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Dynamics from Seconds to Hours in Hodgkin-Huxley Model with Time-Dependent Ion Concentrations and Buffer Reservoirs

Niklas Hübel and Markus A Dahlem

PLOS Computational Biology, 2014, vol. 10, issue 12, 1-20

Abstract: The classical Hodgkin-Huxley (HH) model neglects the time-dependence of ion concentrations in spiking dynamics. The dynamics is therefore limited to a time scale of milliseconds, which is determined by the membrane capacitance multiplied by the resistance of the ion channels, and by the gating time constants. We study slow dynamics in an extended HH framework that includes time-dependent ion concentrations, pumps, and buffers. Fluxes across the neuronal membrane change intra- and extracellular ion concentrations, whereby the latter can also change through contact to reservoirs in the surroundings. Ion gain and loss of the system is identified as a bifurcation parameter whose essential importance was not realized in earlier studies. Our systematic study of the bifurcation structure and thus the phase space structure helps to understand activation and inhibition of a new excitability in ion homeostasis which emerges in such extended models. Also modulatory mechanisms that regulate the spiking rate can be explained by bifurcations. The dynamics on three distinct slow times scales is determined by the cell volume-to-surface-area ratio and the membrane permeability (seconds), the buffer time constants (tens of seconds), and the slower backward buffering (minutes to hours). The modulatory dynamics and the newly emerging excitable dynamics corresponds to pathological conditions observed in epileptiform burst activity, and spreading depression in migraine aura and stroke, respectively.Author Summary: The classical theory by Hodgkin and Huxley (HH) describes nerve impulses (spikes) that manifest communication between nerve cells. The underlying mechanism of a single spike is excitability, i.e., a small disturbance triggers a large excursion that reverts without further input to the original state. A spike lasts a 1/1000 second and, even though during this period ions are exchanged across the nerve cell membrane, the change in the corresponding ion concentrations can become significant only in series of such spikes. Under certain pathological conditions, changes in ion concentrations become massive and last minutes to hours before they recover. This establishes a new type of excitability underlying communication failure between nerve cells during migraine and stroke. To clarify this mechanism and to recognize the relevant factors that determine the slow time scales of ion changes, we use an extended version of the classical HH theory. We identify one variable of particular importance, the potassium ion gain or loss through some reservoirs provided by the nerve cell surroundings. We suggest to describe the new excitability as a sequence of two fast processes with constant total ion content separated by two slow processes of ion clearance (loss) and re-uptake (gain).

Date: 2014
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1003941

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003941

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