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Dive into the research topics where Lorin S. Milescu is active.

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Featured researches published by Lorin S. Milescu.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Raphé Neurons Stimulate Respiratory Circuit Activity by Multiple Mechanisms via Endogenously Released Serotonin and Substance P

Krzysztof Ptak; Tadashi Yamanishi; Jason Aungst; Lorin S. Milescu; Ruli Zhang; George B. Richerson; Jeffrey C. Smith

Brainstem serotonin (5-HT) neurons modulate activity of many neural circuits in the mammalian brain, but in many cases endogenous mechanisms have not been resolved. Here, we analyzed actions of raphé 5-HT neurons on respiratory network activity including at the level of the pre-Bötzinger complex (pre-BötC) in neonatal rat medullary slices in vitro, and in the more intact nervous system of juvenile rats in arterially perfused brainstem–spinal cord preparations in situ. At basal levels of activity, excitation of the respiratory network via simultaneous release of 5-HT and substance P (SP), acting at 5-HT2A/2C, 5-HT4, and/or neurokinin-1 receptors, was required to maintain inspiratory motor output in both the neonatal and juvenile systems. The midline raphé obscurus contained spontaneously active 5-HT neurons, some of which projected to the pre-BötC and hypoglossal motoneurons, colocalized 5-HT and SP, and received reciprocal excitatory connections from the pre-BötC. Experimentally augmenting raphé obscurus activity increased motor output by simultaneously exciting pre-BötC and motor neurons. Biophysical analyses in vitro demonstrated that 5-HT and SP modulated background cation conductances in pre-BötC and motor neurons, including a nonselective cation leak current that contributed to the resting potential, which explains the neuronal depolarization that augmented motor output. Furthermore, we found that 5-HT, but not SP, can transform the electrophysiological phenotype of some pre-BötC neurons to intrinsic bursters, providing 5-HT with an additional role in promoting rhythm generation. We conclude that raphé 5-HT neurons excite key circuit components required for generation of respiratory motor output.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Fast-activating voltage- and calcium-dependent potassium (BK) conductance promotes bursting in pituitary cells: a dynamic clamp study.

Joël Tabak; Maurizio Tomaiuolo; Arturo E. Gonzalez-Iglesias; Lorin S. Milescu; Richard Bertram

The electrical activity pattern of endocrine pituitary cells regulates their basal secretion level. Rat somatotrophs and lactotrophs exhibit spontaneous bursting and have high basal levels of hormone secretion, while gonadotrophs exhibit spontaneous spiking and have low basal hormone secretion. It has been proposed that the difference in electrical activity between bursting somatotrophs and spiking gonadotrophs is due to the presence of large conductance potassium (BK) channels on somatotrophs but not on gonadotrophs. This is one example where the role of an ion channel type may be clearly established. We demonstrate here that BK channels indeed promote bursting activity in pituitary cells. Blocking BK channels in bursting lacto-somatotroph GH4C1 cells changes their firing activity to spiking, while further adding an artificial BK conductance via dynamic clamp restores bursting. Importantly, this burst-promoting effect requires a relatively fast BK activation/deactivation, as predicted by computational models. We also show that adding a fast-activating BK conductance to spiking gonadotrophs converts the activity of these cells to bursting. Together, our results suggest that differences in BK channel expression may underlie the differences in electrical activity and basal hormone secretion levels among pituitary cell types and that the rapid rate of BK channel activation is key to its role in burst promotion.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Kinetic Properties and Functional Dynamics of Sodium Channels during Repetitive Spiking in a Slow Pacemaker Neuron

Lorin S. Milescu; T. Yamanishi; Krzysztof Ptak; Jeffrey C. Smith

We examined the kinetic properties of voltage-gated Na+ channels and their contribution to the repetitive spiking activity of medullary raphé neurons, which exhibit slow pacemaking and strong spiking adaptation. The study is based on a combination of whole-cell patch-clamp, modeling and real-time computation. Na+ currents were recorded from neurons in brain slices obtained from male and female neonatal rats, using voltage-clamp protocols designed to reduce space-clamp artifacts and to emphasize functionally relevant kinetic features. A detailed kinetic model was formulated to explain the broad range of transient and stationary voltage-dependent properties exhibited by Na+ currents. The model was tested by injecting via dynamic clamp a model-based current as a substitute for the native TTX-sensitive Na+ currents, which were pharmacologically blocked. The model-based current reproduced well the native spike shape and spiking frequency. The dynamics of Na+ channels during repetitive spiking were indirectly examined through this model. By comparing the spiking activities generated with different kinetic models in dynamic-clamp experiments, we determined that state-dependent slow inactivation contributes significantly to spiking adaptation. Through real-time manipulation of the model-based current, we established that suprathreshold Na+ current mainly controls spike shape, whereas subthreshold Na+ current modulates spiking frequency and contributes to the pacemaking mechanism. Since the model-based current was injected in the soma, the results also suggest that somatic Na+ channels are sufficient to establish the essential spiking properties of raphé neurons in vitro.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Isolation of Somatic Na+ Currents by Selective Inactivation of Axonal Channels with a Voltage Prepulse

