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1.
Eur J Neurosci ; 32(11): 1930-9, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21044179

ABSTRACT

Throughout the brain, neurons encode information in fundamental units of spikes. Each spike represents the combined thresholding of synaptic inputs and intrinsic neuronal dynamics. Here, we address a basic question of spike train formation: how do perithreshold synaptic inputs perturb the output of a spiking neuron? We recorded from single entorhinal principal cells in vitro and drove them to spike steadily at ∼5 Hz (theta range) with direct current injection, then used a dynamic-clamp to superimpose strong excitatory conductance inputs at varying rates. Neurons spiked most reliably when the input rate matched the intrinsic neuronal firing rate. We also found a striking tendency of neurons to preserve their rates and coefficients of variation, independently of input rates. As mechanisms for this rate maintenance, we show that the efficacy of the conductance inputs varied with the relationship of input rate to neuronal firing rate, and with the arrival time of the input within the natural period. Using a novel method of spike classification, we developed a minimal Markov model that reproduced the measured statistics of the output spike trains and thus allowed us to identify and compare contributions to the rate maintenance and resonance. We suggest that the strength of rate maintenance may be used as a new categorization scheme for neuronal response and note that individual intrinsic spiking mechanisms may play a significant role in forming the rhythmic spike trains of activated neurons; in the entorhinal cortex, individual pacemakers may dominate production of the regional theta rhythm.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Entorhinal Cortex/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Electric Stimulation/methods , Entorhinal Cortex/cytology , Models, Neurological , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Periodicity , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans , Synapses/physiology , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , Time Factors
2.
J Neurophysiol ; 96(6): 3305-13, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16928795

ABSTRACT

Actions of inhibitory interneurons organize and modulate many neuronal processes, yet the mechanisms and consequences of plasticity of inhibitory synapses remain poorly understood. We report on spike-timing-dependent plasticity of inhibitory synapses in the entorhinal cortex. After pairing presynaptic stimulations at time t(pre) with evoked postsynaptic spikes at time t(post) under pharmacological blockade of excitation we found, via whole cell recordings, an asymmetrical timing rule for plasticity of the remaining inhibitory responses. Strength of response varied as a function of the time interval Deltat = t(post) - t(pre): for Deltat > 0 inhibitory responses potentiated, peaking at a delay of 10 ms. For Deltat < 0, the synaptic coupling depressed, again with a maximal effect near 10 ms of delay. We also show that changes in synaptic strength depend on changes in intracellular calcium concentrations and demonstrate that the calcium enters the postsynaptic cell through voltage-gated channels. Using network models, we demonstrate how this novel form of plasticity can sculpt network behavior efficiently and with remarkable flexibility.


Subject(s)
Entorhinal Cortex/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Synapses/physiology , Animals , Bicuculline/pharmacology , Calcium Channel Blockers/pharmacology , Calcium Channels, L-Type/physiology , Chelating Agents/pharmacology , Egtazic Acid/analogs & derivatives , Egtazic Acid/pharmacology , Electrophysiology , Entorhinal Cortex/drug effects , Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials/drug effects , Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials/physiology , GABA Antagonists/pharmacology , Models, Neurological , Nerve Net/cytology , Nerve Net/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity/drug effects , Nimodipine/pharmacology , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans , Receptors, AMPA/antagonists & inhibitors , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/antagonists & inhibitors , Seizures/physiopathology , Synapses/drug effects
3.
Science ; 307(5711): 896-901, 2005 Feb 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15705844

ABSTRACT

We investigated decision-making in the leech nervous system by stimulating identical sensory inputs that sometimes elicit crawling and other times swimming. Neuronal populations were monitored with voltage-sensitive dyes after each stimulus. By quantifying the discrimination time of each neuron, we found single neurons that discriminate before the two behaviors are evident. We used principal component analysis and linear discriminant analysis to find populations of neurons that discriminated earlier than any single neuron. The analysis highlighted the neuron cell 208. Hyperpolarizing cell 208 during a stimulus biases the leech to swim; depolarizing it biases the leech to crawl or to delay swimming.


