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Initial Variability and Time-Dependent Changes of Neuronal Response Features Are Cell-Type-Specific.

Jens-Steffen Scherer1, Oda E Riedesel1, Ihor Arkhypchuk1

  • 1Computational Neuroscience, Department of Neuroscience, Faculty VI, University of Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany.

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|May 16, 2022
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Cellular response variability is common. In leeches, mechanoreceptor cells (T and P) show increased excitability over time, suggesting flexible adaptation rather than randomness.

Keywords:
Retzius cellinvertebrateleechmechanoreceptorpressure cellresting membrane potentialspike counttouch cell

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Cellular Physiology
  • Computational Biology

Background:

  • Cell types are typically defined by distinct response features.
  • However, significant variability exists within cell types, necessitating analysis of response feature distributions.
  • Time-dependent changes in response features are increasingly recognized for their role in robust neuronal network output.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze response features of individual Touch (T), Pressure (P), and Retzius (Rz) cells in the medicinal leech.
  • To elucidate differences and variability within and between these cell types over time.
  • To investigate the mechanisms underlying time-dependent changes in cellular excitability.

Main Methods:

  • Individual characterization of T, P, and Rz cells in the medicinal leech.
  • Somatic current injection to analyze initial responses (spike counts, latency, precision).
  • Prolonged electrical stimulation to observe changes in resting membrane potential and spiking activity.
  • Control experiments to test the necessity of massive current stimulation or hyperpolarization for excitability changes.

Main Results:

  • T and P cells exhibit a wide range of initial spike counts with high temporal precision.
  • Rz cells show low, similar spike counts with variable, long latencies.
  • During prolonged stimulation, all cell types hyperpolarize; Rz cells decrease spiking, while T and P cells increase spiking.
  • Control experiments rule out massive current or hyperpolarization as drivers for mechanoreceptor excitability increase.
  • Statistical analysis excludes common experimental confounders for observed variability.

Conclusions:

  • Time-dependent excitability changes in T and P cells suggest shifts between spiking regimes, potentially explaining initial response variability.
  • The findings challenge the role of slow K+ channels and HCN channels in these time-dependent activity changes.
  • Further investigation in naturalistic settings is needed to differentiate membrane properties from network interactions and understand the adaptive role of response variability.