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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00839.2001
Submitted on 15 October 2001
Accepted on 24 July 2002
Institute National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U.483, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Boîte 23, 75252 Paris Cedex 05, France
Genet, Stéphane and
Bruno Delord.
A Biophysical Model of Nonlinear Dynamics Underlying Plateau
Potentials and Calcium Spikes in Purkinje Cell Dendrites. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2430-2444, 2002. Computational
capabilities of Purkinje cells (PCs) are central to the cerebellum
function. Information originating from the whole nervous system
converges on their dendrites, and their axon is the sole output of the
cerebellar cortex. PC dendrites respond to weak synaptic activation
with long-lasting, low-amplitude plateau potentials, but stronger
synaptic activation can generate fast, large amplitude calcium spikes.
Pharmacological data have suggested the involvement of only the P-type
of Ca channels in both of these electric responses. However, the
mechanism allowing this Ca current to underlie responses with such
different dynamics is still unclear. This mechanism was explored by
constraining a biophysical model with electrophysiological, Ca-imaging,
and single ion channel data. A model is presented here incorporating a
simplified description of [Ca]i regulation and
three ionic currents: 1) the P-type Ca current,
2) a delayed-rectifier K current, and 3) a
generic class of K channels activating sharply in the sub-threshold
voltage range. This model sustains fast spikes and long-lasting
plateaus terminating spontaneously with recovery of the resting
potential. Small depolarizing, tonic inputs turn plateaus into a stable
membrane state and endow the dendrite with bistability properties. With larger tonic inputs, the plateau remains the unique equilibrium state,
showing long traces of transient inhibitory inputs that are called
"valley potentials" because their dynamics mirrors that of
inverted, finite-duration plateaus. Analyzing the slow subsystem
obtained by assuming instantaneous activation of the delayed-rectifier
reveals that the time course of plateaus and valleys is controlled by
the slow [Ca]i dynamics, which arises from the
high Ca-buffering capacity of PCs. A bifurcation analysis shows that
tonic currents modulate sub-threshold dynamics by displacing the
resting state along a hysteresis region edged by two saddle-node bifurcations; these bifurcations mark transitions from finite-duration plateaus to bistability and from bistability to valley potentials, respectively. This low-dimensionality model may be introduced into
large-scale models to explore the role of PC dendrite computations in
the functional capabilities of the cerebellum.
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