Subject(s)
Ganglia, Invertebrate/physiology , Leeches/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Central Nervous System/cytology , Central Nervous System/physiology , Coloring Agents , Decision Making , Discriminant Analysis , Electric Stimulation , Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer , Ganglia, Invertebrate/cytology , Interneurons/physiology , Leeches/cytology , Locomotion , Membrane Potentials , Microelectrodes , Motor Neurons/physiology , Principal Component Analysis , Swimming
4.
Neural Comput ; 16(8): 1601-40, 2004 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15228747

ABSTRACT

We propose a theoretical framework for odor classification in the olfactory system of insects. The classification task is accomplished in two steps. The first is a transformation from the antennal lobe to the intrinsic Kenyon cells in the mushroom body. This transformation into a higher-dimensional space is an injective function and can be implemented without any type of learning at the synaptic connections. In the second step, the encoded odors in the intrinsic Kenyon cells are linearly classified in the mushroom body lobes. The neurons that perform this linear classification are equivalent to hyperplanes whose connections are tuned by local Hebbian learning and by competition due to mutual inhibition. We calculate the range of values of activity and size of the network required to achieve efficient classification within this scheme in insect olfaction. We are able to demonstrate that biologically plausible control mechanisms can accomplish efficient classification of odors.


Subject(s)
Conditioning, Psychological/physiology , Insecta/physiology , Models, Neurological , Mushroom Bodies/physiology , Olfactory Pathways/physiology , Animals , Linear Models , Mushroom Bodies/cytology , Neurons/classification , Neurons/physiology , Nonlinear Dynamics , Olfactory Pathways/cytology
5.
Neuroscience ; 126(4): 1063-73, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15207339

ABSTRACT

Spectrally broadband stimulation of neurons has been an effective method for studying their dynamic responses to simulated synaptic inputs. Previous studies with such stimulation were mostly based upon the direct intracellular injection of noisy current waveforms. In the present study we analyze and compare the firing output of various identified molluscan neurons to aperiodic, broadband current signals using three types of stimulus paradigms: 1. direct injection in current clamp mode, 2. conductance injection using electrotonic coupling of the input waveform to the neuron, and 3. conductance injection using a simulated chemical excitatory connection. The current waveforms were presented in 15 successive trials and the trial-to-trial variations of the spike responses were analyzed using peri-stimulus spike density functions. Comparing the responses of the neurons to the same type of input waveforms, we found that conductance injection resulted in more reliable and precise spike responses than direct current injection. The statistical parameters of the response spike trains depended on the spectral distribution of the input. The reliability increased with increasing cutoff frequency, while the temporal jitter of spikes changed in the opposite direction. Neurons with endogenous bursting displayed lower reproducibility in their responses to noisy waveforms when injected directly; however, they fired far more reliably and precisely when receiving the same waveforms as conductance inputs. The results show that molluscan neurons are capable of accurately reproducing their responses to synaptic inputs. Conductance injection provides an enhanced experimental technique for assessing the neurons' spike timing reliability and it should be preferred over direct current injection of noisy waveforms.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Computer Simulation , Neurons/physiology , Synapses/physiology , Time , Animals , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Electric Stimulation/methods , Electrophysiology , Neurons/classification , Reproducibility of Results , Snails , Synaptic Transmission
6.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 67(2 Pt 1): 021901, 2003 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12636709

ABSTRACT

We study the synchronization of two model neurons coupled through a synapse having an activity-dependent strength. Our synapse follows the rules of spike-timing dependent plasticity. We show that this plasticity of the coupling between neurons produces enlarged frequency-locking zones and results in synchronization that is more rapid and much more robust against noise than classical synchronization arising from connections with constant strength. We also present a simple discrete map model that demonstrates the generality of the phenomenon.


Subject(s)
Biophysics , Neurons/pathology , Animals , Biophysical Phenomena , Models, Theoretical , Normal Distribution , Time Factors
7.
Neural Netw ; 14(6-7): 865-75, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11665777

ABSTRACT

An essential question raised after the observation of highly variable bursting activity in individual neurons of Central Pattern Generators (CPGs) is how an assembly of such cells can cooperatively act to produce regular signals to motor systems. It is well known that some neurons in the lobster stomatogastric ganglion have a highly irregular spiking-bursting behavior when they are synaptically isolated from any connection in the CPG. Experimental recordings show that periodic stimuli on a single neuron can regulate its firing activity. Other evidence demonstrates that specific chemical and/or electrical synapses among neurons also induce the regularization of the rhythms. In this paper we present a modeling study in which a slow subcellular dynamics, the exchange of calcium between an intracellular store and the cytoplasm, is responsible for the origin and control of the irregular spiking-bursting activity. We show this in simulations of single cells under periodic driving and in minimal networks where the cooperative activity can induce regularization. While often neglected in the description of realistic neuron models, subcellular processes with slow dynamics may play an important role in information processing and short-term memory of spiking-bursting neurons.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Ganglia, Invertebrate/physiology , Models, Neurological , Nephropidae/physiology , Nerve Net/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Periodicity , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , Animals , Calcium Signaling/physiology , Nephropidae/cytology
8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 87(6): 068102, 2001 Aug 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11497865

