Abstract

Action potentials reliably propagate along the axons, and after potential often follows the axonal action potentials. After potential lasts for several tens of millisecond and plays a crucial role in regulating excitability during repetitive firings of the axon. Several mechanisms underlying the generation of after potential have been suggested, including activation of ionotropic autoreceptors, accumulation of K+ ions in the surrounding extracellular space, the opening of slow voltage-dependent currents, and capacitive discharge of upstream action potentials passively propagated through axon cable. Among them, capacitive discharge is difficult to examine experimentally, since the quantitative evaluation of a capacitive component requires simultaneous recordings from at least two different sites on the connecting axon. In this study, a series of numerical simulation of the axonal action potential was performed using a proposed model of the hippocampal mossy fiber where morphological as well as electrophysiological data are accumulated. To evaluate the relative contribution of the capacitive discharge in axonal after potential, voltage-dependent Na+ current as well as voltage-dependent K+ current was omitted from a distal part of mossy fiber axons. Slow depolarization with a similar time course with the recorded after potential in the previous study was left after blockade of Na+ and K+ currents, suggesting that a capacitive component contributes substantially in axonal after potential following propagating action potentials. On the other hand, it has been shown that experimentally recorded after potential often showed clear voltage-dependency upon changes in the initial membrane potential, obviously deviating from voltage-independent nature of the capacitive component. The simulation revealed that activation of voltage-dependent K+ current also contributes to shape a characteristic waveform of axonal after potential and reconstitute similar voltage-dependency with that reported for the after potential recorded from mossy fiber terminals. These findings suggest that the capacitive component reflecting passive propagation of upstream action potential substantially contributes to the slow time course of axonal after potential, although voltage-dependent K+ current provided a characteristic voltage dependency of after potential waveform.

Highlights

  • The axon carries neuronal information reliably to the presynaptic terminal as a form of the action potential (Debanne et al, 2011)

  • A series of numerical simulation using a realistic model of hippocampal mossy fiber was performed to illustrate the possible mechanisms underlying after potential following an axonal action potential

  • The later phase was most likely explained by the passive capacitive discharge of the axonal membrane

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Summary

Introduction

The axon carries neuronal information reliably to the presynaptic terminal as a form of the action potential (Debanne et al, 2011). Propagation of action potential along axon has been considered as a highly reliable digital process (Bean, 2007), the excitability of axons is slightly modulated for a short period after generation of action potential up to tens to hundreds of milliseconds (Gardner-Medwin, 1972; Zucker, 1974). This post-stimulus change in the excitability of axon was mediated, at least in part, by depolarizing after potential which often follows action potential in the axon (Barrett and Barrett, 1982). Despite functional significance in temporal integration (Ohura and Kamiya, 2018a), the property and the underlying mechanism of after potential was not thoroughly studied experimentally, especially in thin axons in the central nervous system, because of the extremely small size of axon diameter does not allow direct recordings from the axonal membrane in thin axons

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