneous synaptic activity than neurons in sagittal slices. These differences could be primarily attributed to interruption of synaptic inputs and pruning of neuronal processes during the slicing procedure.

The results are in overall agreement with previous investigations reporting considerable diversity in the firing patterns of dorsal horn neurons based on characteristics of spike frequency adaptation (Jiang et al. 1995Go; King et al. 1988Go; Lopez-Garcia and King 1994Go; Thompson et al. 1989) and discharge timing (Morisset and Nagy 1998Go). However, other studies showing that some deep dorsal horn neurons exhibit a degree of firing plasticity under the control of modulatory inputs (Morisset and Nagy 1996Go; Russo and Hounsgaard 1994Go; Russo et al. 1998Go) have questioned the usefulness of previous categorization schemes based on these criteria. I conclude from quantitative analyses of spike frequency adaptation that differences in firing properties among deep dorsal horn neurons can be substantial and relatively independent of recording conditions and experimental preparations. Most phasic and tonic cells contrasted strongly in their responses to current steps and ramp-hold stimuli. Initial discharge frequency and firing adaptation exhibited some degree of voltage dependency, but there was no compelling evidence that a neuron's resting potential influenced its assignment to a category. To some extent, magnitude and rate of adaptation were dependent on injected current amplitude. However, rate of adaptation and level of adapted firing for most phasic neurons were distinguishable from tonic cells, suggesting that these classes are relatively independent of stimulating current over the range tested. On the other hand, the responses of delayed-firing cells were quite sensitive to membrane potential: depolarizing the membrane potential by 5–10 mV shifted firing to a pattern of maintained discharge characteristic of tonic neurons (see also Morisset and Nagy 1998Go). Therefore the present results may underestimate the number of neurons in this class.

The extensive population of neurons sampled by the present study provides additional insight into the composition of neural networks within the deep spinal dorsal horn. In hamster, tonic and phasic cells comprises 47 and 38% of the neurons in lamina III–V, respectively, whereas delayed-firing cells accounted for only 15% of the population. Recent studies in young and neonatal rats reported that up to two-thirds of the neurons in laminae III–V exhibited tonic firing patterns with relatively fewer neurons having rapidly adapting, phasic-type responses (Hochman et al. 1997Go; Ruscheweyh and Sankühler 2002Go). Delayed firing neurons were absent in the deep dorsal horn of young rats similar in age to hamsters used in the present study (Ruscheweyh and Sankühler 2002Go) and were only infrequently encountered in neonatal animals (Hochman et al. 1997Go). The differences between the studies could reflect variations in species, classification, and sampling procedures. In addition, it has recently been reported that the discharge pattern of phasically firing deep dorsal horn neurons are sensitive to modulatory actions of biogenic amines (Garraway and Hochman 2001Go). These differences notwithstanding, the results are in general agreement that neurons of the tonic and phasic types are abundant in laminae III–V, with delayed-firing cells being relatively scarce.

Characteristics of spike frequency adaptation

Tonic neurons have been reported recently in rat spinal lamina I with firing that undergoes monoexponential decay during one-second membrane depolarizations (Prescott and De Koninck 2002Go). The present study identified two populations of tonic-firing neurons in hamster laminae III–V: one with monophasic linear adaptation and another the discharge of which decayed exponentially, followed by a period of linear decline. Biphasic firing adaptation has been reported for tonic-firing neurons in the deep spinal dorsal horn but not described quantitatively (Jiang et al. 1995Go). It appears that firing adaptation of phasic neurons can exhibit a similar complexity. The time course of the decline in phasic cell discharge may exhibit up to three distinct phases described by combinations of exponential and linear functions. Initial adaptation was limited to the first few spikes in the discharge, the time course being fitby a single exponential, and was followed by a subsequent linear decline lasting <=1 s. A later period of slow, linear adaptation was apparent in some phasic cells if activated by a strong depolarization.

The nature of curve fits suggest that initial and later phases of adaptation have different underlying ionic mechanisms. Previous studies in dorsal horn suggest that activation of low-threshold transient (T-type) calcium channels may mediate the burst response of phasic cells to step depolarization (Russo and Hounsgaard 1994Go, 1996bGo; Ryu and Randic 1990Go). A hyperpolarization-activated cation current (Mayer and Westbrook 1983Go) is evidenced by some dorsal horn neurons (Grudt and Perl 2002Go; Jiang et al. 1995Go; Yoshimura and Jessell 1989Go) and may also shape phasic firing patterns (e.g., Erikson et al. 1993Go). Although these processes may contribute to the initial phase of adaptation, later phases could involve activation of several outward currents, including Na+-activated potassium current (Safronov and Vogel 1996Go; Schwindt et al. 1989Go), Ca+-activated potassium current (Lancaster and Nicoll 1987Go; Madison and Nicoll 1984Go; Sawchuck et al. 1997), and M current (Madison and Nicoll 1984Go). Alternatively, a persistent inward sodium current, which has been shown to influence repetitive firing in several neuron types (Fleidervish et al. 1996Go; Nishimura et al. 1989Go; Stafstrom et al. 1985Go), may also contribute to late adaptation in tonic and phasic cells. It is not yet known if significant currents of these types are present in deep dorsal horn neurons and should be investigated in future experiments. Regardless of the underlying mechanisms, spike firing of laminae III–V neurons is clearly regulated by complex processes that probably have important functional consequences on their signal processing characteristics and ultimately influencing integration of complex somatosensory information.

