Copper enhances cellular and network excitabilities, and improves temporal processing in the rat hippocampus
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2015Metadata
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Maureira, Carlos
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Copper enhances cellular and network excitabilities, and improves temporal processing in the rat hippocampus
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Abstract
Copper, an ion with many important metabolic functions, has also been proposed to have a role as modulator on neuronal function,
mostly based on its effects on voltage- and neurotransmitter-gated conductance as well as on neurological symptoms of
patients with altered copper homeostasis. Nevertheless, the mechanisms by which copper exerts its neuromodulatory effects
have not been clearly established in a functional neuronal network. Using rat hippocampus slices as a neuronal network model,
the effects of copper in the range of 10–100 nM were tested on the intrinsic, synaptic and network properties of the CA1 region.
Most of the previously described effects of this cation were in the micromolar range of copper concentrations. The current results
indicate that copper is a multifaceted neuromodulator, having effects that may be grouped into two categories: (i) activity
enhancement, by modulating synaptic communication and action potential (AP) conductances; and (ii) temporal processing and
correlation extraction, by improving reliability and depressing inhibition. Specifically it was found that copper hyperpolarizes AP firing
threshold, enhances neuronal and network excitability, modifies CA3–CA1 pathway gain, enhances the frequency of spontaneous
synaptic events, decreases inhibitory network activity, and improves AP timing reliability. Moreover, copper chelation by
bathocuproine decreases spontaneous network spiking activity. These results allow the proposal that copper affects the network
activity from cellular to circuit levels on a moment-by-moment basis, and should be considered a crucial functional component of
hippocampal neuronal circuitry.
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European Journal of Neuroscience, Vol. 42, pp. 3066–3080, 2015
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