| Literature DB >> 33748701 |
Cynthia R Steinhardt1, Gene Y Fridman1,2,3.
Abstract
In contrast to the conventional pulsatile neuromodulation that excites neurons, galvanic or direct current stimulation can excite, inhibit, or sensitize neurons. The vestibular system presents an excellent system for studying galvanic neural interface due to the spontaneously firing afferent activity that needs to be either suppressed or excited to convey head motion sensation. We determine the cellular mechanisms underlying the beneficial properties of galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) by creating a computational model of the vestibular end organ that elicits all experimentally observed response characteristics to GVS simultaneously. When GVS was modeled to affect the axon alone, the complete experimental data could not be replicated. We found that if GVS affects hair cell vesicle release and axonal excitability simultaneously, our modeling results matched all experimental observations. We conclude that contrary to the conventional belief that GVS affects only axons, the hair cells are likely also affected by this stimulation paradigm.Entities:
Keywords: Biological Sciences; Cellular Neuroscience; Neuroscience
Year: 2021 PMID: 33748701 PMCID: PMC7967006 DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.102205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: iScience ISSN: 2589-0042