Modeling of Spontaneous Activity in Developing Spinal Cord Using Activity-Dependent Depression in an Excitatory Network
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BORIS DOI
Official URL
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
10751456
Description
Spontaneous episodic activity is a general feature of developing neural networks. In the chick spinal cord, the activity comprises episodes of rhythmic discharge (duration 5-90 sec; cycle rate 0.1-2 Hz) that recur every 2-30 min. The activity does not depend on specialized connectivity or intrinsic bursting neurons and is generated by a network of functionally excitatory connections. Here, we develop an idealized, qualitative model of a homogeneous, excitatory recurrent network that could account for the multiple time-scale spontaneous activity in the embryonic chick spinal cord. We show that cycling can arise from the interplay between excitatory connectivity and fast synaptic depression. The slow episodic behavior is attributable to a slow activity-dependent network depression that is modeled either as a modulation of cellular excitability or as synaptic depression. Although the two descriptions share many features, the model with a slow synaptic depression accounts better for the experimental observations during blockade of excitatory synapses.
Date of Publication
2000-04-15
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Tabak, Joël | |
O'Donovan, Michael J. | |
Rinzel, John |
Additional Credits
Series
Journal of neuroscience
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience
ISSN
0270-6474
Access(Rights)
restricted