Encoder Adaptation Modulates the Visual Responses of Crayfish Interneurons

2004 ◽  
Vol 92 (1) ◽  
pp. 327-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymon M. Glantz ◽  
John P. Schroeter

The responses of sustaining and dimming fibers were characterized by the time varying firing rates elicited by extrinsic current and flashes of light. These data were simulated by an adaptive integrate-and-fire model. A postimpulse shunt conductance simulated spike-frequency adaptation. The correlation between observed and model current-elicited impulse rates was 0.94–0.98. However, except for a difference in input resistance (both measured and simulated), the voltage to impulse encoders of the two cell groups was similar and exhibited comparable degrees of spike-frequency adaptation (40 to 45%). The encoder model derived from current-elicited responses (with fixed parameters) was used to simulate visual responses elicited by light flashes. These simulations included a synaptic current derived from the time course of the postsynaptic potential (PSP). The sustaining fiber visual response consisted of a large excitatory PSP and high-frequency transient burst that adapted (by ∼80%) to a low-frequency plateau discharge. The simulations indicated that spike-frequency adaptation had no effect on the transient discharge but reduced the plateau firing rate by ∼60%. Encoder adaptation enhances the sustaining fiber response to the time derivative of the stimulus. In dimming fibers, the light flash elicits an inhibitory PSP that interrupts the “dark discharge” and an off response following the end of the flash. The simulations indicated that spike-frequency adaptation reduces the firing rate of both the dark discharge and the off response. Thus the model suggests that different effects of encoder adaptation on the two cell types arise from the same encoder mechanisms, but different actions are determined by differences in impulse rate and the time course of the discharge.

2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
pp. 2951-2962 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabrizio Gabbiani ◽  
Holger G. Krapp

We investigated in vivo the characteristics of spike-frequency adaptation and the intrinsic membrane properties of an identified, looming-sensitive interneuron of the locust optic lobe, the lobula giant movement detector (LGMD). The LGMD had an input resistance of 4–5 MΩ, a membrane time constant of about 8 ms, and exhibited inward rectification and rebound spiking after hyperpolarizing current pulses. Responses to depolarizing current pulses revealed the neuron's intrinsic bursting properties and pronounced spike-frequency adaptation. The characteristics of adaptation, including its time course, the attenuation of the firing rate, the mutual dependency of these two variables, and their dependency on injected current, closely followed the predictions of a model first proposed to describe the adaptation of cat visual cortex pyramidal neurons in vivo. Our results thus validate the model in an entirely different context and suggest that it might be applicable to a wide variety of neurons across species. Spike-frequency adaptation is likely to play an important role in tuning the LGMD and in shaping the variability of its responses to visual looming stimuli.


1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (5) ◽  
pp. 1799-1810 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Sawczuk ◽  
R. K. Powers ◽  
M. D. Binder

1. We studied spike frequency adaptation of motoneuron discharge in the rat hypoglossal nucleus using a brain stem slice preparation. The characteristics of adaptation in response to long (60 s) injected current steps were qualitatively similar to those observed previously in cat hindlimb motoneurons. The discharge rate typically exhibited a rapid initial decline, characterized by a linear frequency-time relation, followed by a gradual exponential decline that continued for the duration of current injection. However, a more systematic, quantitative analysis of the data revealed that there were often three distinct phases of the adaptation rather than two. 2. The three phases of adaptation (initial, early, and late) were present in at least one 60-s trial of repetitive firing in all but a small number of motoneurons. Initial adaptation was limited to the first few spikes except in a few trials (7%) in which there was no initial adaptation. The time course of the subsequent decline in rate could be adequately described by a single-exponential function in about half of the trials (48%). In the remaining trials this subsequent decline in frequency was better described as the sum of two exponential functions: an early phase, lasting < 2 s, and a late phase, which lasted for the duration of the discharge period. 3. The magnitude of initial adaptation was correlated with the initial firing frequency (i.e., the reciprocal of the 1st interspike interval). The magnitudes of the early and late phases of adaptation were correlated with the firing frequency reached at the end of initial adaptation. Neither the magnitudes nor the time courses of the three phases were correlated with other membrane properties such as input resistance, rheobase, or repetitive firing threshold. 4. The slope of the frequency-current (f-I) curve was steeper in the initial phase (first 2-5 spikes) than in either the early (< 2 s) or late (> 2 s) phases of adaptation as previously reported by other investigators. In the absence of early adaptation, a steady state for the f-I slope was reached by 0.7-1 s, the time typically reported in studies of repetitive discharge. However, when early adaptation was present (50% of the trials), a steady-state value for the f-I slope was not reached until the cell had discharged for > 1 s. 5. To characterize the time course of firing rate recovery from the adaptive processes, the current was turned off for periods of < or = 10 s during the course of a 60-s trial.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (6) ◽  
pp. 3689-3697 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Barraza ◽  
Hitoshi Kita ◽  
Charles J. Wilson

