Compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.

Bipolar cells of the retina are among the smallest neurons of the nervous system. For this reason, compared to other neurons, their delay in signaling is minimal. Additionally, the small bipolar cell surface combined with the low membrane conductance causes very little attenuation in the signal from...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Frank Rattay, Hassan Bassereh, Isabel Stiennon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209123
id doaj-e04b09a3f5a744fca5c0a2421df36758
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e04b09a3f5a744fca5c0a2421df367582021-03-03T21:01:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011312e020912310.1371/journal.pone.0209123Compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.Frank RattayHassan BasserehIsabel StiennonBipolar cells of the retina are among the smallest neurons of the nervous system. For this reason, compared to other neurons, their delay in signaling is minimal. Additionally, the small bipolar cell surface combined with the low membrane conductance causes very little attenuation in the signal from synaptic input to the terminal. The existence of spiking bipolar cells was proven over the last two decades, but until now no complete model including all important ion channel types was published. The present study amends this and analyzes the impact of the number of model compartments on simulation accuracy. Characteristic features like membrane voltages and spike generation were tested and compared for one-, two-, four- and 117-compartment models of a macaque bipolar cell. Although results were independent of the compartment number for low membrane conductances (passive membranes), nonlinear regimes such as spiking required at least a separate axon compartment. At least a four compartment model containing the functionally different segments dendrite, soma, axon and terminal was needed for understanding signaling in spiking bipolar cells. Whereas for intracellular current application models with small numbers of compartments showed quantitatively correct results in many cases, the cell response to extracellular stimulation is sensitive to spatial variation of the electric field and accurate modeling therefore demands for a large number of short compartments even for passive membranes.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209123
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frank Rattay
Hassan Bassereh
Isabel Stiennon
spellingShingle Frank Rattay
Hassan Bassereh
Isabel Stiennon
Compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Frank Rattay
Hassan Bassereh
Isabel Stiennon
author_sort Frank Rattay
title Compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.
title_short Compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.
title_full Compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.
title_fullStr Compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.
title_full_unstemmed Compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.
title_sort compartment models for the electrical stimulation of retinal bipolar cells.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Bipolar cells of the retina are among the smallest neurons of the nervous system. For this reason, compared to other neurons, their delay in signaling is minimal. Additionally, the small bipolar cell surface combined with the low membrane conductance causes very little attenuation in the signal from synaptic input to the terminal. The existence of spiking bipolar cells was proven over the last two decades, but until now no complete model including all important ion channel types was published. The present study amends this and analyzes the impact of the number of model compartments on simulation accuracy. Characteristic features like membrane voltages and spike generation were tested and compared for one-, two-, four- and 117-compartment models of a macaque bipolar cell. Although results were independent of the compartment number for low membrane conductances (passive membranes), nonlinear regimes such as spiking required at least a separate axon compartment. At least a four compartment model containing the functionally different segments dendrite, soma, axon and terminal was needed for understanding signaling in spiking bipolar cells. Whereas for intracellular current application models with small numbers of compartments showed quantitatively correct results in many cases, the cell response to extracellular stimulation is sensitive to spatial variation of the electric field and accurate modeling therefore demands for a large number of short compartments even for passive membranes.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209123
work_keys_str_mv AT frankrattay compartmentmodelsfortheelectricalstimulationofretinalbipolarcells
AT hassanbassereh compartmentmodelsfortheelectricalstimulationofretinalbipolarcells
AT isabelstiennon compartmentmodelsfortheelectricalstimulationofretinalbipolarcells
_version_ 1714819214770962432