体积传输中的动力学问题。

IF 1.8 4区 数学 Q3 ECOLOGY Journal of Biological Dynamics Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-24 DOI:10.1080/17513758.2023.2269986
Allison Cruikshank, H Frederik Nijhout, Janet Best, Michael Reed
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在体积传递(或神经调控)中,神经元不会与其他神经元建立一对一的连接,而是简单地将神经递质从大量静脉曲张释放到细胞外空间。许多众所周知的神经递质,包括血清素(5HT)、多巴胺(DA)、组胺(HA)、γ-氨基丁酸(GABA)和乙酰胆碱(ACh),都参与了体积传递。通常,细胞体在一个体积内,轴突投射到大脑中的一个遥远体积,在那里释放神经递质。我们介绍了体积传递,并从数学上描述了两种自然稳态机制。在一些大脑区域,细胞外空间中的几种神经递质相互影响释放。我们研究了两种不同情况下这种共调制产生的动力学:血清素和组胺;以及纹状体中4种神经递质的共调制,并与实验数据进行比较。这种共调制提出了新的动力学问题,以及这些生物化学网络如何影响大脑中的电生理网络的问题。
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Dynamical questions in volume transmission.

In volume transmission (or neuromodulation) neurons do not make one-to-one connections to other neurons, but instead simply release neurotransmitter into the extracellular space from numerous varicosities. Many well-known neurotransmitters including serotonin (5HT), dopamine (DA), histamine (HA), Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid (GABA) and acetylcholine (ACh) participate in volume transmission. Typically, the cell bodies are in one volume and the axons project to a distant volume in the brain releasing the neurotransmitter there. We introduce volume transmission and describe mathematically two natural homeostatic mechanisms. In some brain regions several neurotransmitters in the extracellular space affect each other's release. We investigate the dynamics created by this comodulation in two different cases: serotonin and histamine; and the comodulation of 4 neurotransmitters in the striatum and we compare to experimental data. This kind of comodulation poses new dynamical questions as well as the question of how these biochemical networks influence the electrophysiological networks in the brain.

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来源期刊
Journal of Biological Dynamics
Journal of Biological Dynamics ECOLOGY-MATHEMATICAL & COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
3.60%
发文量
28
审稿时长
33 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Biological Dynamics, an open access journal, publishes state of the art papers dealing with the analysis of dynamic models that arise from biological processes. The Journal focuses on dynamic phenomena at scales ranging from the level of individual organisms to that of populations, communities, and ecosystems in the fields of ecology and evolutionary biology, population dynamics, epidemiology, immunology, neuroscience, environmental science, and animal behavior. Papers in other areas are acceptable at the editors’ discretion. In addition to papers that analyze original mathematical models and develop new theories and analytic methods, the Journal welcomes papers that connect mathematical modeling and analysis to experimental and observational data. The Journal also publishes short notes, expository and review articles, book reviews and a section on open problems.
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