Electrical transient laws in neuronal microdomains based on electro-diffusion
Abstract
The current-voltage (I-V) conversion characterizes the physiology of cellular microdomains and reflects cellular communication, excitability, and electrical transduction. Yet deriving such I-V laws remains a major challenge in most cellular microdomains due to their small sizes and the difficulty of accessing voltage with a high nanometer precision. We present here novel analytical relations derived for different numbers of ionic species inside a neuronal micro/nano-domains, such as dendritic spines. When a steady-state current is injected, we find a large deviation from the classical Ohm's law, showing that the spine neck resistance is insuficent to characterize electrical properties. For a constricted spine neck, modeled by a hyperboloid, we obtain a new I-V law that illustrates the consequences of narrow passages on electrical conduction. Finally, during a fast current transient, the local voltage is modulated by the distance between activated voltage-gated channels. To conclude, electro-diffusion laws can now be used to interpret voltage distribution in neuronal microdomains.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1803.03940,
title = {Electrical transient laws in neuronal microdomains based on electro-diffusion},
author = {J. Cartailler and D. Holcman},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1803.03940},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
3 figures;submitted to PRL