4.5 Article

A Network Architecture for Bidirectional Neurovascular Coupling in Rat Whisker Barrel Cortex

Journal

FRONTIERS IN COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fncom.2021.638700

Keywords

bidirectional network model; hypoxia-ischemia; neurovascular coupling; plasticity; whisker barrel cortex

Funding

  1. Department of Biotechnology (DBT), Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India [BIO/17-18/303/DBTX/SRIN]

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Neurovascular coupling is a bidirectional system where neurons transmit signals to blood vessels for vasodilation, and vessels feedback available oxygen to fuel neural firing. This feedback mechanism influences the formation of neuronal maps in both normal and pathological conditions such as hypoxia and hypoxia-ischemia.
Neurovascular coupling is typically considered as a master-slave relationship between the neurons and the cerebral vessels: the neurons demand energy which the vessels supply in the form of glucose and oxygen. In the recent past, both theoretical and experimental studies have suggested that the neurovascular coupling is a bidirectional system, a loop that includes a feedback signal from the vessels influencing neural firing and plasticity. An integrated model of bidirectionally connected neural network and the vascular network is hence required to understand the relationship between the informational and metabolic aspects of neural dynamics. In this study, we present a computational model of the bidirectional neurovascular system in the whisker barrel cortex and study the effect of such coupling on neural activity and plasticity as manifest in the whisker barrel map formation. In this model, a biologically plausible self-organizing network model of rate coded, dynamic neurons is nourished by a network of vessels modeled using the biophysical properties of blood vessels. The neural layer which is designed to simulate the whisker barrel cortex of rat transmits vasodilatory signals to the vessels. The feedback from the vessels is in the form of available oxygen for oxidative metabolism whose end result is the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) necessary to fuel neural firing. The model captures the effect of the feedback from the vascular network on the neuronal map formation in the whisker barrel model under normal and pathological (Hypoxia and Hypoxia-Ischemia) conditions.

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