ABSTRACT

Following studies of olfactory processing in insects and fish, we investigate neural networks whose dynamics in phase space is represented by orbits near the heteroclinic connections between saddle regions (fixed points or limit cycles). These networks encode input information as trajectories along the heteroclinic connections. If there are N neurons in the network, the capacity is approximately e(N-1)!, i.e., much larger than that of most traditional network structures. We show that a small winnerless competition network composed of FitzHugh-Nagumo spiking neurons efficiently transforms input information into a spatiotemporal output.


Subject(s)
Models, Neurological , Nerve Net/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Fishes/physiology , Grasshoppers/physiology , Olfactory Pathways/physiology , Synapses/physiology
9.
Curr Opin Neurobiol ; 11(4): 423-30, 2001 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11502387

ABSTRACT

The use of methods from contemporary nonlinear dynamics in studying neurobiology has been rather limited.Yet, nonlinear dynamics has become a practical tool for analyzing data and verifying models. This has led to productive coupling of nonlinear dynamics with experiments in neurobiology in which the neural circuits are forced with constant stimuli, with slowly varying stimuli, with periodic stimuli, and with more complex information-bearing stimuli. Analysis of these more complex stimuli of neural circuits goes to the heart of how one is to understand the encoding and transmission of information by nervous systems.


Subject(s)
Nervous System Physiological Phenomena , Neurobiology/methods , Nonlinear Dynamics , Animals , Models, Neurological
10.
J Neurosci Methods ; 108(1): 39-48, 2001 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11459616

ABSTRACT

The dynamic clamp protocol allows an experimenter to simulate the presence of membrane conductances in, and synaptic connections between, biological neurons. Existing protocols and commercial ADC/DAC boards provide ready control in and between < or =2 neurons. Control at >2 sites is desirable when studying neural circuits with serial or ring connectivity. Here, we describe how to extend dynamic clamp control to four neurons and their associated synaptic interactions, using a single IBM-compatible PC, an ADC/DAC interface with two analog outputs, and an additional demultiplexing circuit. A specific C++ program, DYNCLAMP4, implements these procedures in a Windows environment, allowing one to change parameters while the dynamic clamp is running. Computational efficiency is increased by varying the duration of the input-output cycle. The program simulates < or =8 Hodgkin-Huxley-type conductances and < or =18 (chemical and/or electrical) synapses in < or =4 neurons and runs at a minimum update rate of 5 kHz on a 450 MHz CPU. (Increased speed is possible in a two-neuron version that does not need auxiliary circuitry). Using identified neurons of the crustacean stomatogastric ganglion, we illustrate on-line parameter modification and the construction of three-member synaptic rings.


Subject(s)
Membrane Potentials/physiology , Models, Neurological , Nerve Net/physiology , Neural Pathways/physiology , Patch-Clamp Techniques/instrumentation , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , User-Computer Interface , Algorithms , Animals , Computer Systems , Crustacea/physiology , Ganglia, Invertebrate/physiology , Microcomputers/standards , Microcomputers/trends
11.
Neuron ; 30(2): 553-67, 2001 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11395014

ABSTRACT

Transient pairwise synchronization of locust antennal lobe (AL) projection neurons (PNs) occurs during odor responses. In a Hodgkin-Huxley-type model of the AL, interactions between excitatory PNs and inhibitory local neurons (LNs) created coherent network oscillations during odor stimulation. GABAergic interconnections between LNs led to competition among them such that different groups of LNs oscillated with periodic Ca(2+) spikes during different 50-250 ms temporal epochs, similar to those recorded in vivo. During these epochs, LN-evoked IPSPs caused phase-locked, population oscillations in sets of postsynaptic PNs. The model shows how alternations of the inhibitory drive can temporally encode sensory information in networks of neurons without precisely tuned intrinsic oscillatory properties.


