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Excitatory actions of gaba during development: the nature of the nurture.

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TLDR
This work proposes that GABA becomes inhibitory by the delayed expression of a chloride exporter, leading to a negative shift in the reversal potential for choride ions, and provides a solution to the problem of how to excite developing neurons to promote growth and synapse formation.
Abstract
In the immature brain, GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) is excitatory, and GABA-releasing synapses are formed before glutamatergic contacts in a wide range of species and structures. GABA becomes inhibitory by the delayed expression of a chloride exporter, leading to a negative shift in the reversal potential for choride ions. I propose that this mechanism provides a solution to the problem of how to excite developing neurons to promote growth and synapse formation while avoiding the potentially toxic effects of a mismatch between GABA-mediated inhibition and glutamatergic excitation. As key elements of this cascade are activity dependent, the formation of inhibition adds an element of nurture to the construction of cortical networks.

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Citations
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Cholinergic Control in Developing Prefrontal–Hippocampal Networks

TL;DR: It is shown that cholinergic projections growing into the rat prefrontal cortex toward the end of the first postnatal week boost the generation of nested gamma oscillations superimposed on discontinuous spindle bursts by acting on functional muscarinic but not nicotinic receptors.
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Prenatal VPA Exposure and Changes in Sensory Processing by the Superior Colliculus.

TL;DR: The results suggest that prenatal VPA treatment affects the development of the superior colliculus and leads to persistent anatomical changes evidenced by aberrant behavior in tasks that require sensory processing.
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Interneuronopathies and their role in early life epilepsies and neurodevelopmental disorders

TL;DR: The current state of knowledge on the origin, development, and migration and integration of GABAergic interneurons, present neurodevelopmental conditions, with or without epilepsy, that have been associated with interneuronopathies are outlined, and the evidence linking certain types ofinterneuronal dysfunction with epilepsy and/or cognitive or behavioral deficits is discussed.
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Synchrony of Neuronal Oscillations Controlled by GABAergic Reversal Potentials

TL;DR: This work shows when shunting and partially depolarizing inhibition can produce synchrony, asynchrony, and coexistence of the two, and shows that this depends critically on such factors as the firing rate, the speed of the synapse, spike frequency adaptation, and, most important, the dynamics of spike generation.
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A Novel Function of Ionotropic γ-Aminobutyric Acid Receptors Involving Alveolar Fluid Homeostasis

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that ionotropic γ-aminobutyric acid receptors contribute to fluid transport in the lung via luminal secretion of chloride, which may have the potential to develop clinical approaches for pulmonary diseases involving abnormal fluid dynamics.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The K+/Cl- co-transporter KCC2 renders GABA hyperpolarizing during neuronal maturation.

TL;DR: It is shown that, in pyramidal neurons of the rat hippocampus, the ontogenetic change in GABAA-mediated responses from depolarizing to hyperpolarizing is coupled to a developmental induction of the expression of the neuronal Cl−-extruding K+/Cl − co-transporter, KCC2 (ref. 7).
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Gamma (40-100 Hz) oscillation in the hippocampus of the behaving rat

TL;DR: It is suggested that gamma oscillation emerges from an interaction between intrinsic oscillatory properties of interneurons and the network properties of the dentate gyrus and that Gamma oscillation in the CA3-CA1 circuitry is suppressed by either the hilar region or the entorhinal cortex.
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Synaptic Assembly of the Brain in the Absence of Neurotransmitter Secretion

TL;DR: Synaptic connectivity does not depend on neurotransmitter secretion, but its maintenance does, and neurotransmitter secretion probably functions to validate already established synaptic connections.
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Giant synaptic potentials in immature rat CA3 hippocampal neurones.

TL;DR: In neurones in which evoked GDPs were blocked by bicuculline, a NMDA‐mediated component was revealed by increasing the strength or the frequency of stimulation, and during the second week of postnatal life, superfusion with bicuciulline induced, as in adult slices, interictal discharges.
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