Adaptive transition rates in excitable membranes
- Department of Physiology in the Faculty of Medicine and the Network Biology Research Laboratories, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
Adaptation of activity in excitable membranes occurs over a wide range of timescales. Standard computational approaches handle this wide temporal range in terms of multiple states and related reaction rates emanating from the complexity of ionic channels. The study described here takes a different (perhaps complementary) approach, by interpreting ion channel kinetics in terms of population dynamics. I show that adaptation in excitable membranes is reducible to a simple Logistic-like equation in which the essential non-linearity is replaced by a feedback loop between the history of activation and an adaptive transition rate that is sensitive to a single dimension of the space of inactive states. This physiologically measurable dimension contributes to the stability of the system and serves as a powerful modulator of input–output relations that depends on the patterns of prior activity; an intrinsic scale free mechanism for cellular adaptation that emerges from the microscopic biophysical properties of ion channels of excitable membranes.
Keywords: excitability, inactivation, ionic channel, population dynamics, logistic equation, adaptation, complex adaptation, graceful adaptation
Citation: Marom S (2009) Adaptive transition rates in excitable membranes. Front. Comput. Neurosci. 3:2. doi: 10.3389/neuro.10.002.2009
Received: 02 November 2009;
Paper pending published: 12 December 2008;
Accepted: 01 February 2009;
Published online: 10 February 2009
Edited by:
David Hansel, University of Paris, France
Reviewed by:
Carl van Vreeswijk, CNRS, France
Adrienne Fairhall, University of Washington, USA
Copyright: © 2009 Marom. This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.
*Correspondence: Shimon Marom, Network Biology Research Laboratories, Fishbach Building, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel. e-mail: marom@technion.ac.il