Bédard C, Kröger H, Destexhe A
Département de Physique, Université Laval, Québec, Québec G1K 7P4, Canada.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys. 2006 May;73(5 Pt 1):051911. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.73.051911. Epub 2006 May 19.
Local field potentials (LFPs) are routinely measured experimentally in brain tissue, and exhibit strong low-pass frequency filtering properties, with high frequencies (such as action potentials) being visible only at very short distances (approximately 10 microm) from the recording electrode. Understanding this filtering is crucial to relate LFP signals with neuronal activity, but not much is known about the exact mechanisms underlying this low-pass filtering. In this paper, we investigate a possible biophysical mechanism for the low-pass filtering properties of LFPs. We investigate the propagation of electric fields and its frequency dependence close to the current source, i.e., at length scales in the order of average interneuronal distances. We take into account the presence of a high density of cellular membranes around current sources, such as glial cells. By considering them as passive cells, we show that under the influence of the electric source field, they respond by polarization. Because of the finite velocity of ionic charge movements, this polarization will not be instantaneous. Consequently, the induced electric field will be frequency-dependent, and much reduced for high frequencies. Our model establishes that this situation is analogous to an equivalent RC circuit, or better yet a system of coupled RC circuits. We present a number of numerical simulations of an induced electric field for biologically realistic values of parameters, and show the frequency filtering effect as well as the attenuation of extracellular potentials with distance. We suggest that induced electric fields in passive cells surrounding neurons are the physical origin of frequency filtering properties of LFPs. Experimentally testable predictions are provided allowing us to verify the validity of this model.
局部场电位(LFPs)通常在脑组织中通过实验测量,并且呈现出很强的低通频率滤波特性,高频信号(如动作电位)仅在距记录电极非常短的距离(约10微米)内可见。理解这种滤波对于将LFP信号与神经元活动联系起来至关重要,但对于这种低通滤波背后的确切机制知之甚少。在本文中,我们研究了LFP低通滤波特性的一种可能的生物物理机制。我们研究了靠近电流源处电场的传播及其频率依赖性,即在平均神经元间距离量级的长度尺度上。我们考虑了电流源周围存在的高密度细胞膜,如神经胶质细胞。通过将它们视为被动细胞,我们表明在电源场的影响下,它们会通过极化做出反应。由于离子电荷运动的速度有限,这种极化不会是瞬时的。因此,感应电场将与频率相关,并且高频时会大大减弱。我们的模型表明这种情况类似于一个等效的RC电路,或者更确切地说是一个耦合RC电路系统。我们针对生物学上现实的参数值对感应电场进行了大量数值模拟,并展示了频率滤波效应以及细胞外电位随距离的衰减。我们认为神经元周围被动细胞中的感应电场是LFP频率滤波特性的物理起源。我们提供了可通过实验验证的预测,以验证该模型的有效性。