Subject(s)
Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials/physiology , Grasshoppers/physiology , Mechanoreceptors/physiology , Neurons/physiology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/physiology , Animals , Calcium Signaling/physiology , Electric Stimulation , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Models, Neurological , Nerve Net/physiology , Oscillometry , Receptors, GABA-A/physiology , Receptors, Nicotinic/physiology , Synapses/physiology
12.
Neuron ; 30(2): 569-81, 2001 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11395015

ABSTRACT

Locust antennal lobe (AL) projection neurons (PNs) respond to olfactory stimuli with sequences of depolarizing and hyperpolarizing epochs, each lasting hundreds of milliseconds. A computer simulation of an AL network was used to test the hypothesis that slow inhibitory connections between local neurons (LNs) and PNs are responsible for temporal patterning. Activation of slow inhibitory receptors on PNs by the same GABAergic synapses that underlie fast oscillatory synchronization of PNs was sufficient to shape slow response modulations. This slow stimulus- and neuron-specific patterning of AL activity was resistant to blockade of fast inhibition. Fast and slow inhibitory mechanisms at synapses between LNs and PNs can thus form dynamical PN assemblies whose elements synchronize transiently and oscillate collectively, as observed not only in the locust AL, but also in the vertebrate olfactory bulb.


Subject(s)
Grasshoppers/physiology , Mechanoreceptors/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Odorants , Smell/physiology , Synapses/physiology , Animals , Models, Neurological , Nerve Net/physiology , Neurons/classification , Oscillometry , Reaction Time , Receptors, GABA/physiology , Receptors, Nicotinic/physiology , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/physiology
13.
J Neurophysiol ; 85(4): 1623-38, 2001 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11287486

ABSTRACT

Periodic current forcing was used to investigate the intrinsic dynamics of a small group of electrically coupled neurons in the pyloric central pattern generator (CPG) of the lobster. This group contains three neurons, namely the two pyloric dilator (PD) motoneurons and the anterior burster (AB) interneuron. Intracellular current injection, using sinusoidal waveforms of varying amplitude and frequency, was applied in three configurations of the pacemaker neurons: 1) the complete pacemaker group, 2) the two PDs without the AB, and 3) the AB neuron isolated from the PDs. Depending on the frequency and amplitude of the injected current, the intact pacemaker group exhibited a wide variety of nonlinear behaviors, including synchronization to the forcing, quasiperiodicity, and complex dynamics. In contrast, a single, broad 1:1 entrainment zone characterized the response of the PD neurons when isolated from the main pacemaker neuron AB. The isolated AB responded to periodic forcing in a manner similar to the complete pacemaker group, but with wider zones of synchronization. We have built an analog electronic circuit as an implementation of a modified Hindmarsh-Rose model for simulating the membrane potential activity of pyloric neurons. We subjected this electronic model neuron to the same periodic forcing as used in the biological experiments. This four-dimensional electronic model neuron reproduced the autonomous oscillatory firing patterns of biological pyloric pacemaker neurons, and it expressed the same stationary nonlinear responses to periodic forcing as its biological counterparts. This adds to our confidence in the model. These results strongly support the idea that the intact pyloric pacemaker group acts as a uniform low-dimensional deterministic nonlinear oscillator, and the regular pyloric oscillation is the outcome of cooperative behavior of strongly coupled neurons, having different dynamical and biophysical properties when isolated.


Subject(s)
Neurons/physiology , Nonlinear Dynamics , Periodicity , Pylorus/innervation , Pylorus/physiology , Action Potentials , Animals , Electrophysiology , Fourier Analysis , Models, Neurological , Nephropidae , Reaction Time
14.
Annu Rev Neurosci ; 24: 263-97, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11283312

ABSTRACT

We examine early olfactory processing in the vertebrate and insect olfactory systems, using a computational perspective. What transformations occur between the first and second olfactory processing stages? What are the causes and consequences of these transformations? To answer these questions, we focus on the functions of olfactory circuit structure and on the role of time in odor-evoked integrative processes. We argue that early olfactory relays are active and dynamical networks, whose actions change the format of odor-related information in very specific ways, so as to refine stimulus identification. Finally, we introduce a new theoretical framework ("winnerless competition") for the interpretation of these data.


