Cholinergic-receptor-independent modulation of intrinsic properties of subicular neurons through inhibition of hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated channels
Abstract
Acetylcholine release is vital in tuning the hippocampal theta oscillations. Subiculum, the output
region of the hippocampus endowed with different neuronal subtypes, also generates theta oscillations
during arousal and REM sleep. Generation of theta rhythms in the hippocampus requires a
combination of extrinsic cholinergic inputs from the medial septum and the intrinsic resonance in
the hippocampal neurons. Hitherto, the effect of acetylcholine on the resonance of hippocampal
neurons was thought to be mediated only via the activation of mAChRs. We studied the
acetylcholine receptor-independent effect of cholinergic agents on the intrinsic properties of
subiculum neurons and the underlying mechanism. We bath perfused acetylcholine in the
presence of atropine on horizontal rat brain slices. Exogenously applied acetylcholine affected
three groups of electrophysiologically characterized subicular neurons differently by reducing
the resonance frequency and I h in bursting neurons, whereas these properties were unaffected in
regular firing neurons and fast-spiking interneurons. This was further validated by studying the
effect of endogenously released ACh by stimulating cholinergic fibers in septohippocampal brain
slices. Endogenous ACh decreased the sag amplitude and resonance frequency and increased input
resistance and tonic AP frequency, specifically in burst firing neurons among the two excitatory
neurons. To further confirm the modulation of burst firing neurons properties, we applied
nicotine, an agonist of nAChRs. Nicotine changed the intrinsic properties of burst firing neurons
by decreasing the amplitude and increasing the activation time constant of Ih. The study suggests
the active role of burst firing neurons over other neuronal populations that actively respond to
acetylcholine through a shift in resonance frequency by partially inhibiting HCN current during
high cholinergic inputs, which is independent of acetylcholine receptor activation. Direct
modulation of a voltage-gated ion channel by the neurotransmitter ACh, was the unique
observation that emerged from the study. This together with the action of ACh on its post-
synaptic receptors may contribute to fine-tuning the rhythmic activity of neurons.