Neurons of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) are very sensitive to applied currents, firing at 10–20/s during spontaneous activity, but increasing to peak firing rates of 200/s with applied currents <0.5 nA. They receive a powerful tonic excitatory input from neurons in the cerebral cortex, yet in vivo maintain an irregular firing rate only slightly higher than the autonomous firing rate seen in slices. Spike frequency adaptation acts to normalize background firing rate by removing slow trends in firing due to changes in average input. Subthalamic neurons have been previously described as showing little spike frequency adaptation, but this was based on tests using brief stimuli. We applied long-duration depolarizing current steps to STN neurons in slices and observed a very strong spike frequency adaptation with a time constant of 20 s and that recovered at a similar rate. This adaptation could return firing to near-baseline levels during prolonged current pulses that transiently drove the cells at high rates. The current responsible for adaptation was studied in voltage clamp during and after high-frequency driving of the cell and was determined to be a slowly accumulating K+ current. This current was independent of calcium or sodium entry and could be induced with long-duration voltage steps after blockade of action potentials. In addition to the adaptation current, driven firing produced slow inactivation of the persistent Na+ current, which also contributed to the reduced excitability of STN cells during and after driven firing.


2015 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 507-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. C. Alan Fung ◽  
S.-i. Amari

Attractor models are simplified models used to describe the dynamics of firing rate profiles of a pool of neurons. The firing rate profile, or the neuronal activity, is thought to carry information. Continuous attractor neural networks (CANNs) describe the neural processing of continuous information such as object position, object orientation, and direction of object motion. Recently it was found that in one-dimensional CANNs, short-term synaptic depression can destabilize bump-shaped neuronal attractor activity profiles. In this article, we study two-dimensional CANNs with short-term synaptic depression and spike frequency adaptation. We found that the dynamics of CANNs with short-term synaptic depression and CANNs with spike frequency adaptation are qualitatively similar. We also found that in both kinds of CANNs, the perturbative approach can be used to predict phase diagrams, dynamical variables, and speed of spontaneous motion.


2001 ◽  
Vol 1 (02) ◽  
pp. 135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory D. Smith ◽  
Charles L. Cox ◽  
Murray S. Sherman ◽  
John Rinzel

2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (5) ◽  
pp. 2463-2476 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle M. Martin

Electrophysiological properties of lamprey spinal motoneurons were measured to determine whether their cellular properties change as the spinal cord goes from a quiescent state to the active state of fictive swimming. Intracellular microelectrode recordings of membrane potential were made from motoneurons in the isolated spinal cord preparation. Electrophysiological properties were first characterized in the quiescent spinal cord, and then fictive swimming was induced by perfusion with d-glutamate and the measurements were repeated. During the depolarizing excitatory phase of fictive swimming, the motoneurons had significantly reduced rheobase and significantly increased input resistance compared with the quiescent state, with no significant changes in these parameters during the repolarizing inhibitory phase of swimming. Spike threshold did not change significantly during fictive swimming compared with the quiescent state. During fictive swimming, the slope of the spike frequency versus injected current ( F-I) relationship decreased significantly as did spike-frequency adaptation and the amplitude of the slow after-spike hyperpolarization (sAHP). Serotonin is known to be released endogenously from the spinal cord during fictive swimming and is known to reduce the amplitude of the sAHP. Therefore the effects of serotonin on cellular properties were tested in the quiescent spinal cord. It was found that, in addition to reducing the sAHP amplitude, serotonin also reduced the slope of the F-I relationship and reduced spike-frequency adaptation, reproducing the changes observed in these parameters during fictive swimming. Application of spiperone, a serotonin antagonist, significantly increased the sAHP amplitude during fictive swimming but had no significant effect on F-I slope or adaptation. Because serotonin may act in part through reduction of calcium currents, the effect of calcium-free solution (cobalt substituted for calcium) was tested in the quiescent spinal cord. Similar to fictive swimming and serotonin application, the calcium-free solution significantly reduced the sAHP amplitude, the slope of the F-I relationship, and spike-frequency adaptation. These results suggest that there are significant changes in the firing properties of motoneurons during fictive swimming compared with the quiescent state, and it is possible that these changes may be attributed in part to the endogenous release of serotonin acting via reduction of calcium currents.


