Activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.

During normal neuronal activity, ionic concentration gradients across a neuron's membrane are often assumed to be stable. Prolonged spiking activity, however, can reduce transmembrane gradients and affect voltage dynamics. Based on mathematical modeling, we investigated the impact of neuronal a...

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Main Authors: Susana Andrea Contreras, Jan-Hendrik Schleimer, Allan T Gulledge, Susanne Schreiber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-05-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008510
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spelling doaj-c6335de2418c40409042afdd18abfc902021-07-03T04:31:30ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582021-05-01175e100851010.1371/journal.pcbi.1008510Activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.Susana Andrea ContrerasJan-Hendrik SchleimerAllan T GulledgeSusanne SchreiberDuring normal neuronal activity, ionic concentration gradients across a neuron's membrane are often assumed to be stable. Prolonged spiking activity, however, can reduce transmembrane gradients and affect voltage dynamics. Based on mathematical modeling, we investigated the impact of neuronal activity on ionic concentrations and, consequently, the dynamics of action potential generation. We find that intense spiking activity on the order of a second suffices to induce changes in ionic reversal potentials and to consistently induce a switch from a regular to an intermittent firing mode. This transition is caused by a qualitative alteration in the system's voltage dynamics, mathematically corresponding to a co-dimension-two bifurcation from a saddle-node on invariant cycle (SNIC) to a homoclinic orbit bifurcation (HOM). Our electrophysiological recordings in mouse cortical pyramidal neurons confirm the changes in action potential dynamics predicted by the models: (i) activity-dependent increases in intracellular sodium concentration directly reduce action potential amplitudes, an effect typically attributed solely to sodium channel inactivation; (ii) extracellular potassium accumulation switches action potential generation from tonic firing to intermittently interrupted output. Thus, individual neurons may respond very differently to the same input stimuli, depending on their recent patterns of activity and/or the current brain-state.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008510
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susana Andrea Contreras
Jan-Hendrik Schleimer
Allan T Gulledge
Susanne Schreiber
spellingShingle Susana Andrea Contreras
Jan-Hendrik Schleimer
Allan T Gulledge
Susanne Schreiber
Activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Susana Andrea Contreras
Jan-Hendrik Schleimer
Allan T Gulledge
Susanne Schreiber
author_sort Susana Andrea Contreras
title Activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.
title_short Activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.
title_full Activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.
title_fullStr Activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.
title_full_unstemmed Activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.
title_sort activity-mediated accumulation of potassium induces a switch in firing pattern and neuronal excitability type.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2021-05-01
description During normal neuronal activity, ionic concentration gradients across a neuron's membrane are often assumed to be stable. Prolonged spiking activity, however, can reduce transmembrane gradients and affect voltage dynamics. Based on mathematical modeling, we investigated the impact of neuronal activity on ionic concentrations and, consequently, the dynamics of action potential generation. We find that intense spiking activity on the order of a second suffices to induce changes in ionic reversal potentials and to consistently induce a switch from a regular to an intermittent firing mode. This transition is caused by a qualitative alteration in the system's voltage dynamics, mathematically corresponding to a co-dimension-two bifurcation from a saddle-node on invariant cycle (SNIC) to a homoclinic orbit bifurcation (HOM). Our electrophysiological recordings in mouse cortical pyramidal neurons confirm the changes in action potential dynamics predicted by the models: (i) activity-dependent increases in intracellular sodium concentration directly reduce action potential amplitudes, an effect typically attributed solely to sodium channel inactivation; (ii) extracellular potassium accumulation switches action potential generation from tonic firing to intermittently interrupted output. Thus, individual neurons may respond very differently to the same input stimuli, depending on their recent patterns of activity and/or the current brain-state.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008510
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AT allantgulledge activitymediatedaccumulationofpotassiuminducesaswitchinfiringpatternandneuronalexcitabilitytype
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