Abstract

We measured a time-resolved map of electrical activity in a thin straight neurite (1.5 microns thick, 500 microns long) at a resolution of 8 microns and 0.4 ms. The neurite was obtained by guided outgrowth of an identified neuron of the leech on lanes of extracellular matrix protein. The electrical signals were detected by a fluorescent voltage-sensitive dye. We observed the voltage that was caused by an action potential elicited at the soma and by a Gaussian hyperpolarization induced at the soma, respectively. We compared the data with numerical solutions of the cable equation using the Hodgkin-Huxley parametrization. We could attribute the experimental results of depolarization and of hyperpolarization to the propagation of an action potential along an "active" cable and to the spread along a "passive" cable, respectively, if we assigned rather high specific resistances to the cytoplasm (RI = 250 omega.cm) and to the membrane (RM = 22 k omega.cm2). This assignment explained the slow velocity of 150 microns/ms of a pulse by active propagation and the limited range of 200 microns of a pulse by passive spread.

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