| Literature DB >> 26635545 |
Phillip J Hendrickson1, Gene J Yu1, Dong Song1, Theodore W Berger1.
Abstract
This paper reports on findings from a million-cell granule cell model of the rat dentate gyrus that was used to explore the contributions of local interneuronal and associational circuits to network-level activity. The model contains experimentally derived morphological parameters for granule cells, which each contain approximately 200 compartments, and biophysical parameters for granule cells, basket cells, and mossy cells that were based both on electrophysiological data and previously published models. Synaptic input to cells in the model consisted of glutamatergic AMPA-like EPSPs and GABAergic-like IPSPs from excitatory and inhibitory neurons, respectively. The main source of input to the model was from layer II entorhinal cortical neurons. Network connectivity was constrained by the topography of the system, and was derived from axonal transport studies, which provided details about the spatial spread of axonal terminal fields, as well as how subregions of the medial and lateral entorhinal cortices project to subregions of the dentate gyrus. Results of this study show that strong feedback inhibition from the basket cell population can cause high-frequency rhythmicity in granule cells, while the strength of feedforward inhibition serves to scale the total amount of granule cell activity. Results furthermore show that the topography of local interneuronal circuits can have just as strong an impact on the development of spatio-temporal clusters in the granule cell population as the perforant path topography does, both sharpening existing clusters and introducing new ones with a greater spatial extent. Finally, results show that the interactions between the inhibitory and associational loops can cause high frequency oscillations that are modulated by a low-frequency oscillatory signal. These results serve to further illustrate the importance of topographical constraints on a global signal processing feature of a neural network, while also illustrating how rich spatio-temporal and oscillatory dynamics can evolve from a relatively small number of interacting local circuits.Entities:
Keywords: associational-commissural fibers; compartmental model; dentate gyrus; inhibition; interneurons; oscillations; spatio-temporal patterns; topography
Year: 2015 PMID: 26635545 PMCID: PMC4647071 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2015.00155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
Synaptic parameters, including numbers of synapses, synaptic weights, EPSP/IPSP magnitudes and rise/fall times, and reversal potentials.
| Synapse counts: | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| GC # spines – inner 1/3 | 1150–1350 | GC to BC | 500–1400 |
| GC # spines – middle 1/3 | 1050–1200 | MEC to BC | 100–200 |
| GC # spines – outer 1/3 | 1100–1300 | LEC to BC | 100–200 |
| BC to GC | 40–80 | ||
| MC to GC | 750–850 | MC to BC | 950–1050 |
| MEC to GC | 1.17E-5 | GC to BC | 1.13E-4 |
| LEC to GC | 1.50E-5 | MEC to BC | 4.21E-6 |
| BC to GC | 1.09E-5 | LEC to BC | 4.21E-6 |
| GC to MC | 2.00E-5 | MC to GC | 1.17E-6 |
| MC to BC | 2.27E-5 | ||
| MEC to GC | 1.05 | GC to BC | 0.1 |
| LEC to GC | 1.05 | EC to BC | 1.05 |
| BC to GC | 1.05 | ||
| MEC to GC | 5.75 | GC to BC | 0.59 |
| LEC to GC | 5.75 | EC to BC | 18 |
| BC to GC | 5.75 | ||
| MEC to GC | 0 | GC to BC | 0 |
| LEC to GC | 0 | EC to BC | 0 |
| BC to GC | -75 |
Passive and active biophysical parameters for dentate cells.
