Synaptic and intrinsic conductances shape picrotoxin-induced synchronized after-discharges in the guinea-pig hippocampal slice
1. A computer model was constructed of the guinea-pig hippocampal region in vitro, containing 100 pyramidal neurones. This approach has contributed to the understanding of brief (usually less than 100 ms) epileptic events known as 'interictal spikes'. The present study addresses the cellul...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 1993-02, Vol.461 (1), p.525-547 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. A computer model was constructed of the guinea-pig hippocampal region in vitro, containing 100 pyramidal neurones. This
approach has contributed to the understanding of brief (usually less than 100 ms) epileptic events known as 'interictal spikes'.
The present study addresses the cellular mechanisms of more prolonged epileptic events, lasting 200 ms and more, that may
represent short-duration seizures. Each neurone was simulated with a nineteen-compartment model using six voltage-dependent
ionic conductances. The neurones were randomly interconnected with excitatory synapses, each synapse exerting a fast voltage-independent
alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid (AMPA) component and a slower voltage-dependent N-methyl-D-aspartate
(NMDA) component. Each neurone received input from twenty other neurones. 2. This model was able to generate, in response
to synaptic noise or to stimulation of one neurone, a series of synchronized population bursts, the initial (primary) burst
being longer than later (secondary) bursts, terminating in a prolonged after-hyperpolarization. The simulated after-discharge
potentials resemble those recorded experimentally from pyramidal neurones during perfusion of the hippocampal slice with media
containing picrotoxin, a blocker of synaptic inhibition mediated by GABAA receptors. 3. Simulated after-discharges agree with
the following experiments: over a certain range of total NMDA conductance, blockade of AMPA receptors will prevent the occurrence
of synchronized firing, whereas, blockade of NMDA receptors will, in contrast, abolish the secondary bursts, leaving a shortened
and somewhat smaller primary burst. Dendritic potential oscillations occur in phase with somatic oscillations. When interneurones
(some generating GABAA-mediated IPSPs, others generating GABAB IPSPS) are included in the model, the occurrence of synchronized
events was suppressed, the most significant suppressant effect coming from GABAA IPSPS. 4. The model predicts that: a dendritic
calcium spike occurs during each secondary burst; AMPA receptors serve to maintain the synchrony of secondary bursts, as well
as to initiate the primary burst; and that with sufficient total NMDA conductance, synchronized firing can occur even with
AMPA receptors blocked. 5. The model suggests, in addition, that the duration of the initial burst is determined in part by
the experimentally observed delay between Ca2+ entry and peaking of the after-hyperpolarization |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1993.sp019527 |