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Interactions between membrane conductances underlying thalamocortical slow-wave oscillations

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 83, Issue 4, Pages 1401-1453

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00012.2003

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Funding Source: Medline

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Neurons of the central nervous system display a broad spectrum of intrinsic electrophysiological properties that are absent in the traditional integrate-and-fire model. A network of neurons with these properties interacting through synaptic receptors with many time scales can produce complex patterns of activity that cannot be intuitively predicted. Computational methods, tightly linked to experimental data, provide insights into the dynamics of neural networks. We review this approach for the case of bursting neurons of the thalamus, with a focus on thalamic and thalamocortical slow-wave oscillations. At the single-cell level, intrinsic bursting or oscillations can be explained by interactions between calcium-and voltage-dependent channels. At the network level, the genesis of oscillations, their initiation, propagation, termination, and large-scale synchrony can be explained by interactions between neurons with a variety of intrinsic cellular properties through different types of synaptic receptors. These interactions can be altered by neuromodulators, which can dramatically shift the large-scale behavior of the network, and can also be disrupted in many ways, resulting in pathological patterns of activity, such as seizures. We suggest a coherent framework that accounts for a large body of experimental data at the ion-channel, single-cell, and network levels. This framework suggests physiological roles for the highly synchronized oscillations of slow-wave sleep.

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