Subject(s)
Odorants , Olfactory Bulb/physiology , Smell/physiology , Animals , Humans , Models, Neurological , Olfactory Pathways/physiology
15.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 63(1 Pt 2): 016215, 2001 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11304343

ABSTRACT

The synchronization of chaotic rare-earth-doped fiber ring lasers is analyzed. The lasers are first coupled by transmitting a fraction c of the circulating electric field in the transmitter and injecting it into the optical cavity of the receiver. A coupling strategy which relies on modulation of the intensity of the light alone is also examined. Synchronization is studied as a function of the coupling strength, and we see excellent synchronization, even with very small c. We prove that in an open loop configuration (c=1) synchronization is guaranteed due to the particular structure of our equations and of the injection method we use. The generalized synchronization of these model lasers is examined when there is parameter mismatch between the transmitter and receiver lasers. The synchronization is found to be insensitive to a wide range of mismatch in laser parameters, but it is sensitive to other parameters, in particular those associated with the phase and the polarization of the circulating electric field. Communicating information between the transmitter and receiver lasers is also addressed. We investigate a scheme for modulating information onto the chaotic electric field and then demodulating and detecting the information embedded in the chaotic signal passed down the communications channel. We show full recovery with very low error for a wide range of coupling strengths.

16.
Biol Cybern ; 84(1): L1-8, 2001 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11204401

ABSTRACT

The pyloric Central Pattern Generator (CPG) in the lobster has an architecture in which every neuron receives at least one connection from another member of the CPG. We call this a "non-open" network topology. An "open" topology, where at least one neuron does not receive synapses from any other CPG member, is found neither in the pyloric nor in the gastric mill CPG. Here we investigate a possible reason for this topological structure using the ability to perform a biologically functional task as a measure of the efficacy of the network. When the CPG is composed of model neurons that exhibit regular membrane voltage oscillations, open topologies are as able to maximize this functionality as non-open topologies. When we replace these models by neurons which exhibit chaotic membrane voltage oscillations, the functional criterion selects non-open topologies. As isolated neurons from invertebrate CPGs are known in some cases to undergo chaotic oscillations, this suggests that there is a biological basis for the class of non-open network topologies that we observe.


Subject(s)
Models, Neurological , Motor Neurons/physiology , Nephropidae/physiology , Nonlinear Dynamics , Animals , Ganglia, Invertebrate/cytology , Ganglia, Invertebrate/physiology , Periodicity , Pylorus/innervation , Pylorus/physiology
17.
Biol Cybern ; 84(2): 91-101, 2001 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11205354

ABSTRACT

Conductance-based models of neurons from the lobster stomatogastric ganglion (STG) have been developed to understand the observed chaotic behavior of individual STG neurons. These models identify an additional slow dynamical process calcium exchange and storage in the endoplasmic reticulum as a biologically plausible source for the observed chaos in the oscillations of these cells. In this paper we test these ideas further by exploring the dynamical behavior when two model neurons are coupled by electrical or gap junction connections. We compare in detail the model results to the laboratory measurements of electrically-coupled neurons that we reported earlier. The experiments on the biological neurons varied the strength of the effective coupling by applying a parallel, artificial synapse, which changed both the magnitude and polar-of the conductance between the neurons. We observed a sequence of bifarctions that took the neurons from strongly synchronized in-phase behavior. through uncorrelated chaotic oscillations to strongly synchronized and now regular out-of-phase behavior. The model calculations reproduce these observations quantitatively, indicating that slow subcellular processes could account for the mechanisms involved in the synchronization and regularization of the otherwise individual chaotic activities.


Subject(s)
Models, Neurological , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Nephropidae
18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11102068

