State-Dependent Coordination of Rhythmic Neuronal
Circuits
Yair Manor, Farzan Nadim, Steven Epstein, Jason Ritt, Eve Marder and Nancy Kopell
Abstract
We describe a novel mechanism by which network oscillations can arise from reciprocal
inhibitory connections between two entirely passive neurons. The model was inspired by the
activation of the gastric mill rhythm in the crab stomatogastric ganglion by the
Modulatory Commissural Ganglion Neuron 1 (MCN1), but is studied here in general terms. One
model neuron has a linear current-voltage curve with a low (L) resting potential and the
second model neuron has a linear current-voltage curve with a high (H) resting potential.
The inhibitory connections between them are graded. There is an extrinsic modulatory
excitatory input to the L neuron and the L neuron presynaptically inhibits the modulatory
neuron. Activation of the extrinsic modulatory neuron elicits stable network oscillations
in which the L and H neurons are active in alternation. The oscillations arise because the
graded reciprocal synapses create the equivalent of a negative-slope conductance region in
the I-V curves for the cells. Geometrical methods are used to analyze the
properties of and the mechanism underlying these network oscillations.
Back to
Publications Page
|