Responses to time-varying membrane depolarizations

An important finding of the present study is that many neurons were differentially responsive to ramps of depolarizing current. This surprising result suggests that deep dorsal horn neurons are tuned differently to static and dynamic components of afferent sensory input, influencing spinal integration of sensory information. Current ramps applied directly to the cell membrane produced linear voltage responses ({approx}6–350 mV/s) similar to the trajectory of postsynaptic responses generated in deep dorsal horn neurons by noxious and innocuous cutaneous mechanical stimuli both in vitro (Lopez Garcia and King 1994Go; Schneider and Perl 1994Go; Schneider, unpublished observations) and in vivo (Woolf and King 1989Go). The finding that phasic cells were strongly and selectively activated by fast membrane depolarizations means that these cells might be especially sensitive to inputs from rapidly adapting mechanoreceptors. This property could be associated with activation of the same low-threshold, T-type calcium conductance that generates characteristic burst responses of phasic cells (Murase and Randic 1983Go; Russo and Hounsgaard 1996bGo; Ryu and Randic 1990Go). A transient, inward calcium current (IT) underlying low-threshold calcium potentials in cat lateral geniculate neurons also is activated selectively by depolarizations exceeding 30 mV/s (cf. Crunelli et al. 1989Go, Fig. 9). This value is very close to the threshold for ramp activation of phasic cells in the present study, suggesting that a mechanism similar to IT contributes to rate sensitivity in deep dorsal horn neurons.

The present results also showed that the responses for a majority of delayed-firing cells to depolarizing current were inversely related to membrane voltage trajectory, declining with increasing ramp slope. The delayed excitation and accelerated firing that are characteristic of neurons of this class may be shaped by several ionic mechanisms. L-type calcium channels have been associated with acceleration of firing in motoneurons (Carlin et al. 2000Go; Hounsgaard and Kiehn 1989Go) and also in some deep dorsal horn interneurons (Morisset and Nagy 1999Go; Russo and Hounsgaard 1996aGo). Furthermore, a slowly inactivating potassium current, similar to the ID type described in hippocampal CA1 neurons (Storm 1988Go), has also been implicated in the behavior of deep dorsal horn neurons with delayed, accelerating discharges (Morisset and Nagy 1998Go). The results of the present experiments using ramp-hold current injection suggest that one or both of these mechanisms are involved in producing the inverse relationship between discharge frequency and trajectory of membrane depolarization depicted in Fig. 8. This idea is consistent with the suggestion that an ID-like mechanism suppresses responsiveness of deep dorsal horn neurons to brief, transient inputs (Morisset and Nagy 1998Go) and receives additional support from the recent observation that delayed-firing neurons in lamina I fail to respond to fast, afferent-evoked EPSPs (Prescott and De Koninck 2002Go). The rate sensitivity of delay cells appears to be strongly influenced by the prevailing membrane potential, as evidenced by the shift in discharge pattern to step-wise currents induced by depolarizing current injection. It remains to be determined the extent to which this property influences integration of afferent activity evoked by natural stimuli.

Morphology of recorded neurons and functional considerations

The present findings point to substantial differences in the functional composition of interneurons and projection cells that form networks in laminae III–V. Interneurons in the deep dorsal horn are characterized by a striking heterogeneity in their responses to membrane depolarization, whereas neurons having morphology consistent with a projection function appear to be more homogeneous.

