| Literature DB >> 25673735 |
R Greg Stacey1, Lennart Hilbert2, Thomas Quail3.
Abstract
Neuronal hypersynchrony is implicated in epilepsy and other diseases. The low-frequency, spatially averaged electric fields from many thousands of neurons have been shown to promote synchrony. It remains unclear whether highly transient, spatially localized electric fields from single action potentials (ephaptic coupling) significantly affect spike timing of neighboring cells and in consequence, population synchrony. In this study, we simulated the extracellular potentials and the resulting coupling between neurons in the NEURON environment and generalized their connection rules to create an oscillator network model of a sheet of ephaptically coupled neurons. With the use of both models, we explained several aspects of epileptiform behavior not previously modeled by synaptically coupled networks. Importantly, reduction of neuron spacing induced synchronization via single-spike ephaptic coupling, agreeing with seizure suppression seen clinically and in vitro via extracellular volume adjustment. Further reduction of neuron spacing yielded locally synchronized clusters, providing a mechanism for recent in vitro observations of localized neuronal synchrony in the absence of synaptic and gap-junction coupling.Entities:
Keywords: ephaptic coupling; mathematical model; oscillator network; synchrony
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25673735 PMCID: PMC4440237 DOI: 10.1152/jn.00546.2014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurophysiol ISSN: 0022-3077 Impact factor: 2.714