ABSTRACT

Biological neural communications channels transport environmental information from sensors through chains of active dynamical neurons to neural centers for decisions and actions to achieve required functions. These kinds of communications channels are able to create information and to transfer information from one time scale to the other because of the intrinsic nonlinear dynamics of the component neurons. We discuss a very simple neural information channel composed of sensory input in the form of a spike train that arrives at a model neuron, then moves through a realistic synapse to a second neuron where the information in the initial sensory signal is read. Our model neurons are four-dimensional generalizations of the Hindmarsh-Rose neuron, and we use a model of chemical synapse derived from first-order kinetics. The four-dimensional model neuron has a rich variety of dynamical behaviors, including periodic bursting, chaotic bursting, continuous spiking, and multistability. We show that, for many of these regimes, the parameters of the chemical synapse can be tuned so that information about the stimulus that is unreadable at the first neuron in the channel can be recovered by the dynamical activity of the synapse and the second neuron. Information creation by nonlinear dynamical systems that allow chaotic oscillations is familiar in their autonomous oscillations. It is associated with the instabilities that lead to positive Lyapunov exponents in their dynamical behavior. Our results indicate how nonlinear neurons acting as input/output systems along a communications channel can recover information apparently "lost" in earlier junctions on the channel. Our measure of information transmission is the average mutual information between elements, and because the channel is active and nonlinear, the average mutual information between the sensory source and the final neuron may be greater than the average mutual information at an earlier neuron in the channel. This behavior is strikingly different than the passive role communications channels usually play, and the "data processing theorem" of conventional communications theory is violated by these neural channels. Our calculations indicate that neurons can reinforce reliable transmission along a chain even when the synapses and the neurons are not completely reliable components. This phenomenon is generic in parameter space, robust in the presence of noise, and independent of the discretization process. Our results suggest a framework in which one might understand the apparent design complexity of neural information transduction networks. If networks with many dynamical neurons can recover information not apparent at various waystations in the communications channel, such networks may be more robust to noisy signals, may be more capable of communicating many types of encoded sensory neural information, and may be the appropriate design for components, neurons and synapses, which can be individually imprecise, inaccurate "devices."


Subject(s)
Models, Neurological , Neurons, Afferent/physiology , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , Action Potentials , Information Theory , Nerve Net/physiology , Synapses/physiology
19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11088744

ABSTRACT

We report on experimental studies of synchronization phenomena in a pair of analog electronic neurons (ENs). The ENs were designed to reproduce the observed membrane voltage oscillations of isolated biological neurons from the stomatogastric ganglion of the California spiny lobster Panulirus interruptus. The ENs are simple analog circuits which integrate four-dimensional differential equations representing fast and slow subcellular mechanisms that produce the characteristic regular/chaotic spiking-bursting behavior of these cells. In this paper we study their dynamical behavior as we couple them in the same configurations as we have done for their counterpart biological neurons. The interconnections we use for these neural oscillators are both direct electrical connections and excitatory and inhibitory chemical connections: each realized by analog circuitry and suggested by biological examples. We provide here quantitative evidence that the ENs and the biological neurons behave similarly when coupled in the same manner. They each display well defined bifurcations in their mutual synchronization and regularization. We report briefly on an experiment on coupled biological neurons and four-dimensional ENs, which provides further ground for testing the validity of our numerical and electronic models of individual neural behavior. Our experiments as a whole present interesting new examples of regularization and synchronization in coupled nonlinear oscillators.


Subject(s)
Biological Clocks , Nephropidae/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Computer Simulation , Electrophysiology , Ganglia, Invertebrate/cytology , Membrane Potentials , Models, Neurological , Synapses/physiology
20.
Biol Cybern ; 82(6): 517-27, 2000 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10879435

ABSTRACT

Chaotic bursting has been recorded in synaptically isolated neurons of the pyloric central pattern generating (CPG) circuit in the lobster stomatogastric ganglion. Conductance-based models of pyloric neurons typically fail to reproduce the observed irregular behavior in either voltage time series or state-space trajectories. Recent suggestions of Chay [Biol Cybern 75: 419-431] indicate that chaotic bursting patterns can be generated by model neurons that couple membrane currents to the nonlinear dynamics of intracellular calcium storage and release. Accordingly, we have built a two-compartment model of a pyloric CPG neuron incorporating previously described membrane conductances together with intracellular Ca2+ dynamics involving the endoplasmic reticulum and the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor IP3R. As judged by qualitative inspection and quantitative, nonlinear analysis, the irregular voltage oscillations of the model neuron resemble those seen in the biological neurons. Chaotic bursting arises from the interaction of fast membrane voltage dynamics with slower intracellular Ca2+ dynamics and, hence, depends on the concentration of IP3. Despite the presence of 12 independent dynamical variables, the model neuron bursts chaotically in a subspace characterized by 3-4 active degrees of freedom. The critical aspect of this model is that chaotic oscillations arise when membrane voltage processes are coupled to another slow dynamic. Here we suggest this slow dynamic to be intracellular Ca2+ handling.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Inositol 1,4,5-Trisphosphate/metabolism , Models, Biological , Neurons/physiology , Action Potentials , Animals , Calcium Channels/metabolism , Humans , Inositol 1,4,5-Trisphosphate Receptors , Nephropidae , Neurons/metabolism , Pylorus/innervation , Pylorus/metabolism , Pylorus/physiology , Receptors, Cytoplasmic and Nuclear/metabolism
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