Labeled neurons in laminae III–V fell into two principle groups, interneurons and projection cells, based on trajectory of axonal ramifications. The location, dendritic distribution, and axonal arrangements of interneurons confirmed prior descriptions of neuronal morphology in hamster deep dorsal horn (Schneider 1992Go; Schneider et al. 1995Go) and are consistent with extensive reports in other species (Mannen 1975Go; Mannen and Suguira 1976Go; Ramon y Cajal 1909Go; Scheibel and Scheibel 1968Go). In the present study, the ratio of interneurons making localized connections (i.e., over an area comparable to the separation between adjacent dorsal roots) outnumbered those with presumed intersegmental projections by ~3:1, approximately twice the previously published ratio of 1.5:1 (Schneider 1992Go). The discrepancy is probably due to sampling differences associated with the use of sharp microelectrodes (Schneider 1992Go; Schneider et al. 1995Go) versus whole cell recording methodology in the present experiments. Regardless, these two classes dominate the deep dorsal horn. They display considerable diversity in firing characteristics and sensitivity to time-varying membrane depolarizations, apparently reflecting the complexity of local circuits in which these neurons take part. This functional heterogeneity, however, may not be characteristic of interneurons in other dorsal horn laminae. A recent finding that nonprojection neurons in hamster lamina I consistently responded to step-current activation with sustained, repetitive firing (Grudt and Perl 2002Go) may be evidence of fundamental differences in organization between the superficial and deep dorsal horn.

The vast majority of phasic cells (>90%), those uniquely signaling transient membrane depolarizations, were identified as interneurons on the basis of axonal morphology. Of these, an exceptionally high number (33/42 or almost 80%) formed densely branched terminations within the laminae III–V neuropil in vicinity of the soma and dendritic tree. This observation is significant for two reasons. First, it suggests that an important function of local circuits in the deep dorsal horn is the initial processing of afferent information signaling rapid stimulus motion or displacement and identifies a likely class of neuron responsible. Second, the results provide a useful tool for identifying a major morphological class of lamina III–V interneurons during recordings, assisting future studies of dorsal horn functional organization.

About one-fourth of labeled neurons in laminae III–V were classified as presumptive projection cells on the basis of ventromedial trajectory of the axon or funicular location of a stained process that could be traced back to the labeled cell. This result is consistent with previous work showing that several ascending sensory pathways originate from this area in rat and cat (Brown and Fyffe 1981Go; Brown et al. 1976Go; Carstens and Trevino 1978Go; Geisler et al. 1979Go; Rustioni and Kaufman 1977Go). The ultimate destination of labeled axons could not be determined by the present experiments, and it is possible that some neurons join propriospinal projection systems (Chung and Coggeshall 1983Go; Chung et al. 1984Go, 1987Go). The response profile of presumptive projection cells was more homogeneous than interneurons with the bulk exhibiting tonic firing patterns. This is in agreement with a previous report that projection neurons acutely isolated from rat dorsal horn discharge repetitively in response to sustained depolarization (Huang 1987Go) although responses of spinal projection neurons to DC stimulation have not been adequately examined in vivo to permit meaningful comparisons with in vitro data. Together these results suggest that, in the deep dorsal horn, functional diversity is a hallmark of interneurons rather than projection cells. Based on the present data, it would appear that deep dorsal horn neurons giving rise to long distance projections may have a surprisingly limited repertoire for encoding changes in membrane potential.

Concluding remarks

The present study provides an alternate perspective from which to view integrative function in the deep dorsal horn. It seems reasonable to conclude that differences in sensitivity to rate of membrane depolarization among lamina III–V neurons, such as those presented here, will have important consequences on the transformation of primary mechanosensory information. Phasic cells were able to respond selectively to relatively fast membrane depolarizations, indicating they should favor activation by brief, rapidly adapting inputs signaling transient skin displacement or motion, while being less responsive to static or slowly changing stimuli. At depolarized membrane potentials, phasic cells can exhibit low-level repetitive firing to maintained depolarizations, thereby switching to a mode that enables signaling of slowly adapting inputs while preserving rate-sensitive information. Phasic cells may therefore emulate variable "high-pass" filters within the network. On the other hand, tonic cells discriminated poorly between fast and slow current ramps and so would be hypothesized to respond with comparable fidelity to slowly and rapidly adapting inputs. Accordingly, tonic cells may function in a "broad band" capacity, signaling both static and dynamic components of sensory stimuli. Delayed-firing cells might be tuned to excitation by slowly adapting inputs, as suggested by the decline in discharge frequency with increasing rate of membrane depolarization, indicating that this class complements the high-pass characteristics of phasic neurons.

The present study leaves open the question of whether lamina III–V neurons are assembled into functionally distinct circuits having different input-output relations. Such circuits would be important substrates for integration and serial processing of sensory information in the deep dorsal horn. It would, therefore, be of considerable importance to determine the constituent neurons of these hypothetical circuits, functional properties of their afferent input, and the organization and nature of their synaptic connectivity.


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
M. Lopez and K. McNaughton provided valuable assistance with histological preparation of the experimental tissue, and E. Johnson helped with software programming. The authors thank Dr. R.E.W. Fyffe for helpful comments on the manuscript.

This work was supported by Grant NS-25771 from the National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke.


    FOOTNOTES
 
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be h