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Cerebral Cortex Advance Access originally published online on November 17, 2008
Cerebral Cortex 2009 19(8):1795-1805; doi:10.1093/cercor/bhn206
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Electrical Excitability of Early Neurons in the Human Cerebral Cortex during the Second Trimester of Gestation

Anna R. Moore1, Radmila Filipovic1, Zhicheng Mo1, Matthew N. Rasband2, Nada Zecevic1 and Srdjan D. Antic1

1 Department of Neuroscience, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT 06030, USA, 2 Department of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA

Address correspondence to Srdjan D. Antic, Department of Neuroscience, L-4000, University of Connecticut Health Center, 263 Farmington Avenue, Farmington, CT 06030-3401, USA. Email: antic{at}neuron.uchc.edu.

Information about development of the human cerebral cortex (proliferation, migration, and differentiation of neurons) is largely based on postmortem histology. Physiological properties of developing human cortical neurons are difficult to access experimentally and therefore remain largely unexplored. Animal studies have shown that information about the arousal of electrical activity in individual cells within fundamental cortical zones (subventricular zone [SVZ], intermediate zone, subplate [SP], and cortical plate [CP]) is necessary for understanding normal brain development. Here we ask where, in what cortical zone, and when, in what gestational week (gw), human neurons acquire the ability to generate nerve impulses (action potentials [APs]). We performed electrical recordings from individual cells in acute brain slices harvested postmortem from the human fetal cerebral cortex (16–22 gw). Tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ current occurs more frequently among CP cells and with significantly greater peak amplitudes than in SVZ. As early as 16 gw, a relatively small population of CP neurons (27%) was able to generate sodium APs upon direct current injection. Neurons located in the SP exhibited the highest level of cellular differentiation, as judged by their ability to fire repetitive APs. At 19 gw, a fraction of human CP and SP neurons possess βIV spectrin–positive axon initial segments populated with voltage-gated sodium channels (PanNav). These results yield the first physiological characterization of developing human fetal cortical neurons with preserved morphologies in intact surrounding brain tissue.

Key Words: action potential • axon initial segment • cortical plate • sodium current • subplate • subventricular zone


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