Abstract

The action potential (AP), the fundamental signal of the nervous system, is carried by two types of axons: unmyelinated and myelinated fibers. In the former the action potential propagates continuously along the axon as established in large-diameter fibers. In the latter axons the AP jumps along the nodes of Ranvier—discrete, anatomically specialized regions which contain very high densities of sodium ion (Na+) channels. Therefore, saltatory conduction is thought as the hallmark of myelinated axons, which enables faster and more reliable propagation of signals than in unmyelinated axons of same outer diameter. Recent molecular anatomy showed that in C-fibers, the very thin (0.1 μm diameter) axons of the peripheral nervous system, Nav1.8 channels are clustered together on lipid rafts that float in the cell membrane. This localized concentration of Na+ channels resembles in structure the ion channel organization at the nodes of Ranvier, yet it is currently unknown whether this translates into an equivalent phenomenon of saltatory conduction or related-functional benefits and efficiencies. Therefore, we modeled biophysically realistic unmyelinated axons with both conventional and lipid-raft based organization of Na+ channels. We find that APs are reliably conducted in a micro-saltatory fashion along lipid rafts. Comparing APs in unmyelinated fibers with and without lipid rafts did not reveal any significant difference in either the metabolic cost or AP propagation velocity. By investigating the efficiency of AP propagation over Nav1.8 channels, we find however that the specific inactivation properties of these channels significantly increase the metabolic cost of signaling in C-fibers.

Highlights

  • Propagation of action potentials (AP) in axons relies on the concerted action of membrane-spanning selectively permeable ion channels (Hodgkin and Huxley, 1952)

  • Saltatory conduction (Huxley and Stämpfli, 1949; Fitzhugh, 1962) in myelinated axons refers to the rapid propagation of the electrical waveform from each node to the

  • The AP waveform is kept constant while propagating through the axon

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Summary

Introduction

Propagation of action potentials (AP) in axons relies on the concerted action of membrane-spanning selectively permeable ion channels (Hodgkin and Huxley, 1952). Saltatory conduction (Huxley and Stämpfli, 1949; Fitzhugh, 1962) in myelinated axons refers to the rapid propagation of the electrical waveform from each node to the (the AP seems to jump between nodes) This mode of conduction allows faster (Rushton, 1951; Waxman and Bennett, 1972) and more reliable (Kuriscak et al, 2002) propagation of signals than unmyelinated axons. The number of ion channels on the surface of neurons’ membrane is usually thought to be large enough to justify combining the individual channel conductances into a continuous measure of overall conductivity (Dayan and Abbott, 2001), as originally done by Hodgkin and Huxley (1952). The conceptual transition from conductivity (per surface area) to density of channels, with each channel having only two possible conductance value corresponding to its open and closed states, involves investigating the effects of possible non-uniformities in the distribution of ion channels across the membrane

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