Hamodi AS, Pratt KG. Region-specific regulation of voltagegated intrinsic currents in the developing optic tectum of the Xenopus tadpole. J Neurophysiol 112: 1644 -1655, 2014. First published July 2, 2014; doi:10.1152/jn.00068.2014.-Across the rostrocaudal (RC) axis of the Xenopus tadpole optic tectum exists a developmental gradient. This gradient has served as a useful model to study many aspects of synapse and dendrite maturation. To compliment these studies, we characterized how the intrinsic excitability, the ease in which a neuron can fire action potentials, might also be changing across the same axis. Whole-cell recordings from tectal neurons at different points along the RC axis revealed a graded increase in intrinsic excitability: compared with neurons at the caudal end of the tectum, neurons at the rostral end fired more action potentials in response to current injection and expressed greater peak Na ϩ and K ϩ currents, the major intrinsic currents in these neurons that underlie the action potential. We also observed, along the same axis and in the same direction, a previously described increase in the amount of synaptic drive received by individual neurons (Wu GY, Malinow R, Cline HT. Science 274: [972][973][974][975][976] 1996). Thus as synaptic activity ramps up across the RC axis, so does intrinsic excitability. The reduction of overall circuit activity induced a compensatory scaling up of peak Na ϩ and K ϩ currents only in the caudal portion of the tectum, suggesting a region-specific, compensatory form of plasticity. development; instrinsic currents; optic tectum; region specific; Xenopus tadpole AT THE CAUDAL EDGE OF THE optic tectum of the Xenopus tadpole is a proliferative zone where progenitor cells give rise to tectal neurons. At a rate that is dependent on levels of visually driven activity, these newborn neurons migrate rostrally out of the proliferative zone and into the tectum proper, where they get incorporated into the functioning retinotectal circuit (Sharma and Cline 2010). As new members of the retinotectal circuit, they begin receiving direct synaptic input from retinal ganglion cells of the contralateral eye, the lateral line (via the brain stem), as well as other tectal neurons. This ongoing incorporation of newborn neurons from the proliferative zone creates a spatial developmental gradient, in which the most immature neurons are localized at the caudal end of the tectum, and the most mature are localized to the rostral end (Cline 2001;Lazar 1973;Wu et al. 1996). Many aspects of neural development have been described across this rostrocaudal (RC) axis: tectal neuron dendrites become increasingly complex and arborized (Wu et al. 1999), glutamatergic synapses gain ␣-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors (Wu et al. 1996), AMPA receptors gain glutamate receptor 2 (GluR2) subunits (Aizenman et al. 2002), spontaneous synaptic frequency increases (Wu et al. 1996), and GABAergic transmission becomes increasingly hyperpolarizing (Khakhalin and Aizenman 2012)....