A Slow Outward Current Activated by FMRFamide in Heart Interneurons of the Medicinal Leech

Farzan Nadim and Ronald L. Calabrese

Abstract

The endogenous neuropeptide FMRFamide (Phe-Met-Arg-Phe-NH2) can accelerate the oscillation of reciprocally inhibitory pairs of interneurons that pace heartbeat in the medicinal leech.  A model based on all available biophysical data of a two-cell heart interneuron oscillator provides a theoretical basis for understanding this modulation.  Previously observed modulation of K+ currents by FMRFamide cannot account for this acceleratory effect in the model.  This observation prompted the present re-examination of K+ currents in heart interneurons.  We devised better methods for separation of the various components of K+ current and more accurately measured their activation and deactivation kinetics.  Moreover, we demonstrated that FMRFamide activates a previously undetected K+ current (IKF), which has very slow activation and deactivation kinetics.  Addition of physiologically measured amounts of IKF to the model two-cell oscillator can account for the acceleratory effect of FMRFamide.

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