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How adaptation currents and synaptic inhibition change threshold, gain and variability of neuronal spiking

Many types of neurons show spike rate adaptation, a gradual decrease in spiking activity following a sudden increase in stimulus intensity. This behavior is typically mediated by slow potassium currents through voltage-sensitive low-threshold or calcium-activated high-threshold channels, both of which are susceptible to cholinergic modulation [1]. Such adaptation currents (and changes thereof) contribute to frequency selectivity [2], coding [3] and attention [4]. These effects are likely caused by altering the relationship between synaptic input and spike rate output (I-O curve) as well as the characteristics of inter-spike intervals (ISI). Here we investigate (i) how voltage-dependent subthreshold and spike-dependent adaptation currents change the neuronal I-O curve as well as the ISI distribution for different input statistics and (ii) how these changes compare to those induced by synaptic inhibition.

Based on a population of adaptive exponential integrate-and-fire (aEIF) model neurons receiving noisy external and recurrent synaptic inputs we use the Fokker-Planck equation to compute spike rates and ISI distributions in the limit of a large adaptation timescale.

We show that a subthreshold adaptation current or synaptic inhibition received from independent neurons (external inhibition) change the neuronal I-O curve subtractively. That is, both mechanisms increase the spike threshold. On the other hand, a spike-triggered adaptation current or inhibitory synaptic feedback (recurrent inhibition) change the I-O curve divisively, i.e., they reduce the neuronal gain, see Figure 1A. Both types of adaptation current naturally increase the mean ISI. Surprisingly, they affect spiking variability in opposite ways. Subthreshold adaptation leads to an increase while spike-triggered adaptation causes a decrease of variability, see Figure 1B. Both types of synaptic inhibition however increase spiking variability. We simplify the model by neglecting the leak conductance which allows to analytically derive expressions describing these effects. For validation purposes, we show that the effective description of subthreshold and spike-triggered adaptation in the aEIF model corresponds well to the biophysical description of a voltage-sensitive muscarinic and a calcium-activated potassium current in a Hodgkin-Huxley type neuron model, respectively. Our results suggest that neuronal adaptation currents differentially contribute to neuronal threshold and gain control as well as ISI-based coding schemes.

Figure 1
figure 1

Steady-state I-O relationships (A) and ISI distributions (B) for neurons without adaptation (black) and different degrees of subthreshold (green) or spike-triggered adaptation (magenta), driven by excitatory and inhibitory neurons whose spike times are generated by Poisson processes.

References

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Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the DFG Collaborative Research Center SFB910.

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Correspondence to Josef Ladenbauer.

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This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Ladenbauer, J., Augustin, M. & Obermayer, K. How adaptation currents and synaptic inhibition change threshold, gain and variability of neuronal spiking. BMC Neurosci 14 (Suppl 1), P299 (2013). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1471-2202-14-S1-P299

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  • DOI: https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1471-2202-14-S1-P299

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