2005 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 1035-1041 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinsong Zeng ◽  
Randall K. Powers ◽  
Gregory Newkirk ◽  
Marc Yonkers ◽  
Marc D. Binder

In response to constant current inputs, the firing rates of motoneurons typically show a continuous decline over time. The biophysical mechanisms underlying this process, called spike-frequency adaptation, are not well understood. Spike-frequency adaptation normally exhibits a rapid initial phase, followed by a slow, later phase that continues throughout the duration of firing. One possible mechanism mediating the later phase might be a reduction in the persistent sodium current ( INaP) that has been shown to diminish the capacity of cortical pyramidal neurons and spinal motoneurons to sustain repetitive firing. In this study, we used the anticonvulsant phenytoin to reduce the INaP of juvenile rat hypoglossal motoneurons recorded in brain stem slices, and we examined the consequences of a reduction in INaP on the magnitude and time course of spike-frequency adaptation. Adding phenytoin to the bathing solution (≥50 μM) generally produced a marked reduction in the persistent inward currents (PICs) recorded at the soma in response to slow, voltage-clamp triangular ramp commands (−70 to 0 mV and back). However, the same concentrations of phenytoin appeared to have no significant effect on spike-frequency adaptation even though the phenytoin often augmented the reduction in action potential amplitude that occurs during repetitive firing. The surprising finding that the reduction of a source of sustained inward current had no appreciable effect on the pattern of spike generation suggests that several types of membrane channels must act cooperatively to insure that these motoneurons can generate the sustained repetitive firing required for long-lasting motor behaviors.


2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 761-770 ◽  
Author(s):  
Galit Fuhrmann ◽  
Henry Markram ◽  
Misha Tsodyks

Spike-frequency adaptation in neocortical pyramidal neurons was examined using the whole cell patch-clamp technique and a phenomenological model of neuronal activity. Noisy current was injected to reproduce the irregular firing typically observed under in vivo conditions. The response was quantified by computing the poststimulus histogram (PSTH). To simulate the spiking activity of a pyramidal neuron, we considered an integrate-and-fire model to which an adaptation current was added. A simplified model for the mean firing rate of an adapting neuron under noisy conditions is also presented. The mean firing rate model provides a good fit to both experimental and simulation PSTHs and may therefore be used to study the response characteristics of adapting neurons to various input currents. The models enable identification of the relevant parameters of adaptation that determine the shape of the PSTH and allow the computation of the response to any change in injected current. The results suggest that spike frequency adaptation determines a preferred frequency of stimulation for which the phase delay of a neuron's activity relative to an oscillatory input is zero. Simulations show that the preferred frequency of single neurons dictates the frequency of emergent population rhythms in large networks of adapting neurons. Adaptation could therefore be one of the crucial factors in setting the frequency of population rhythms in the neocortex.


1988 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 869-878 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Llinás ◽  
J. Lopez-Barneo

1. The long-term adaptation of repetitive firing in guinea pig superior colliculus neurons was studied in a mesencephalic slice preparation using intracellular recording techniques. 2. This long-term adaptation was characterized by a decrease in the number of action potentials generated by a depolarizing pulse of constant amplitude applied at frequencies of 0.5-2 Hz. Long-term adaptation appeared in all cells tested regardless of whether they showed short-term spike frequency adaptation during each pulse. 3. Long-term adaptation had a close-to-exponential time course with a time constant of 4.085 +/- 0.675 s (mean +/- SD, n = 8). This phenomenon developed more rapidly as the stimulus frequency increased and was paralleled by a progressive hyperpolarization of the membrane potential which, at the termination of the train of stimuli, remained 6-10 mV more negative than the resting value. 4. The hyperpolarization and the spike frequency adaptation recovered spontaneously in approximately 60 s. The time constant of recovery was 14.66 +/- 1.189 s (n = 4). 5. The afterhyperpolarization (AHP) was also paralleled by a decrease in the input resistance of the cells. This response and the adaptation disappeared after removal of Ca2+ or after addition of Cd2+ to the external solution. This suggests that Ca2+ entry during trains of action potentials activates a Ca2+-dependent K+ conductance with an unusually slow kinetics. 6. This conductance appears to differ from other Ca2+-dependent K+ conductances in that it was blocked by 4-aminopyridine. 7. The properties of this long-term adaptation are remarkably similar to those reported for visual habituation; thus this newly described K+ conductance may be pertinent to the understanding of this behavioral phenomenon.


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