Abstract
Spike threshold filters incoming inputs and thus gates activity flow through neuronal networks. Threshold is variable, and in many types of neurons there is a relationship between the threshold voltage and the rate of rise of the membrane potential (dVm/dt) leading to the spike. In primary sensory cortex this relationship enhances the sensitivity of neurons to a particular stimulus feature. While Na⁺ channel inactivation may contribute to this relationship, recent evidence indicates that K⁺ currents located in the spike initiation zone are crucial. Here we used a simple Hodgkin-Huxley biophysical model to systematically investigate the role of K⁺ and Na⁺ current parameters (activation voltages and kinetics) in regulating spike threshold as a function of dVm/dt. Threshold was determined empirically and not estimated from the shape of the Vm prior to a spike. This allowed us to investigate intrinsic currents and values of gating variables at the precise voltage threshold. We found that Na⁺ nactivation is sufficient to produce the relationship provided it occurs at hyperpolarized voltages combined with slow kinetics. Alternatively, hyperpolarization of the K⁺ current activation voltage, even in the absence of Na⁺ inactivation, is also sufficient to produce the relationship. This hyperpolarized shift of K⁺ activation allows an outward current prior to spike initiation to antagonize the Na⁺ inward current such that it becomes self-sustaining at a more depolarized voltage. Our simulations demonstrate parameter constraints on Na⁺ inactivation and the biophysical mechanism by which an outward current regulates spike threshold as a function of dVm/dt.
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