Lorin S. Milescu; Bruce P. Bean; Jeffrey C. Smith

We present a simple and effective method for isolating the somatic Na+ current recorded under voltage clamp from neurons in brain slices. The principle is to convert the axon from an active compartment capable of generating uncontrolled axonal spikes into a passive structure by selectively inactivating axonal Na+ channels. Typically, whole-cell currents from intact neurons under somatic voltage clamp contain a mixture of Na+ current and axial current caused by escaped axonal spikes. We found that a brief prepulse to voltages near spike threshold evokes the axonal spike, which inactivates axonal but not somatic channels. A subsequent voltage step then evokes only somatic Na+ current from electrotonically proximal sodium channels under good voltage-clamp control. Simulations using a neuron compartmental model support the idea that the prepulse effectively inactivates currents from the axon and isolates well controlled somatic currents. Na+ currents recorded from cortical pyramidal neurons in slices, using the prepulse, were found to have voltage dependence nearly identical to that of currents recorded from acutely dissociated pyramidal neurons. In addition, studies in dissociated neurons show that the prepulse has no visible effect on the voltage dependence and kinetics of Na+ currents elicited by the subsequent voltage step, only decreasing the amplitude of the currents by 10–20%. The technique was effective in several neuronal types in brain slices from male and female neonatal rats and mice, including raphé neurons, cortical pyramidal neurons, inferior olivary neurons, and hypoglossal motoneurons.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

A Modeling Study of T-Type Ca2+ Channel Gating and Modulation by L-Cysteine in Rat Nociceptors

Michael T. Nelson; Lorin S. Milescu; Slobodan M. Todorovic; Reese S. Scroggs

L-cysteine (L-cys) increases the amplitude of T-type Ca(2+) currents in rat T-rich nociceptor-like dorsal root ganglia neurons. The modulation of T-type Ca(2+) channel gating by L-cys was studied by fitting Markov state models to whole-cell currents recorded from T-rich neurons. The best fitting model tested included three resting states and inactivation from the second resting state and the open state. Inactivation and the final opening step were voltage-independent, whereas transitions between the resting states and deactivation were voltage-dependent. The transition rates between the first two resting states were an order of magnitude faster than those between the second and third resting states, and the voltage-dependency of forward transitions through resting states was two to three times greater than for analogous backward transitions. Analysis with the best fitting model suggested that L-cys increases current amplitude mainly by increasing the transition rate from resting to open and decreasing the transition rate from open to inactivated. An additional model was developed that could account for the bi-exponential time course of recovery from inactivation of the currents and the high frequency of blank sweeps in single channel recordings. This model detected basically the same effects of L-cys on channel gating as the best fitting model.


Archive | 2015

Experiments and Theory Electrical Activity in Pituitary Somatotrophs: Mechanism of Spontaneous and Receptor-Controlled

Krasimira Tsaneva-Atanasova; Arthur Sherman; Frederick van Goor; Belisario Dominguez; Ricardo Felix; Eduardo Monjaraz; Joël Tabak; Maurizio Tomaiuolo; Arturo E. Gonzalez-Iglesias; Lorin S. Milescu; Richard; Tamar Eigler; Anat Ben-Shlomo


Archive | 2010

Spiking in a Slow Pacemaker Neuron Kinetic Properties and Functional Dynamics of Sodium Channels during Repetitive

Christopher A. Del Negro; Naohiro Koshiya; Robert J. Butera; Yun Ping Dai; Larry M. Jordan; Nicholas M. Mellen; D. P. Mishra; Lorin S. Milescu; Tadashi Yamanishi; Krzysztof Ptak; Jeffrey C. Smith


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Fast Real-Time Computation of Na Channel Kinetic Models for Dynamic Clamp

Lorin S. Milescu


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Kinetic Modeling of CaV3.1

Katie C. Bittner; Lorin S. Milescu; Dorothy A. Hanck


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Dwell Time And Maximum Likelihood Analysis Of Single Molecule Disulfide Bond Reduction Events While Under A Stretching Force

Robert Szoszkiewicz; Lorin S. Milescu; Julio M. Fernandez

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Jeffrey C. Smith

National Institutes of Health

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Joël Tabak

Florida State University

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Tadashi Yamanishi

National Institutes of Health

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T. Yamanishi

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

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Anat Ben-Shlomo

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Arthur Sherman

National Institutes of Health

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