| Cell Type | Property/mechanism | Soma | GCL | Inner 1/3 | Middle 1/3 | Outer 1/3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Granule cell | Soma S.A. (cm2) | 4.97E-04 | ||||
| Soma volume (cm3) | 1.11E-06 | |||||
| R.M.P. (mV) | -75.01 | |||||
| Rin (M-Ohms) | 185.86 | |||||
| Membrane time constant (ms) | 31 | |||||
| Latency to first AP (ms) | 100 | |||||
| Cm (uF/cm2) | 9.8 | 9.8 | 15.68 | 15.68 | 15.68 | |
| Ra (ohm-cm) | 210 | 210 | 210 | 210 | 210 | |
| Leak (S/cm2) | 2.90E-04 | 2.90E-04 | 4.57E-04 | 4.57E-04 | 4.57E-04 | |
| Sodium (S/cm2) | 0.84 | 0.126 | 0.091 | 0.056 | – | |
| Delayed rectifier K (slow) | 0.006 | 0.006 | 0.006 | 0.006 | 0.008 | |
| Delayed rectifier K (fast) | 0.036 | 0.009 | 0.009 | 0.00225 | 0.00225 | |
| A-type K (S/cm2) | 0.108 | – | – | – | – | |
| L-type Ca (S/cm2) | 0.0025 | 0.00375 | 0.00375 | 0.00025 | – | |
| N-type Ca (S/cm2) | 1.47E-03 | 7.35E-04 | 7.35E-04 | 7.35E-04 | 7.35E-04 | |
| T-type Ca (S/cm2) | 0.000074 | 0.00015 | 0.0005 | 0.001 | 0.002 | |
| Ca-dependent K (SK) | 0.001 | 0.0004 | 0.0002 | – | – | |
| Ca- and V- dependent K (BK) | 1.20E-04 | 1.20E-04 | 2.00E-04 | 4.80E-04 | 4.80E-04 | |
| Tau for decay of Ca (ms) | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 10 | |
| Steady-state Ca (mol) | 5.00E-06 | 5.00E-06 | 5.00E-06 | 5.00E-06 | 5.00E-06 | |
| Mossy cell | Soma S.A. (cm2) | 2.51E-03 | ||||
| Soma volume (cm3) | 2.51E-05 | |||||
| R.M.P. (mV) | -64.75 | |||||
| Cm (uF/cm2) | 0.6 | |||||
| Ra (ohm-cm) | 100 | |||||
| Leak (S/cm2) | 1.10E-05 | |||||
| Sodium (S/cm2) | 0.12 | |||||
| Delayed rectifier K (fast) | 5.00E-04 | |||||
| A-type K (S/cm2) | 1.00E-05 | |||||
| L-type Ca (S/cm2) | 6.00E-04 | |||||
| N-type Ca (S/cm2) | 5.00E-05 | |||||
| Ca-dependent K (SK) | 1.60E-03 | |||||
| Ca- and V- dependent K (BK) | 1.65E-02 | |||||
| Tau for decay of Ca (ms) | 10 | |||||
| Steady-state Ca (mol) | 5.00E-06 |
Summary of changes in network activity due to strengthening and weakening individual synaptic connections.
| Connection | Increase/decrease weight? | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| MC → GC | Increase | Strong high-frequency activity modulated by low-frequency oscillation. High-frequency bursts are highly synchronous. |
| Decrease | Less, but more regular GC activity; spatio-temporal clusters slightly more “fuzzy;” fewer long (3–4 mm) clusters. | |
| GC → MC | Increase | Slight increase in both mossy and basket cell activity, with corresponding decrease in granule cell activity. Otherwise, little discernable difference in activity. |
| Decrease | Slight decrease in both mossy and basket cell activity. Otherwise, little discernable difference. | |
| MC → BC | Increase | GC activity is more regular; no other strong differences. |
| Decrease | Strong high-frequency activity modulated by low-frequency oscillation. Low frequency component is higher than in MC → GC and BC → GC cases, while high frequency component is slower. | |
| GC → BC | Increase | Very regular activity in all three dentate cell populations. |
| Decrease | Low-frequency oscillation modulates strength and density of spatio-temporal clusters in granule cells. | |
| BC → GC | Increase | Spatio-temporal clusters have sharpter tailing edges, with less inter-cluster activity. |
| Decrease | Strong high-frequency activity modulated by low-frequency oscillation. Synchrony in high-frequency activity not as strong as for MC → GC case. |